Thursday, March 1, 2012
Home Sweet Home
Thursday, March 12, 2009
A Dream of Versailles

This photo shoot by the world-famous couturier takes place on the grounds of one of my favorite locales...Versailles. I can't imagine a more breath taking backdrop than the gardens of Versailles for any photo. Friday, March 6, 2009
I Love Loubou!

I was actually inspired to go look at the sight after reading Kelli's latest fabulous post at A Rendez~Vous With Style. She talks about Louboutin's Marie~Antoinette inspired collection. What could be better than that, Marie~Antoinette, shoes, and a French designer? It sounds heavenly to me! Thanks Kelli! A poke around her site is so much fun! I especially love all of the Parisian tidbits and vintage finds! She is a girl after my own heart!
The man and Legend~Christian Louboutin
A Louboutin Boutique
Ny Times showcasing the Ribbon shoe!
The inception of Louboutin's trademark red sole is somewhat vague, but it seems that he was inspired to paint the sole of his shoe red after seeing an assistant painting her nails (red) while he was working on a shoe design. He immediately seized the bottle of nail polish and painted it directly on to the sole of the (prototype) shoe. Being pleased with the effect, he originally planned to paint all of his shoes with different coloured soles, however, after seeing the popularity of the red soled shoe he abandoned this idea, and allowed the red sole to become his signature.~Excerpt from Wikipedia
At the Rodarte show
xoxo,
Judith~
Tuesday, January 6, 2009
The Furnishings

The furnishings were more or less well inventoried, some of them were put in storage and some were sent to government buildings, but the most of them were put up for public sale to help pay for the mounting costs of Revolution. The Revolutionary leaders were eager to see the last of Versailles and all its reminders of autocracy so they preferred foreign buyers to buy the objects from the palace and enticed them by selling them tax free, they came from all over Europe and America to take advantage of this. Much of today's Buckingham Palace is a legacy of the taste of the Prince of Wales whose agents took away shiploads of Versailles treasures.
Commissioned for Marie~Antoinette it bears the royal markings
This table probably came from the Trianon de Porcelaine, which is now where the Grand Trianon stands, a small house built for the King's mistress, Madame de Montespan. This table's marquetry of ivory and horn, painted blue underneath, would have followed the chateau's blue and white color scheme, imitating blue and white Chinese porcelain, a fashionable and highly prized material at the time. The table's top may be raised to form an angled reading or writing stand, while a drawer at the side is fitted for writing equipment. It is now housed in the Getty.
I always wondered how the Belvedere was furnished and now I have an idea after finding this chair, also housed in the Getty. This chair was part of a suite of eight side chairs and eight armchairs made for Queen Marie-Antoinette. Designed in the Neoclassical style with carved bands of ivy, laurel wreaths, and fluting, they stood in the salon du rocher of the Belvedere Pavilion located in the gardens of the palace of Versailles.
This might be might favorite, not because of its aesthetic but because of its history. Marie-Antoinette sat in this very chair while her servants arranged her hair and applied her makeup in her bedroom at the Petit Trianon. Known as a chaise de toilette, its swivel mechanism and low back were specially designed for performing the daily rituals of dressing. It is finely carved with bands of lily of the valley and ivy. This chair was part of a set of furniture delivered to the palace in 1787 that also included two armchairs, two side chairs, a fire screen, and a stool. The bed from the set is missing, but the rest remains at the Petit Trianon. The other pieces retain the original pastel-colored paint in yellow, blue, green, and white that has unfortunately been stripped from this chair.
This is a chaise à la reine, they were generally low and comfortably padded. This chair was once part of a fifteen-piece suite of seating furniture acquired secondhand from the upholsterer Claude-François Capin for Louis XVI at the palace of Versailles. 
Jean-Henri Reisener was just one of many who supplied the Royal household with luxurious furnishings. He is best known for the artistry of his marquetry and his specialty, mechanical tables with secret compartments. As Versailles' supplier of the Garde-Meuble Royal until 1785, Reisener supplied Marie-Antoinette and other high-ranking members of the court with countless pieces. ~Wikipedia (if you look him up her there are links to museums, where you can see his work, many of the pieces were for Marie~Antoinette). He was one of many cabinet makers who made furniture for the Monarchs of Versailles.
Founded by Louis XIV, the Garde Meuble was responsible for supplying the King, his family and the household with all of the movable elements of decoration: textiles, furniture, lighting accessories, table wares, silver and carpets. The Garde Meuble was responsible for keeping the Royal house up to date on trends and new styles of cabinet making. Could you just imagine being the "Interior Designer" to the King of France! How fun!
All of the furniture (including carpets, jewels, object d'art, etc.) for the Royal residences were inventoried in what is called the Journal du Garde Meuble for the years 1666-1792. Available to view at The Wallace Collection in England. All of these items of furniture were marked with their inventory numbers and the location they were to be (for example PT would indicate that the piece would reside in the Petite Trianon). If a piece like this goes up for auction and it is marked and located in the Journal, it can fetch quite a high price. This has also made it easier for historians to locate some of the furniture and bring it back to Versailles. It helps to authenticate the items as well.
This is the marking on the base of the above armoire that once belonged to Marie~Antoinette. The "W" signified it belonged to Versailles. 

