The Flickr Floralpattern Image Generatr

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This page simply reformats the Flickr public Atom feed for purposes of finding inspiration through random exploration. These images are not being copied or stored in any way by this website, nor are any links to them or any metadata about them. All images are © their owners unless otherwise specified.

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Le Charme du Bleu by raaen99

© raaen99, all rights reserved.

Le Charme du Bleu

The theme for “Smile on Saturday” for the 10th of May is “Blue for You – ME 2025” which is in honour of ME/CFS and Fibromyalgia International Awareness Day which happens to fall on May 12th. May the 12th was chosen as it coincided with the birth date of Florence Nightingale, the celebrated English social reformer and statistician, and the founder of modern nursing. Nightingale became chronically ill in her mid-thirties after returning from the Crimean War; the M.E.-like illness often left her bedridden during the last 50 years of her life. I have friends who suffer with ME/CFS and Fibromyalgia, so this theme has a personal connection for me, even if I do not have it myself.

As the subject for “Smile on Saturday” this week was open to personal choice but required a lot of blue, although I usually create a blue themed Playmobil tableau, I have broken with tradition this year, as I recently was given a rather lovely blue hand painted resin Nostalgia Shoe which I felt was perfect to feature in a photograph. I have paired my slipper which features red and gold accents with a blue Art Deco “Charme Caressant” Rachel powder box from my powder box collection which features stylised red and pink flowers on it. I have photographed them on a piece of hand made and printed paper featuring a William Morris pattern in blue. I hope that you like my choice for this week’s theme, and that it makes you smile!

"Charme Caressant" is the name of a vintage Dalon face powder, produced in both Paris and Sydney from 1924 into the 1930s. It was a popular French beauty product known for its Art Deco style and various colour shades.

We Beg Your Acceptance of this Elegant Thimble by raaen99

© raaen99, all rights reserved.

We Beg Your Acceptance of this Elegant Thimble

'But who is to give the prizes?' quite a chorus of voices asked.

'Why, SHE, of course,' said the Dodo, pointing to Alice with one finger; and the whole party at once crowded round her, calling out in a confused way, 'Prizes! Prizes'

Alice had no idea what to do, and in despair she put her hand in her pocket, and pulled out a box of comfits, (luckily the salt water had not got into it), and handed them round as prizes. There was exactly one a-piece all round.

'But she must have a prize herself, you know,' said the Mouse.

'Of course,' the Dodo replied very gravely. 'What else have you got in your pocket?' he went on, turning to Alice.

'Only a thimble,' said Alice sadly.

'Hand it over here,' said the Dodo.

Then they all crowded round her once more, while the Dodo solemnly presented the thimble, saying 'We beg your acceptance of this elegant thimble'; and, when it had finished this short speech, they all cheered.

“Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland” – Lewis Carroll

The theme for for "Looking Close… on Friday" for Friday 9th of May is "combination of letters and numbers". In this case, I have chosen the details of one of my favourite thimbles from my sterling silver collection. Around its rim, it features the number 16, which probably refers to the pattern number, and the letters H G & S, which are the makers’ initials. In this case they stand for Henry Griffith and Sons who were a well known silversmiths and were one of the leading producers of sterling silver thimbles in Britain. So in this case, both the numbers and letters have meaning. I do hope you like my choice for this week’s theme, and that it makes you smile!

This floral thimble is sterling silver and was made by silversmiths Henry Griffith and Sons in Birmingham in 1897. Henry Griffith and Sons commenced in 1850, was continued as Henry Griffith & Sons (until 1898) and later as Henry Griffith & Sons Ltd. They were well known for their manufacture of silver thimbles, and later for their silver and gold jewellery. They closed their doors in 1982. Thimble making was part of the Griffith family heritage. The father of Henry Griffith was a thimble maker and was put in charge of the thimbles departments at the beginning of his son's activity. The Griffiths became one of the leading producers of silver thimbles and were one of the only silversmiths who marked some of their thimbles with 'Sterling Silver' instead of having them hallmarked.

Allium in bloom by Bob Jenkin LRPS

Available under a Creative Commons by-nc license

Allium in bloom

Daisy Floral Pattern by Chris Hunkeler

Available under a Creative Commons by-sa license

Daisy Floral Pattern

The USLA National Lifeguard Championships were held on Thursday, August 10 through Saturday, August 12, 2023, near the Virginia Beach Surf and Rescue Museum in Virginia Beach, Virginia.

The event draws professional, gold junior, and alum lifeguard members of the United States Lifesaving Association from across the USA to compete in rescue races, board races, board relays, beach flags competitions, various swim and run events, Ironman/Ironwoman and Ironguard events, and team competitions.

XHG_6579_rot-2_cr

April Showers by raaen99

© raaen99, all rights reserved.

April Showers

My friend BKHagar *Kim* bought a “mystery tub” of china from an auction, all wrapped in old newspaper. She sent me a photo of the box as she had received it from the auction, and I pointed out that she had a Royal Albert teacup from the 1930s amongst them. You can see her beautiful 1932 Royal Albert "Petit-Point" teacup here: www.flickr.com/photos/bkhagar_gallery/54482268384/in/phot... or in the first comment below. She asked me how on earth could I know that just from seeing half a cup and a handle sticking out of some newspaper. My answer to her was that I had a teacup in a different pattern with the exact same cup shape and handle in my decorative china collection, and this is it.

This is a Royal Albert trio decorated with the pattern "April Showers" featuring a transfer that was then over-painted by hand. "April Showers" was produced from the 1920s through to the 1950s in a range of colours (I also have a blue variation), featuring a different style of teacup for each decade. This cup shape has the delightful name of "Hampton" and was used during the 1930s. The trio features a square cake plate, implying that this set was made in the early part of the 1930s.

