I’m just curls and teeth tbh 💜
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Bejeweled Furby - update
So I just reached out to the auction house before my previous post, asking for more relevant information and photos, this was the email o received:
“Please find your requested photographs below. The Tiara uses a brooch attachment.
We don’t have any indicators on which edition the furby is, but we know that this furby was owned by the owner”
As far as I know these photos haven’t been shared publicly before.
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Trollbeads is a Danish jewelry company best known for their expensive glass and silver beads. They’re the sort of jewelry you’re supposed to buy or give as a gift for special occasions. I admittedly have a soft spot for them because it’s the only place I can get silver pendants depicting trolls and other Nordic folklore creatures and recently they’ve been advertising pretty aggressively to me because I bought their chihuahua bead.
They especially want me to buy this bead.
It’s a male troll standing on a classic Danish designer chair according to the description. Only I had to visit their store to see it from this angle. Every ad I get looks like THIS
I don’t even know what sort of “special occasion” this would be for other than to show you appreciate your bottom/top.
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Costanté “For Before + Beyond” Campaign photographed by Louisa Meng
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TUDOR WEEK 2022
DAY 4 FAVORITE TUDOR RELATED RELIC → (1 OF 2) THE CHEQUERS RING
Worn by Elizabeth I, the Chequers Ring most likely dates back to the 1570s. The ring’s hoop is mother-of-pearl with gold sheet with rubies. Atop the bezel is an E for Elizabeth (the stones on the E are white diamonds) and R for Regina (the R is made out of cobalt enamel). Beneath the bezel is the image of a phoenix (the Seymour family symbol).
The locket (the bezel with hinges) contains two portraits: one of Elizabeth (the portrait of the older woman with the ruby) and one of a younger woman (with a diamond). A lot of people assert that the portrait of the younger woman with the French Hood is Elizabeth’s mother, Anne Boleyn. However, it has been argued that the younger woman could also be Katherine Parr, Elizabeth’s stepmother. Evidence that supports the argument that the portrait of the younger woman is Katherine Parr is that the woman has red hair, when Anne Boleyn was famous for her dark hair. Furthermore, Katherine Parr married into the Seymour family upon being widowed in 1547, which could account for the phoenix on the back of the bezel.
Photos
1. Wiki Commons
2. and 3. British Library
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Costanté “For Before + Beyond” Campaign photographed by Louisa Meng
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