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 In the book there is an eccentric older lady whose clothes are out of date - just as in this ditty.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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More from @sarasheridan

5 Jul
Ok - so here's what happened at the weekend. I didn't tell you while it was going on cos Things. My daughter noticed a couple hanging round outside her flat, playing with her dog, Kim Chi with a squeaky toy, thru the railings. Aw, she thought, mebbe their dog died or sthg... /1
Kim Chi btw is a rescue, a sweet wee staffy with bad eyes and a lovely nature. The couple came back a few times - very kind to the dog and popping treats thru the railings now. My daughter filmed them and posted on her social media about these sweet people... /2
This weekend, there was a crash outside in the middle of the night. Molly thought it was the wind knocking over old vases outside on the bench. But it turns out someone was trying to climb down and there was a familiar ... squeak. Yes - the nice couple were dog nappers. WHAT? /3
Read 7 tweets
27 Jan
So: a short thread about the ongoing effect of the Holocaust (also called the Shoah) cos it's #HolocaustMemorialDay #LightTheDarkness #NeverAgain I grew up in a wealthy Jewish family in Edinburgh in the 70s. Nobody mentioned the Shoah. People didn't want to upset or scare kids./1
At the age when most kids learned Santa wasn't real, 1 of my Jewish pals found a video of a BBC doc about the death camps. They shared it. We were terrified. We came from families that had left places (Russia in the 1880s/1910s), Hungary, Germany None of us had realised why /2
My family regularly had summer parties. Big buffet. Music in the garden. Maybe 100 folk. We had a big house. It was at one of these parties I made the connection that some of my parents' friends (ie some of my friends' parents) had survived what had happened. /3
Read 10 tweets
25 Jan
I grew up in a house with an English Catholic Dad and a Scottish Jewish Mum. As a kid everything to me was just language. Just words. We spoke English with a sprinkling of Yiddish and Scots. I learned French and Latin at school and Ancient Hebrew at Jewish Sunday school ... /1
I think this is part of where my fascination for story came from. I still sometimes use vocabulary and don't know which language it comes from - most recently in a book where I used the word thole that I assumed was English but is really Scots. I only found out cos /2
the editor picked me up on it and I had to look the word up. At college I studied Anglo Saxon too (It was a breeze cos Yiddish) I feel incredibly lucky to have such a rich spread of vocabulary. I also love the sound of language I can't understand. I listen to Gaelic speakers /3
Read 4 tweets
27 Dec 20
THREAD: Scottish women who had impact in Europe. Born illegitimate in Oban, Victorian Rose Blaze de Bury moved to Paris, where she hosted a salon, wrote several novels, drafted an economic plan for Austria & helped set up a bank. She corresponded with Bismark. Jawdropping no? /1
Next, let's go to the EU era & Grace Campbell who went to court in Strasbourg in the 70s to have corporal punishment banned in UK schools. She won and Westminster had to legislate. What. A. Mama. vimeo.com/236910048 /2
Elizabeth Wiskemann gathered intelligence undercover in Switzerland during WWII. When the Allies refused to bomb Auschwitz she sent a coded msg she knew wd be intercepted & halted Hungarian Jewish deportations. Later she was Professor of International Relations at Edinburgh /3
Read 14 tweets
18 Dec 20
So Menopause adventures: A THREAD👇of things that have worked for me. It's a personal journey but here's what I did. 1st, when I started researching most of what I read was way too subjective so I decided I needed measureables. Tip 1: take your base temperature every day. /1
If you have an iphone the health app will let you track it. I discovered my temperature was on the low side. 37 is normal. Days I woke with a 35 were bad days. Days that started 36 were better. And yes, there are ways to bring your temperature up. Among the most effective ... /2
eating protein & carbs together every 4 hrs, eating breakfast when I got up & having dark hot choc before bed. Hot flushes: These happened separately - but keeping my basal temp at 37 ie improving my metabolism helped balance the hormones that gave me hot flushes. No question/3
Read 16 tweets
16 Dec 20
The v brilliant @madebymodren created a custom bag for carrying Dotty and Dotty loves it so much she won't get out of it. 😂🐾 when she moves I will take pics of the secret compartments for all my stuff (don't hold yr breath) It's so perfect! Thank you Sandra. Xxx Image
I love ordering things from independent makers. They take such trouble over everything.... so worth it. #shoplocal
There's even a wee custom blanket. Dotty is Queen Dachsy today. Image
Read 4 tweets

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