Another friend of mine’s Aunt said that “drinking tea from a thick pottery mug was as good as receiving a slap in the face”. Whilst I don’t necessarily feel quite so strongly about drinking tea from an alternative, I do believe that there is nothing nicer than drinking tea from a fine porcelain cup. I think it is elegant, and keeps alive the fine tradition of taking elevenses or afternoon tea in a gracious fashion. In a world of utility, there is a certain charm in taking tea from a beautifully designed cup, painted with beautiful flowers.

In 1896, Thomas Clark Wild bought a pottery in Longton, Stoke on Trent, England, called Albert Works, which had been named the year before in honor of the birth of Prince Albert, who became King George VI in 1936. Using the brand name Albert Crown China, Thomas Wild and Co. produced commemorative bone-china pieces for Queen Victoria's 1897 Diamond Jubilee, and by 1904 had earned a Royal Warrant. From the beginning, Royal Albert's bone china dinnerware was popular, especially its original floral patterns made in rich shades of red, green, and blue. Known for incredibly fine, white, and pure bone china, Royal Albert was given to the sentimental and florid excesses of Victorian era England, making pattern after pattern inspired by English gardens and woodlands. With designs like Serena, Old English Roses, and Masquerade and motifs inspired by Japanese Imari, the company appealed to a wide range of tastes, from the simplest to the most aristocratic. In 1910, the company created its first overseas agency in New Zealand. Soon it had offices in Australia, Canada, and the United States. Willing to experiment with the latest in industrial technologies, the company was an early adopter of kilns fuelled by gas and electricity. Starting in 1927, Royal Albert china used a wide variety of more stylized backstamps, some with the crown, some without, and others stylized with script and Art Deco lettering. Some of these marks even had roses or other parts of the pattern in them. Patterns from the years between the wars include American Beauty, Maytime, Indian Tree, Dolly Varden, and Lady-Gay. The '40s saw patterns like Fragrance, Teddy's Playtime, Violets for Love, Princess Anne, Sunflower, White Dogwood, Mikado, Minuet, Cotswold, and the popular Lady Carlyle. Royal Albert incorporated as a limited company in 1933, and in the 1960s it was acquired by Pearson Group, joining that company's Allied English Potteries. By 1970, the porcelain maker was completely disassociated with its T.C. Wild & Sons origins and renamed Royal Albert Ltd. Pearson Group also acquired Royal Doulton in 1972, putting Royal Crown Derby, Royal Albert, Paragon, and the Lawleys chain under the Royal Doulton umbrella, which at this point included Minton, John Beswick, and Webb Corbett. In 1993, Royal Doulton Group was ejected from Pearson Group, for making less money than its other properties. In 2002, Royal Doulton moved the production of Royal Albert china from England to Indonesia. A few years later, Waterford Wedgwood absorbed Royal Doulton Group and all its holdings, which currently makes three brands, Royal Doulton, Minton, and Royal Albert, including the Old Country Roses pattern, which is Royal Albert’s most popular design.

Rug on the ceiling by Adaptabilly

© Adaptabilly, all rights reserved.

Rug on the ceiling

Solid mandala

Padrão de Marvila by vmribeiro.net

© vmribeiro.net, all rights reserved.

Padrão de Marvila

O "padrão de Marvila", presente no Museu Nacional do Azulejo, é um dos exemplos mais emblemáticos da azulejaria portuguesa seiscentista. Conhecido também como "padrão rico de Marvila", este padrão, composto por módulos de 12x12 azulejos com motivos geométricos e vegetalistas em azul, amarelo e branco, destaca-se pela sua aplicação monumental na Igreja de Nossa Senhora da Assunção de Marvila (ou Igreja de Santa Maria de Marvila), em Santarém. Com mais de 65 000 azulejos cobrindo 1200 m² de paredes interiores, a igreja é considerada a maior superfície de azulejaria do século XVII em Portugal, justificando a designação de "catedral do azulejo seiscentista". O padrão, que apresenta uma composição geométrica, frequentemente em losango, com predominância de azuis de cobalto e amarelos ocre sobre fundo branco, e motivos florais e arabescos de influência mudéjar, reflete as influências maneiristas e renascentistas, marcando a transição técnica para a majólica e a progressiva emancipação da azulejaria portuguesa relativamente à influência hispano-mourisca. Utilizado também em outros edifícios religiosos e nobres, este padrão, exemplifica a riqueza ornamental e a inovação técnica da azulejaria portuguesa do século XVII, criando efeitos visuais de continuidade e ordenação espacial.

The "Marvila pattern", present in the National Tile Museum, is one of the most emblematic examples of Portuguese seventeenth-century tiles. Also known as the "rich pattern of Marvila", this pattern, composed of modules of 12x12 tiles with geometric and vegetalist motifs in blue, yellow and white, stands out for its monumental application in the Church of Nossa Senhora da Assunção de Marvila (or Church of Santa Maria de Marvila), in Santarém. With more than 65,000 tiles covering 1200 m² of interior walls, the church is considered the largest 17th century tile surface in Portugal, justifying the designation of "Cathedral of the 17th century tile". The pattern, which features a geometric composition, often in a diamond shape, with a predominance of cobalt blues and ocher yellows on a white background, and floral motifs and arabesques of Mudejar influence, reflects the mannerist and Renaissance influences, marking the technical transition to majolica and the progressive emancipation of Portuguese tiles from the Hispanic-Moorish influence. Also used in other religious and noble buildings, this pattern exemplifies the ornamental richness and technical innovation of Portuguese tiles of the 17th century, creating visual effects of continuity and spatial ordering.

Pink peonies on green grass background in garden by yumehana

© yumehana, all rights reserved.

