stickyskin:

Almost all medieval feast foods were conveyed to the mouth by elaborate, and often elegant, finger choreography…However, both pinky fingers were extended, never touching food or gravy or sauce, reserved as spice fingers. Dipped into the salt, sweet basil, cinnamoned sugar, or ground mustard seed, then raised to the tongue, the spice fingers displayed a feaster’s digital finesse while adding another sensual pleasure: touch of food’s texture.
Some modern polite extensions of pinky fingers, serving no physical pur­pose, are cultural remembrances of medieval spice fingers. In fact, a medieval clerical encouragement for use of the fork was to eliminate the pleasure of touch. The fork was generally ignored until the late 16th century as a super­fluous and foppish metallic intrusion between sensual food and willing mouth. 
-Historian Madeleine Pelner Cosman
image: The Marriage Feast At Cana, traditionally attributed to Hieronymus Bosch

stickyskin:

Almost all medieval feast foods were conveyed to the mouth by elaborate, and often elegant, finger choreography…However, both pinky fingers were extended, never touching food or gravy or sauce, reserved as spice fingers. Dipped into the salt, sweet basil, cinnamoned sugar, or ground mustard seed, then raised to the tongue, the spice fingers displayed a feaster’s digital finesse while adding another sensual pleasure: touch of food’s texture.

Some modern polite extensions of pinky fingers, serving no physical pur­pose, are cultural remembrances of medieval spice fingers. In fact, a medieval clerical encouragement for use of the fork was to eliminate the pleasure of touch. The fork was generally ignored until the late 16th century as a super­fluous and foppish metallic intrusion between sensual food and willing mouth. 

-Historian Madeleine Pelner Cosman

image: The Marriage Feast At Cana, traditionally attributed to Hieronymus Bosch

(via unseeliequeen)

ohmondieuarchitecture:


Printemps (French for “Spring,” as in the season) was founded in 1865, by Jules Jaluzot and Jean-Alfred Duclos. The store was designed by noted architects Jules and Paul Sédille and opened at the corner of Le Havre and Boulevard Haussmann, in Paris France on 3 November 1865. The building was greatly expanded in 1874, and elevators (then a great novelty) from the 1867 Universal Exposition were installed.

ohmondieuarchitecture:

Printemps (French for “Spring,” as in the season) was founded in 1865, by Jules Jaluzot and Jean-Alfred Duclos. The store was designed by noted architects Jules and Paul Sédille and opened at the corner of Le Havre and Boulevard Haussmann, in Paris France on 3 November 1865. The building was greatly expanded in 1874, and elevators (then a great novelty) from the 1867 Universal Exposition were installed.

ohmondieuarchitecture:


Printemps (French for “Spring,” as in the season) was founded in 1865, by Jules Jaluzot and Jean-Alfred Duclos. The store was designed by noted architects Jules and Paul Sédille and opened at the corner of Le Havre and Boulevard Haussmann, in Paris France on 3 November 1865. The building was greatly expanded in 1874, and elevators (then a great novelty) from the 1867 Universal Exposition were installed.

ohmondieuarchitecture:

Printemps (French for “Spring,” as in the season) was founded in 1865, by Jules Jaluzot and Jean-Alfred Duclos. The store was designed by noted architects Jules and Paul Sédille and opened at the corner of Le Havre and Boulevard Haussmann, in Paris France on 3 November 1865. The building was greatly expanded in 1874, and elevators (then a great novelty) from the 1867 Universal Exposition were installed.

fathershane:

Love the dance move Jesus is doing on this month’s Magnificat cover. #resurrectionshuffle #canttouchthis #catholic

fathershane:

Love the dance move Jesus is doing on this month’s Magnificat cover. #resurrectionshuffle #canttouchthis #catholic

(via anglo-catholic)

sunrecords54:

questionableadvice:

~ Bohemia Nugget, May 2, 1902 (Cottage Grove, Oregon)via Historic Oregon Newspapers

I love this so much. Even the name of the source. Bohemia Nugget. How great is that name?

They don’t write ‘em like that anymore.

sunrecords54:

questionableadvice:

~ Bohemia Nugget, May 2, 1902 (Cottage Grove, Oregon)
via Historic Oregon Newspapers

I love this so much. Even the name of the source. Bohemia Nugget. How great is that name?

They don’t write ‘em like that anymore.

americangothgirl:

Photgrapher: Mor Ghermezi (thejoujou.tumblr.com)
Model/MUA/Styling: Alyson Melody (American Goth Girl In London)
Necklace: The Crypt Of Curiosities

americangothgirl:

Photgrapher: Mor Ghermezi (thejoujou.tumblr.com)

Model/MUA/Styling: Alyson Melody (American Goth Girl In London)

Necklace: The Crypt Of Curiosities

americangothgirl:

American Goth Girl In London. 
Claw necklace by the Crypt Of Curiosities.

americangothgirl:

American Goth Girl In London.
Claw necklace by the Crypt Of Curiosities.

unseeliequeen looking appropriately fey.

unseeliequeen looking appropriately fey.

worldofhabsburgs:

“Queens of Europe”
From left to right :
- Marie Henriette of Belgium, Maria Cristina of Spain, Olga of Greece, Victoria of the United Kingdom, Amelia of Portugal, Louise of Denmark and Norway.
- Elisabeth of Austria, Sophia of Sweden, Alexandra of Russia, Margherita of Italy, Augusta Victoria of Prussia.
- Emma and Wilhelmina of the Netherlands, Natalie of Serbia, Marie Louise of Bulgaria, Milena of Montenegro.
From [x]

worldofhabsburgs:

“Queens of Europe”

From left to right :

- Marie Henriette of Belgium, Maria Cristina of Spain, Olga of Greece, Victoria of the United Kingdom, Amelia of Portugal, Louise of Denmark and Norway.

- Elisabeth of Austria, Sophia of Sweden, Alexandra of Russia, Margherita of Italy, Augusta Victoria of Prussia.

- Emma and Wilhelmina of the Netherlands, Natalie of Serbia, Marie Louise of Bulgaria, Milena of Montenegro.

From [x]