Today: a thread about how clothes inspire characters... cos you know I find fashion inspirational right? When I was developing characters for Fair Botanists I chose palettes for each woman. It annoys me that Regency women are always portrayed in muslin - it was a colourful era/1
This dress for example, was worn by one of the women (Elizabeth) to an evening party (her palette was pale pinks and blues) IRL this one is in the MET. Knowing what a character is wearing makes them easier to envisage as they move thru the story. I love the gauze effect... /2
Not all the clothes I chose were worn by characters tho - this beautiful jacket from an earlier era was in my mind when I wrote a scene outside the debtors' prison sited at Holyrood. One of the debtors is trying to sell it - and it's older & worn, which tells its own story. /3
Not all characters wear clothes that are in fashion. In the book there is an eccentric older lady whose clothes are out of date - just as in this ditty. She wears dresses like this one in @NtlMuseumsScot. We all know people who don't move on after a fashion is done, right? /4
There are loads of twitter historians who post fashion if this is your bag. I recommend @kateStrasdin@wikivictorian & @18thCent_Kitty Also - we mustn't forget shoes! There's a reason actors often start developing character thru their shoes. These belong to one of mine ... /5
This dress (also in the MET) is so elegant it's easy to forget that outfits were handmade. The embroidery wd have made it v valuable. If you're on insta I've started a Fair Botanists account & will be posting flowers, fashion & other inspiration. Follow: instagram.com/thefairbotanis…
And of course (ahem) preorders are tremendously welcome and help to reassure my publisher that they haven't made a terrible mistake backing an eccentric middle aged writer who has written a kind of romp set in Edinburgh in 1822.... Please & thank you here: uk.bookshop.org/lists/sara-s-b…
Tx for reading to the end of my thread about historical outfits. I'll post another one about tartan cos 1822 is a big year for tartan, let's face it. Meantime here are some lovely things that other writers have said about the novel. I'm so grateful. Writers need writers. Always.
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In The Secrets of Blythswood Square I curated a secret collection of erotic art. Set in Glasgow, 1846, I wanted to find real pieces to include. This took me down some rabbit hole. Hi. Welcome to the weekend. Here's what I found (stop reading now if you don't like shockers, OK?) 1
A 19th century spring loaded erotic carved wood novelty box. WHAT? This one sold in 2008 at Christie's for £625. (Open the lid, and the penis jumps out - I jest you not) 🫣 /2
She was dead by the time of my novel, but this chair belonged to Catherine the Great (of Russia) The detail though.... WILD /2
This week the UK Minoritised Languages Enquiry was underway. In the Scots section hardly any women were mentioned. Let's level that up with a 🧵 Lassies of the Leid, shall we? 1st, poet Violet Jacob "There's muckle lyin yont the Tay, that's mair tae me nor life" Glorious. /1
Next another poet, Helen Cruickshank. Her home in Corstorphine was a gathering place for the Scottish Renaissance ie Hugh MacDairmid et al. Also a suffragette. She was major. Not a word about her achievements, contribution or talents was spoken in English or Scots .... /2
Another 20th century Scots pioneer - Nan Shepherd's Living Mountain is a seminal book about the Scottish landscape. She's on our bank notes. There's a prize given annually for nature writing in her honour. Fantastic foremother. 11/10 /3
Today🧵of Scottish heiresses cos there's 1 in Secrets of Blythswood Sq. 1st: Marion Burrell who DIDN'T inherit: her parents left their treasures instead to Glasgow ie the Burrell Collection. Marion was treated appallingly. Her mother was an heiress in her own right too. Wild /1
Thwarted heir Elizabeth Sempill announced in Aberdeen's local paper in 1952 that he wished to be known as Dr Ewan Forbes-Sempill & went on to marry his housekeeper. The story appeared in Tatler: … somewhat focussed on the inheritance of a Highland estate. tatler.com/article/trans-…
Here's Catherine Sinclair whose most famous novel, Holiday House, remained in print for a century. Besides writing success, she was a popular philanthropist There's a monument to her in Edinburgh, just off Charlotte Square. /3
So - we've been renovating our dilapidated old flat & it's been an adventure (but not actually dangerous). Not till a couple of weeks ago when we found a mystery tank behind a walls. Luckily our amazing surveyor was here & she halted work. 'We need to see what that is,' she said
Twitter, it was an old kerosene tank that fired a building-wide heating system from 1930s - 1970s. Sometime in the 70s they just bricked it up and moved to natural gas. 'Wow,' I said naively, 'but it's empty right?' I'm not going to string it out. Twitter, it was NOT empty. OMG.
The tank is huge - 1600 gallons - it was about a quarter full. The surveyor turned pale. 'We have to get that drained,' she said on speed dial to the factor. Thing is, getting access to it has been tricky. So today 2 valiant blokes knocked a hole in our bathroom wall.
There's bungs to worry about right now & loads of ppl aren't sleeping well. So here are my tips 🧵for getting a decent 8 hrs. Blood glucose dips will wake you so go Miss Marple & have a wee snack at bedtime. My favie is proper hot choc: milk, real dark choc, sugar. Sorted. /1
Racing thoughts? Me too. I find playing 'Brown noise' helpful. It seems to stop my brain going off on one. Game changer. #sleep /2
Belle Brodie in #TheFairBotanists didn't come from nowhere, right? Essential oils can help. My cousin put me onto Aromatherapy Associates Deep Relax Bath Oil. I laughed at her but tried it. I laugh no more (too busy snoozing). /3
Today, a 🧵 of Scottish women worthy of statues. Statues memorialise in a specific way. They honour achievement. First, Jennie Lee, MP and founder of the Open University. The work she did as Arts Minister was transformative. Also = Mrs Aneurin Bevan. /1
Williamina Fleming, born Dundee 1857 became an astronomer at Harvard University where she classified 10,351 stars, & discovered 10 novae, 52 nebulae & 222 variable stars. Hon member of Royal Astronomical Society 1906 (not allowed to be a full member cos she was a woman - bah!) /2
Writer of over 90 works, Naomi Mitchison visited the US and talked to sharecroppers, went to Russia and write about rape & abortion and Botswana where she became hon grandmother to the Bakgatla tribe. Amazing. Intelligent. Our young women need to know they come from this. /3