Pink peonies on green grass background in garden

Pink peonies on green grass background in garden
つくば牡丹園 茨城県つくば市

Pink peonies on green grass background in garden by yumehana

© yumehana, all rights reserved.

Pink peonies on green grass background in garden

Pink peonies on green grass background in garden 
撮影場所:つくば牡丹園(茨城県つくば市)

Malachi and Mutzli Celebrate Easter by raaen99

© raaen99, all rights reserved.

Malachi and Mutzli Celebrate Easter

MALACHI: "Oh look, Mutzli! A whole basket of pretty chocolate Easter Eggs in a basket, just for me!"

MUTZLI: "And I received a large foil wrapped Easter Egg! I'm so lucky!"

MALACHI: "Oh I do love Easter, Mutzli! I think it's my favourite time of the year!"

MUTZLI: "Even more than Christmas, Malachi?"

MALACHI: "Well..." *Considers.* "Maybe as much as Christmas!"

MUTZLI: "Happy Easter everyone!"

MALACHI: "And happy Easter everybear!"

The theme for “Smile on Saturday” for the 19th of April is “free theme”, where any photo is admissible. It was suggested that if I have a photo somewhere in your photostream or archive that you would love to showcase, then this is the perfect time to do so! I have hundreds of photographs that have never seen the light of day, and I could have used any number of them, but as it is Easter, I have decided to stick with the seasonal theme commenced yesterday with the “Looking Close on Friday” theme of “Easter Greetings”. In this case, I have used two of my 1:12 miniature bears, Malachi and his cousin Mutzli who are sitting inside half of the rather charming Russian papier mâché egg I acquired a little while ago from a Russian gift shop in the city, which opens up and is hollow inside, lined with a pretty stencilled pattern. Another little Russian hand painted wooden egg featuring a folk art floral pattern I picked up at the same time can be seen to the right of the egg Malachi and Mutzli are sitting in. The other delicate and fragile Easter eggs that surround them have been painted completely by hand in Turkey in a beautiful Art Nouveau style, known as Arts and Crafts Movement or “Style Liberty” in the United Kingdom. The eggs all have a solid background over which a stylised pattern of flowers in a William Morris style has been painted. The decorated eggs are then covered in a varnish to protect the fragile hand painted surface. The eggs are all painted in Turkey by one family, and then shipped to Australia. The family also make stylish wooden spherical Christmas ornaments with similar Style Liberty design. I hope you like my choice of this week’s theme, and that it makes you smile!

Malachi I acquired in mid-March 2020 (and mid Coronavirus) from a wonderful Melbourne stalwart toy shop: Dafel Dolls and Bears, when I went looking for a present for one of my goddaughters. Malachi is designed by Mary and hand-made by Wendy Joy in Australia. He has articulated arms and legs, and an extremely sweet face. Malachi was the name he came with, written by hand on his little tag.

Mutzli was a lovely surprise gift from a dear friend in Britain who kindly slipped him into a parcel of other delightful gifts for me. Like Malachi, he is mohair, has articulated arms and legs, and an extremely sweet face. Mutzli got his name from the tiny gold tag around his neck. He is made by Mutzli, a Swiss bear manufacturer since 1949.

Abby by kennethballard.photo

© kennethballard.photo, all rights reserved.

Abby

This was a rather interesting turn of events... First catching Lisa just as I get to the River Market District, then catching Abby as I'm leaving.

Flower bed full of red and yellow tulips and a lake by yumehana

© yumehana, all rights reserved.

Flower bed full of red and yellow tulips and a lake

Flower bed full of red and yellow tulips and a lake 

霞ヶ浦総合公園(茨城県土浦市)にて 霞ヶ浦の湖とチューリップの花壇

Handle with Care by raaen99

© raaen99, all rights reserved.

Handle with Care

These delicate and fragile real Easter eggs have been painted completely by hand in Turkey in a beautiful Art Nouveau style, known as Arts and Crafts Movement or “Style Liberty” in the United Kingdom. The eggshells all have a solid background applied to them, over which a stylised pattern of flowers in a William Morris style has been painted. The decorated eggs are then covered in a varnish to protect the fragile hand painted surface. These eggs have a small puncture at both the top and the bottom of them, indicating that they were “blown”, a tradition where one blows the white and yolk of the egg through the hole in the bottom by way of exhaling into the hole at the top. A time consuming method, egg blowing must be done gently so as not to break the fragile eggshell by applying too much pressure. It can take well over an hour to blow a single egg. The eggs are all painted in Turkey by one family, and then shipped to Australia.

The theme for “Smile on Saturday” for the 12th of April is “painted/painting eggs”, and I couldn’t think of a better choice to offer up for this week. I have packed them in a nice soft and protective nest of straw to keep them safe and show how fragile these hand painted beauties are. I hope you like my choice of subject for this week’s theme, and that it makes you smile!

Flower power by Adaptabilly

© Adaptabilly, all rights reserved.

Flower power

Grid hierarchy

Story Time for Daisy-Maud and Jago by raaen99

© raaen99, all rights reserved.

Story Time for Daisy-Maud and Jago

JAGO: *Reading.* “Whilst Cinderella was sitting beside the Prince in a lovely alcove, and looking at the moon from under a bower of orange blossoms, she heard the clock strike the first stroke of twelve. She started up and fled away as lightly as a deer.”

DAISY-MAUD: “Oh my!” *Puts paw to mouth.* “Cinderella forgot her Fairy Godmother’s warning!”

JAGO: “Indeed she did, Daisy-Maud.”

DAISY-MAUD: “Oh! Please keep reading, Jago. I want to know what happens to poor Cinderella!” *Concerned.*

JAGO: *Reading.* “The Prince followed, but could not catch her. Indeed he missed his lovely princess altogether, and only saw running out of the palace doors a dirty little girl whom he had never beheld before, and of whom her certainly would never have taken the least notice.”

