Day 24 (final day!) of my #LadysMagazineAdventCalendar. Thank you for all the lovely comments and I hope it has piqued your interest. Today I bring you an image and a free gift! Pattern for a winter shawl from December 1796. The free gift? Today I launch phase two of https://ladysmagazine.omeka.net with another (fully searchable) 100 Georgian/Regency #needlework patterns from the #ladysmag for you to enjoy. #openaccess #digitalhistory @fiberarts @histodon. Wishing everyone peace and happiness!
The Lady's Magazine (1770-1819): Patterns of Perfection

The Lady's Magazine: Patterns of Perfection

Day 23 (of 24!) of the #LadysMagazineAdventCalendar is one of the hundreds of word puzzles (enigmas and rebuses) the magazine published. Can you solve “A Dish of Fruit”? The full text can be read in alt text if you click on the image (I’ll post the answer tomorrow). #wordgames #puzzles #crypticcrosswords
Day 22 of the #LadysMagazineAdventCalendar: Carriage Dress from October 1813. Not only do I love this frock but I love the self-referentiality of the plate, which sees the sitter holding a copy of the magazine in her hand. #dresshistory #womensmagazines #periodicals
Day 21 of the #LadysMagazineAdventCalendar: In the 19th century, Patrick Bronte burned volumes of the Lady's Magazine from the 1790s that had belonged to his deceased wife Maria, and which Charlotte Bronte cherished as a teenager. He feared the magazine contained 'foolish love stories'. Patrick Bronte likely never read the Lady's Magazine which was deeply cynical about love and candid about marital disharmony or spousal abuse, the subject of this short story, 'The Assault' from April 1798.
Day 20 of the #LadysMagazineAdventCalendar is Rynwick (sometimes Renwick or Rhynwick) Williams. Williams, popularly known as The Monster, was a Welsh florist, who was convicted in 1790 of stabbing around 50 women in the thighs, buttocks and face in the London streets. The magazine (unusually) covered his trial, which had caused a media frenzy.
Day 19 of the #LadysMagazineAdventCalendar: Travel Writing, both domestic and international, was hugely popular in this periodical. Domestic travel series or one-off pieces seem often to have been original, but the magazine also published abridged and extracted versions of expensive travel writing volumes which it “adapted for the ladies”, including its 5-year serialization of Cook’s third voyage, from which this engraving is taken. #travelwriting #Georgian #CaptainCook #imperialism
Day 18 of the #LadysMagazineAdventCalendar: I am fascinated about the culture of pseudonymity and the many different (and often serious or radical) uses to which it was put by contributors. Then there are other kinds of pseudonym. The double pun here in this letter to the magazine’s medical columnist (Dr Turnbull, the successor to Dr Cook) is something else. Fanny Rash has impetuously plunged her face into a bowl of water and needs advice #innuendo #psedonymity #histodon #bookstadon
Day 17 of the #LadysMagazineAdventCalendar is Mary Pilkington (1761-1825), a prolific writer of children’s books, biography, novels for the Minerva and other presses and periodical writing. This former governess turned to writing to support herself and her mother after her father and husband died. Pilkington’s role as section editor for the Lady’s Monthly Museum (1798-1828) is widely known but not her more than 10 years writing for the Lady’s Magazine. She is one of my favourite of its writers.
Day 16 of the #LadysMagazineAdventCalendar. It's also the 247th birthday of #JaneAusten. So I bring you her aunt, Mrs Leigh Perrot. This lovely portrait appeared in the April 1800 issue to accompany a transcript of her trial at Taunton Assizes for stealing a card of lace from the Bath haberdasher, Elizabeth Gregory. She was acquitted after just 15 minutes of deliberation.
Day 15 of the #LadysMagazineAdventCalendar: The monthly “To Our Correspondents” columns in the Lady’s Magazine are every bit as interesting to me as the contents proper. They offer invaluable insights into the periodical’s editorial policies, it’s readers and authors. Editors could be caustic, though. Anna Maria’s submission on an elegy on her deceased canary clearly won her no friends at the magazine. She was urged to use the paper it was written on it to light the bird’s funeral pyre. Ouch!