Green here is silver-green. Brown is silver-brown.
(The distant silver-blue lagoon at top pretty much refuses to reveal itself unless clicked up to full size.)

Two chinoiserie canvases (in the archaic, blithely colonialist style of the 18th century) painted by Jean-Baptiste Le Prince (1734-1781).


I owe a lasting personal debt to Italian fashion designer Valentino (whose long career was glorified at this recent retrospective in Rome). Last year I was making a skirt for my daughter and struggling with a side-seam zipper. The fabric was embellished with swirling appliqued strips in heavy taffeta. These created three-dimensional surfaces on the fabric surrounding the zipper, which then would get crushed in a conspicuously unattractive way under machine stitching. Just at that time I visited the de Young Museum in Golden Gate Park and saw a collection of garments from the collection of famous New York fashion person Nan Kempner. On one of the mannequins was a 1970s Valentino gown in red silk chiffon with a bodice of tiny horizontal pleats. It zipped up the back. I stood and gazed at that zipper. It had evidently been hand-stitched with each stitch placed BETWEEN a pleat and NEVER on top of a pleat. Afterwards I went home and redid the skirt zipper for my daughter entirely by hand, using the Valentino method.