DAISY-MAUD: “Well! I like that!” *Offended.*

JAGO: “What’s wrong Daisy-Maud?”

DAISY-MAUD: “The Prince is perhaps not so deserving of Cinderella as a bride, if he cannot look beyond her rags and recognise her! Look! There is a picture of Cinderella mid transformation from princess to servant girl.” *Points paw to illustration.* “She still looks beautiful, even in her rags and tatters.”

JAGO: “I know, Daisy-Maud. Don’t be too quick to judge the Prince. The tale isn’t over yet.”

DAISY-MAUD: “I’m certainly glad that my bear prince, Benny likes me for who I am, and not just when I am wearing pearls and jewels!”

JAGO: “Oh yes, Daisy-Maud, Benny loves you just as you are, and so do I!”

DAISY-MAUD: “Oh I love you too, Jago! You are the best big brother anybear could have! I love spending time with Benny, and I love spending time with you too! You read so beautifully, and story time with you is very special and precious to me.”

JAGO: “That’s so lovely of you to say so, Daisy-Maud! I love story time with you too. I missed our story time whilst you were still living with Mummy June in Norfolk and I was here with Daddy.”

DAISY-MAUD: “Well now we need never be apart again, my wonderful big brother.”

JAGO: “And thanks to the magic portal, you don’t have to be separated from your prince, Benny!”

DAISY-MAUD: “Oh yes! I am so grateful to Fairy Mum for making the portal between here and Mummy Marian’s house! We are very lucky bears to live the good life we do, aren’t we Jago?”

JAGO: “Indeed we are, Daisy-Maud. Not all bears get such a nice home to live in, or books of faerie tales to read, or Mummies like Mummy Marian and Mummy June, or Daddies like ours.”

DAISY-MAUD: “I’m glad we are lucky, Jago.”

JAGO: “Me too, Daisy-Maud. Shall I keep reading now?”

DAISY-MAUD: “Oh yes please, Jago. Let’s see if Cinderella gets to live as happily ever after as us.”

JAGO: “I think she will, Daisy-Maud.”

Jago and Daisy-Maud are reading my first edition 1920 copy of Cinderella or the Little Glass Slipper published by George Sully & Co., illustrated by Margaret Evans Price. Margaret Evans Price was a U.S. toy manufacturer. With her husband, Irving Price, and Herman Fisher, she co-founded Fisher-Price Toys in 1930.

Jago was a gift from a dear friend in England. He is made of English mohair with suede paw pads and glass eyes. He is a gentle bear, kind and patient who carries an air of calm about him. He is already fitting in with everyone else very nicely.

Daisy-Maud is Jago's little sister and was made by the same friend in England who made him. She is made of German mohair with floral fabric cotton paw pads that match her pretty sunhat, and glass eyes. A sweet and loving little girl bear, she is happy to be reunited with her big brother, Jago, and enjoys being spoiled by her Daddy.

Embroidery bookish Flower Phone Case by CherryCharmsCase

© CherryCharmsCase, all rights reserved.

Embroidery bookish Flower Phone Case

Wrap your phone in warmth and charm with this embroidered-style bookcase design. Featuring delicate floral accents and cozy bookshelf rows, this phone case is perfect for book lovers and cottagecore dreamers. The soft autumn tones make it a beautiful accessory for your phone!

cherrycharmscases.etsy.com/listing/1823321626

20250327_1703x_01jqd0zm35fszbq7kx2q6mky62 by Adamant41

Available under a Creative Commons by license

20250327_1703x_01jqd0zm35fszbq7kx2q6mky62

The Great Wave off Regents Park by eduardonicho

© eduardonicho, all rights reserved.

The Great Wave off Regents Park

Frank Asks an Important Question by raaen99

© raaen99, all rights reserved.

Frank Asks an Important Question

Cavendish Mews is a smart set of flats in Mayfair where flapper and modern woman, the Honourable Lettice Chetwynd has set up home after coming of age and gaining her allowance. To supplement her already generous allowance, and to break away from dependence upon her family, Lettice has established herself as a society interior designer, so her flat is decorated with a mixture of elegant antique Georgian pieces and modern Art Deco furnishings, using it as a showroom for what she can offer to her well heeled clients.

Today however we are northwest of Lettice’s flat, in the working-class London suburb of Harlesden visiting the home of Edith’s, Lettice’s maid, beloved parents. Edith’s father, George, works at the McVitie and Price biscuit factory in Harlesden as a Line Manager, and her mother, Ada, takes in laundry at home. They live in a small, two storey brick terrace house which opens out directly onto the street, and is far removed from the grandeur of Lettice’s Mayfair flat, but has always been a cosy and welcoming home for Edith and her younger brother Bert all their young lives. Since her father’s promotion in 1922, Edith’s mother is only laundering a few days a week now. The money she makes from this endeavour she uses for housekeeping to make she and George’s life a little more comfortable, but she is able to hold back a little back as pin money* to indulge in one of her joys, collecting pretty china ornaments to decorate their home with.

We are in Ada’s front parlour, which is where most of her decorative porcelain finds from different shops, fairs and flea markets around London are proudly displayed. With busy stylised floral wallpaper and every surface cluttered with ornaments, it can only be described as highly Victorian in style, and it is an example of conscious consumption, rather than qualitative consumption, to demonstrate how prosperous the Watsford family is, especially now that George holds the management position that he does. Like many others of its kind in Harlesden and elsewhere in London, it is the room least used in the house, reserved for when special guests like the parish minister or wealthy old widow and the Watsford’s landlady, Mrs. Hounslow, pay a call. However today’s special guest is not either the minister, nor Mrs. Hounslow. It is Frank Leadbetter, Edith’s beau, who has arranged to visit Edith’s parents on his own, as he has a very important question to ask of them both.