Sunday, January 4, 2009
A Little Privacy...Please!





The scenery, paint and wallpaper have been restored, they refurbished the apartments with much of the original furniture. The staircase and wrought iron ramp have been refurbished. The ground floor, is now as it was at the end of the Ancien Regime, it is the guard room, billiard room, a réchauffoir with the furnace room and called silverware, here you can see two sets of manufacture de Sevres, including the bust "in pearls and barbels," commissioned by Marie-Antoinette in 1781. 
Behind the modern woodwork one can see the Louis XV painted décor in what was formerly a staircase.Samples of Louis-Philippe wallpaper have also been preserved Photo: D. Rykner
Some of Marie~Antoinette's personal effects. The museum wanted one to feel as though the Queen had just stepped out for a moment and you looking into a day in her life.
The Queen's famous portrait
Another new portion of the Petite palace open to visitors is the warming kitchen. This kitchen was used to warm the food brought from the main kitchen. The food was not prepared here as to not let the smell of cooking food permeate the Trianon while Her Majesty was enjoying her day. The executors of the grand refurbishment wanted to show the stark difference between the Noble Floor and the servants areas.

I was very lucky to meet a curator who was heading into the theatre, visitors were not allowed in at the time and my Mom & I were invited in. To see him unlock the great gate with his old keys and to be inside of that precious jewel box, virtually alone, was something I will never forget! I was allowed in the back of the stage and got a wonderful private tour *sigh*. These pictures do not do justice to the gorgeous shade of Blue this theatre is decorated in. To be inside is truly like being inside of a jewel box. Lush Velvet and yards of luxurious fabric sweep you up into another world. We sat on the very benches Marie and her friends may have sat on and looked onto the very stage Marie~Antoinette performed her much talked about plays! It is breathtaking. Luckily the Theatre was overlooked and untouched by the throngs of people looking for "the walls of the whore, plastered in Gold and Diamonds" during the Revolution as it is tucked away. It is in the exact condition the Queen left it in. You can also see an original backdrop displayed on the stage.
I may be mistaken but I do believe that it is here in the theatre that a grand reception was held for Louis & MA after they were married. The floor can be raised level to the stage floor and thus create a large room for a grand party! 
The Garden of the Trianon. "A furious Duc de Croÿ exclaimed in 1780 that 'the large green-house [the most costly and scholarly in Europe] has been replaced by tall mountains, a large rock, and a stream. Never have two acres of land been so totally changed, nor cost so much money.' In order to create her landscape garden, Marie-Antoinette changed everything. Between 1776 and 1783 architect Richard Mique built her a Chinese tilting ring, a Temple of Love, the Rock Pavilion, a theatre, and then the Hamlet. Receptions and nocturnal celebrations followed one after another, restoring to the Petit Trianon the spirit of the festivities that marked the early years of Versailles".
~From the official Versailles website
The Temple of Love, it is said that she would have secret meeting with Count Fersen here
The view of the Temple of Love from her bedroom window.
There is so much one could write about the Petite Trianon alone, not to mention the other sites related to it. I could spend a week exploring everything! So I will leave you with this, a few morsels of information about this magical place.
Bisou Mon Amis!
Photos via flickr