Dressed in his Sunday best suit, Frank sits awkwardly in one of two Victorian high backed barley twist chairs. The combination of the formality of his suit and the hard and uncomfortable horsehair upholstery of the chair encourage Frank to sit with a ramrod stiff back in his seat. He looks awkwardly around the room, allowing his gaze to flit in a desultory fashion around the unfamiliar surrounds of the Watsford’s formal front parlour. Cluttering the surface of an old Victorian sideboard and an ornate whatnot, the cold stares of Queen Victoria, Edward VII, Queen Alexandra and the current King George V and Queen Mary stare out from the glazed surfaces of plates and other objects celebrating coronations and jubilees, whilst on the mantle, flanked by pretty statues of castles and churches, younger versions of George and Ada in sepia pose formally with Edith as a little girl and Bert as a baby, gazing out from brass frames with blank stares. Frank coughs awkwardly and nervously tugs at his stiff collar, feeling hot even though there is no fire going in the small grate of the fireplace.

“Now, now, young Frank!” George booms good naturedly from the one comfortable seat in the room, an old armchair with thick red velvet button back** upholstery. “No need to be nervous, me lad!”

“Oh, you don’t know why I’m here, Mr. Watsford.” Frank replies, running his right index finger nervously around the inside of his collar.

George chuckles. “I think I can guess, Frank.”

Frank gazes down at Ada’s dainty best blue floral china tea set on the lace draped octagonal table set between the cluster of chairs. A selection of McVitie’s*** biscuits brought home by George from the nearby factory sit in a fluted glass dish.

“Will Mrs. Watsford be long, do you think, Mr. Watsford?”

“I shouldn’t think so, Frank. She’s only gone to boil the kettle and fill the pot.”

As if knowing that she was being spoken about, Ada sweeps through the door of the parlour, holding aloft the glazed teapot in the shape of a cottage with a thatched roof with the chimney as the lid that Edith bought for her as a gift from the Caledonian Markets****. “Here we are then,” she says with a heightened level of exuberance. “Tea for three!” She carefully places the teapot in the centre of the tea table.

“Perfect timing, Ada love.” George replies, and without waiting, reaches across the void between him and the tea table and snatches up a biscuit.

“George!” she chides. “Where are your manners?” She looks askance at her husband, who settles back in his seat, quite unperturbed by his wife’s scolding. “Guests first.” She sweeps her hand across the table towards the biscuits as she lowers herself precariously onto the edge of the other high backed barley twist chair. “Frank?”

“Err… umm…” Frank stutters. “Ahh, no… no thank you, Mrs. Watsford. I… I’m not hungry.”

“Oh well, more for us then, Ada love.” George says cheerfully through a biscuit filled mouth, stretching out his hand to the glass dish again.

“George!” Ada cries, slapping her husband’s hand sharply, the sound echoing around the cluttered parlour.

George retreats in his seat, recoiling and rubbing his chastised hand rather like a dog nurses a limp paw.

“Shall I be mother then*****?” Ada asks rhetorically as she automatically picks up the milk jug. “You take milk, don’t you Frank?”

“Err… yes, Mrs. Watsford.” Frank replies as she slops some milk into his cup before adding a dash to her husband’s and her own.

“And sugar?”

“Err.. two please, Mrs. Watsford.”

“Ahh, a sweet tooth after my own heart.” Ada replies with an indulgent smile, putting two heaped teaspoons of sugar into Frank’s cup before adding one to George’s and two to her own. “Now!” she sighs, taking up the cottage ware teapot pouring tea into the cups. “You wanted to talk to us, Frank?”

“Well…” Frank begins.

“You know it feels jolly funny having you here Frank, but not Edith.” Ada interrupts the young man even as he begins. “I’m quite used to you coming with Edith now.”

“Well, you know… I… I really wanted this to be a conversation that I had alone with you and Mr. Watsford,” Frank indicates to George, still licking his wounds. “Mrs. Watsford. So, I asked Hilda to take Edith out shopping today.”

“And she isn’t missing you, Frank?” Ada queries, as she replaces the pot in the middle of the tea table.

“Err…” Frank blushers, heaving and puffing his cheeks out. “Well, I told Edith a bit of a tall tale. I said that I had to help Giuseppe, my chum with his restaurant in the Islington****** today.”

“Oh yes,” Ada remarks with a tone of distaste as she hands George his cup of tea. “Giuseppe. He was your Italian friend who gave you the wine that we shared that first time we met, wasn’t he?”

Frank blushes red at the painful memory of that first rather awkward Sunday luncheon he had at the Watsfords’ when he and Ada had had a disagreement about some of his beliefs about life. “Yes.”

“My, my.” Ada takes up her own cup of tea and cradles it in her lap as she smiles to herself. “Such subterfuge to be alone with us.”

“You might not enjoy poor Frank’s discomfort quite so readily, Ada.” George pipes up from his seat as he sips his tea, tempering his wife.

“I was merely asking a question, George love.” Ada replies with a smug smile.

“No you weren’t, and you know it.” George retorts. “You were bringing up difficult memories of that awkward first tea we all had together, when you know perfectly well that we have all come a long way from there.” He gives his wife a doleful look. “Stop raking over old coals that don’t need to be raked over.”

“I agree, George.” Ada replies calmly. “We have come a long way; however, I was merely reminding Frank that in spite of that, we still have some concerns about his philosophies about life.”

“You have concerns, Ada love. I don’t.”

“Well one of us has to, if Frank has come here asking for Edith’s hand.” Ada turns her attentions to their young guest. “That is why you are here, isn’t it, Frank?”

“Well… I…” Frank stammers.

“Of course it is, Ada love. Frank?” George asks, sitting up in his seat.

“Well yes, Mr. Watsford. That’s what I came for. I came to formally ask for Edith’s hand in marriage.”

George leaps from his seat, dropping his half drunk cup of tea into the tea table noisily, sloshing tea into the saucer in his haste, before he bustles around the small black japanned cane table on which a vase of flowers stands before patting Frank on the back. “Of course! Of course! We’d be delighted, wouldn’t we Ada?” He turns and beams at his wife before turning quickly back to Frank without waiting for a reply. “What took you so long, Frank my boy?”

“Well Mr. Watsford, I know Edith and I have been stepping out for a while now,” Frank explains, sighing with relief and smiling at George’s exuberant acceptance of his request for Edith’s hand. “But I wanted to have a few things in place before I asked you.”

“Jolly good! Jolly good!” George chuckles delightedly. “Have you got a ring yet?”

“I’m not quite there yet, Mr. Watsford, but I’m getting there. I… I also wanted to assure you that my intentions are genuine. I… I love Edith and I don’t want anyone else.”

“Well, of course you don’t, lad!” George puffs, rubbing the young man’s right shoulder comfortingly. “We knew the moment we saw you together, that you two were made for each other, didn’t we Ada?”

Ada doesn’t reply immediately.

“Oh, this is wonderful, Frank!” George shakes Frank’s hands, barely able to contain his joy. “Welcome to the family!”

“Now just hang on for a moment.” Ada’s voice cuts in, slicing the joy with its sharp edge. “Let’s not rush into this without a few clarifying things first.”

“What?” George asks. He snorts preposterously. “Whatever do mean, Ada love? Frank’s just said his intentions are good. I don’t need anything more than that.”

“Well I do.” Ada replies calmly.

“What… what is… is it, Mrs. Watsford?” Frank asks, his voice quavering with nerves.

“Now, if you’d both just sit down for a moment,” Ada says, replacing her cup on the table, indicating for the two men to resume their seats.

Deflated, both Frank and George return to their respective seats.

“Now, Frank,” Ada starts, leaning forward in her seat. “I would just like to say that in principle, I am as pleased as my husband is that you’re asking for Edith’s hand in marriage.”

“Then Ada…?” George begins, but his wife silences him by holding up the palm of her hand to him.

She goes on. “I’d already had words with Edith about the two of you eloping.”

“Oh I’d never do that to you, Mr. Watsford or my Gran, Mrs. Watsford.” Frank assures her, looking earnestly into her unreadable face.

“Yes, I’m glad to hear it, as it confirms what Edith said, which was the same as you.” Ada turns to her husband. “Prospects?”

George looks quizzically at his wife. “Prospects?”

“Yes, prospects!” Ada’s eyes grow wide as she looks knowingly at him. She lowers her voice and whispers, “Remember, we discussed this?” When he looks uncomprehendingly at her again, she adds in a hiss, “When I said you’d go all doolally******* over Frank’s proposal, which you have?”

“Oh!” George pipes up. “Oh yes!” He sits up in his seat and turns to Frank. “Now young man, Both you and Edith have told us that you’re trying to improve your lot in life.” Ada scoffs from her seat. Ignoring her, he asks, “What are your prospects for Edith, once you’re married?”

“Well, it is true that I am trying to improve my circumstances. It’s one of the reasons why I have held off asking for Ediths hand until now. Like I said, I wanted to get a few things in place before I did.”

“Such as?” George’s bushy eyebrow arches over his right eye as he asks.

“Well, as you both know, I’ve been doing extra duties at Mr. Willison’s to build up my skills. I don’t want to be a delivery boy all my life.”

“No of course not, lad!” George pipes up.

“George!” Ada exclaims. “Let the boy finish. I want to hear what he has to say, not you.”

“Err… no, of course not.” George blusters. “Go on, Frank.”

“Well, I’ve been doing a bit of window dressing and arranging of products for Mr. Willison. I’ve also been taking a correspondence course on bookkeeping, which Edith doesn’t know about.”

“Why not?” Ada snaps.

“Because I wanted to complete it first and show that I’ve applied the skills before I told her: rather like a surprise, Mrs. Watsford.”

“Alright Frank.” Ada softens. “And have you?”

“Well, it’s a bit hard to get Mrs. Willison to relinquish anything about the shop’s books, but I did manage to do a bit of bookkeeping earlier this month when she was poorly and in bed. Technically she gave the task to her daughter, Miss Henrietta, but she wanted to do other things in her spare time, so it was reasonably easy to convince her to give it over to me to do, and Mrs. Willison did admit that I did a good job of it.”

“Well that’s something, isn’t it Ada?”

Ada nods in agreement with her husband, but keeps looking at Frank with an observant stare.

Frank continues. “And I’ve been tapped on the shoulder by friends of mine who are part of a trades union.” An uncomfortable look begins to cloud Ada’s features at the mention of unions. “And they tell me that soon there might be an opening or two in one of the suburban grocers for an assistant manager position, which would lead eventually to a position where I’d be running my own corner grocer.”

“In Metroland********?” George splutters. “My daughter all the way out there?”

“It’s not so bad, Mr. Watsford. The Chalk Hill, Grange and Cedars Estates are all built along the railway line not too far from Wembley Park, so Edith would be able to visit you easily, and you’d be able to come and visit us too. We’d live in a nice little flat above the shop with indoor plumbing and all electrified.” Ada tuts at the mention of electricity, but Frank continues to paint a vision of his and Edith’s rosy future. “The children we have, your grandchildren can grow up attending local schools and getting lots of fresh air.”

“Well, since you put it like that, I guess it’s not so bad, is it Ada?”

“Well,” Ada purses her lips. “I’m sure that Edith has told you that I hold no faith in that newfangled electricity, but living in Cavendish Mews she seems to have become a convert.”

“And a lovely new estate is far healthier for any children that we have, Mrs. Watsford. It’s far better than living in a house in Clapham Junction.”

“And how much will this flat of yours cost?” Ada asks seriously.

“Around five shillings a week for a two-up two down******** semi********* in the Chalk Hill Estate, Mrs. Watsford.” Frank says, gaining strength in his convictions, filling his voice with a new boldness and surety. “And, if we were to live in a flat above the grocers’ shop, it would be even less, and we’d still have all the modern conveniences like hot and cold running water and an inside privy.”

“Nothing wrong with an outdoor privy.” remarks George.

“Nothing wrong with an indoor one, either, Mr. Watsford. I only the best for Edith and our children.”

“Alright, young Frank.” George backs down.

“Now, going back to what I had eluded to before, Frank,” Ada continues. “You’re a good lad, Frank Leadbetter, and I can see that by your thoughtfulness and your manners. I know you love our Edith, and you obviously treat her very well…”

“As she deserves, Mrs. Watsford.” Frank assures her.

“I know, Frank.” Ada tempers him. “However, the vehemence with which you spurn your new ideas around is still a bit frightening to me.”

“Oh, there’s nothing to be frightened of Mrs. Watsford.”

“But these labour unions of yours…” Ada’s voice trails off.

“I can assure you, Mrs. Watsford, the unions aren’t bad, and I am not a Communist.” Frank defends himself. “As I said just before, I only want the best for Edith and for the family I hope we will have together. I just want a better world for all of us, and the unions will help with that. However, I swear that I’m not associated with any of those militant factions that popped up after the Russian Revolution. I believe in peaceable actions, discussion and compromise.” Frank looks earnestly at Ada. “I would never put Edith in any danger. I’m a hard working man who just wants a good future. Some of the finer details of it may be different to yours and Mr. Watsford’s, Mrs. Watsford, but at the end of the day, our ideals are the same, and whatever I do, Edith and her wellbeing is central in everything I do, and everything I have planned.”

Ada sighs and smiles. “Alright Frank. So long as she is, I can only give you my blessing too.”

“Oh thank you, Mrs. Watsford!” Frank exclaims, standing up and walking over to Ada who rises from her seat and embraces Frank kindly.

“Good lad!” George says, standing up as well and beaming over his wife’s shoulder, winking at Frank.

He reaches down and snatches up two more biscuits from the fluted glass bowl on the tea table.

“George!” Ada scolds, not quick enough to catch him this time.

He smiles back at her gormlessly.

“At this rate I’m going to have to let out that vest of yours, George Wastford!” Ada remarks.

George turns to Frank. “Are you sure you want the joy of these moments of wedded bliss, Frank my boy?” he asks jokingly.

*Originating in Seventeenth Century England, the term pin money first meant “an allowance of money given by a husband to his wife for her personal expenditures. Married women, who typically lacked other sources of spending money, tended to view an allowance as something quite desirable. By the Twentieth Century, the term had come to mean a small sum of money, whether an allowance or earned, for spending on inessentials, separate and in addition to the housekeeping money a wife might have to spend.

**Button back upholstered furniture contains buttons embedded in the back of the sofa or chair, which are pulled tightly against the leather creating a shallow dimple effect. This is sometimes known as button tufting.

***McVitie's (Originally McVitie and Price) is a British snack food brand owned by United Biscuits. The name derives from the original Scottish biscuit maker, McVitie and Price, Ltd., established in 1830 on Rose Street in Edinburgh, Scotland. The company moved to various sites in the city before completing the St. Andrews Biscuit Works factory on Robertson Avenue in the Gorgie district in 1888. The company also established one in Glasgow and two large manufacturing plants south of the border, in Heaton Chapel, Stockport, and Harlesden, London (where Edith’s father works). McVitie and Price's first major biscuit was the McVitie's Digestive, created in 1892 by a new young employee at the company named Alexander Grant, who later became the managing director of the company. The biscuit was given its name because it was thought that its high baking soda content served as an aid to food digestion. The McVitie's Chocolate Homewheat Digestive was created in 1925. Although not their core operation, McVitie's were commissioned in 1893 to create a wedding cake for the royal wedding between the Duke of York and Princess Mary, who subsequently became King George V and Queen Mary. This cake was over two metres high and cost one hundred and forty guineas. It was viewed by 14,000 and was a wonderful publicity for the company. They received many commissions for royal wedding cakes and christening cakes, including the wedding cake for Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Phillip and Prince William and Catherine Middleton. Under United Biscuits McVitie's holds a Royal Warrant from Queen Elizabeth II.

****The original Caledonian Market, renown for antiques, buried treasure and junk, was situated in in a wide cobblestoned area just off the Caledonian Road in Islington in 1921 when this story is set. Opened in 1855 by Prince Albert, and originally called the Metropolitan Meat Markets, it was supplementary to the Smithfield Meat Market. Arranged in a rectangle, the market was dominated by a forty six metre central clock tower. By the early Twentieth Century, with the diminishing trade in live animals, a bric-a-brac market developed and flourished there until after the Second World War when it moved to Bermondsey, south of the Thames, where it flourishes today. The Islington site was developed in 1967 into the Market Estate and an open green space called Caledonian Park. All that remains of the original Caledonian Markets is the wonderful Victorian clock tower.

*****The meaning of the very British term “shall I be mother” is “shall I pour the tea?”

******The Italian quarter of London, known commonly today as “Little Italy” is an Italian ethnic enclave in London. Little Italy’s core historical borders are usually placed at Clerkenwell Road, Farringdon Road and Rosebery Avenue - the Saffron Hill area of Clerkenwell. Clerkenwell spans Camden Borough and Islington Borough. Saffron Hill and St. Peter’s Italian Catholic Church fall within the Camden side. However, even though this was the traditional enclave for Italians, immigrants moved elsewhere in London, bleeding into areas like Islington and Soho where they established bars, cafes and restaurants which sold Italian cuisine and wines.

*******Doolally is British and Irish slang for a person who is eccentric or has gone mad. It originated in the military.

*******Metroland is a name given to the suburban areas that were built to the north-west of London in the counties of Buckinghamshire, Hertfordshire and Middlesex in the early part of the Twentieth Century that were served by the Metropolitan Railway. The railway company was in the privileged position of being allowed to retain surplus land; from 1919 this was developed for housing by the nominally independent Metropolitan Railway Country Estates Limited (MRCE). The term "Metroland" was coined by the Met's marketing department in 1915 when the Guide to the Extension Line became the Metro-land guide. It promoted a dream of a modern home in beautiful countryside with a fast railway service to central London until the Met was absorbed into the London Passenger Transport Board in 1933.

********Two-up two-down is a type of small house with two rooms on the ground floor and two bedrooms upstairs. There are many types of terraced houses in the United Kingdom, and these are among the most modest. The first two-up two-down terraces were built in the 1870s, but the concept of them made up the backbone of the Metroland suburban expansions of the 1920s with streets lined with rows of two-up two-down semi-detached houses in Mock Tudor, Jacobethan, Arts and Crafts and inter-war Art Deco styles bastardised from the aesthetic styles created by the likes of English Arts and Crafts Movement designers like William Morris and Charles Voysey.

*********A semi-detached house (known more commonly simply as a semi) is a house joined to another house on one side only by a common wall.

This cluttered and old fashioned, yet cosy front parlour may look realistic to you, however it is in fact made up of pieces from my 1:12 miniatures collection, including pieces from my childhood.

You may think that by 1926 when this story is set, that homes would have been more modern and less Victorian, and many were. However, there were a lot of people during this era who grew up and established their homes during the reign of Queen Victoria and did not want to update their homes, or could not afford to do so, so an interior like this would not have been uncommon in the 1920s and even in the lead up to and during the Second World War.

Fun things to look for in this tableau include:

The old fashioned high backed Victorian chairs with their barley twist detailing and brass casters were made by Town Hall Miniatures

Ada’s collection of commemorative plates of Queen Victoria’s Diamond Jubilee in 1897, the Coronation of King Edward VII and Queen Alexandra in 1902 and the Coronation of King George V and Queen Mary in 1911 on the sideboard and the whatnot are all made by the British miniature artist Rachel Munday. The plate of Edward VIII on the far left is a piece of souvenir ware from around 1905 and is made of very finely pressed tin.

The bust of Queen Victoria was made by Warwick Miniatures in Ireland, who are well known for the quality and detail applied to their pieces. It has been hand painted by me.

The Victorian Prince of Wales (later King Edward VII) vase in the centre of the fireplace has been hand made, painted and gilded by Welsh miniature ceramist Rachel Williams who has her own studio, V&R Miniatures, in Powys.

The Watsford family photos on the mantlepiece are all real photos, produced to high standards in 1:12 size on photographic paper by Little Things Dollhouse Miniatures in Lancashire. The frames are from various suppliers, but all are metal.

The church and castle statues at either end of the fireplace are made of resin and are hand painted. They came from Kathleen Knight’s Dolls’ House Shop in the United Kingdom.

Sitting on the central pedestal table is the cottage ware teapot Edith gave her mother as a gift a few years ago. Made by French ceramicist and miniature artisan Valerie Casson, it has been decorated authentically and matches in perfect detail its life-size Price Washington ‘Ye Olde Cottage Teapot’ counterparts. The top part of the thatched rood and central chimney form the lid, just like the real thing. Valerie Casson is renown for her meticulously crafted and painted miniature ceramics.

Also on the table, the glass dish of biscuits is an artisan piece. The bowl is made from real glass with the biscuits attached and hand painted. It came from Beautifully Handmade Miniatures in Kettering. The teacups, milk jug and sugar bowl also come from Kathleen Knight’s Dolls’ House Shop.

Ada’s wicker sewing basket, sitting closed to show off its pretty florally decorated top, has knitting needles sticking out of it. The basket was hand made by Mrs. Denton of Muffin Lodge in the United Kingdom.

The fireplace, the whatnot, the central pedestal table, the embroidered footstool by the fireplace, the brass fire irons and the ornate black japanned cane table on which Ada’s sewing box stand also came from Kathleen Knight’s Dolls’ House Shop.

The sideboard is a piece I bought as part of a larger drawing room suite of dolls house furniture from a department store when I was a teenager.

The collection of floral vases on the bottom two tiers of the whatnot came from an online stockist of miniatures on E-Bay.

The vase of flowers are all beautifully made by hand by the Doll House Emporium and inserted into a real, hand blown glass vase.

The little white vase in the forefront of the photo is mid Victorian and would once have been part of a tiny doll’s tea service. It is Parian Ware. Parian Ware is a type of biscuit porcelain imitating marble. It was developed around 1845 by the Staffordshire pottery manufacturer Mintons, and named after Paros, the Greek island renowned for its fine-textured, white Parian marble, used since antiquity for sculpture. I have had it since I was about ten years old.

The ‘home sweet home’ embroidery and the painting on the wall come from online shops who sell dollhouse miniatures, as does the Art Nouveau vase on the left hand side of the picture.

20250329_045801jqgw99mkfw0apydfzk35des9 by Adamant41

Available under a Creative Commons by license

20250329_045801jqgw99mkfw0apydfzk35des9