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Ep. 686: Cranford | Chapter 8
Book talk begins at 15:54
Lady Glenmire (a real baron's widow!) is in town, and the Cranford ladies can't decide whether to curtsey or completely ignore her—Mrs. Jamieson prefers the latter.
---------------------------------------------------------------
00:00 Episode start
1:55 - MAY RAFFLE - Sir Walter Scott Cross stitch from Rebecca S (Of Book it with Becca)
2:25 - Send your crafty videos: https://bit.ly/craftlit-be-crafty
4:45 - Plum Deluxe Tea-CraftLit's Discount Code! https://bit.ly/craftlit-pdtea
5:05 - Doom and Bloom book,
5:35 - Struthless's YouTube channel
8:01 - ELSIE BLOUSE on WEARING HISTORY wearinghistory.com
8:50 - American Dressmaking Step by Step book. Hope that helps!
10:40 - cool pollinator info to be found on sites like this! And Two-spotted Bumblebee on Coreopsis from Donna Schmidt
13:48-Anya's voice mail
BOOK TALK—Re-hash Notes
15:57 - Last week Visiting - RE-LISTEN
Pre-hash Notes
17:00 - Your Ladyship. Ended with Cherry Brandy (ha!) And Mrs Jamieson blurting out to everyone she would be hosting her SIL Lady Glenmire soon.
17:50 - shared subscription to newspaper. SOME REALLY CLEVER Austen-like wordplay in today's chapter. A lot of fun!
Characters in *Cranford* (Updated for Chs. 6–8)
18:25 - County families—the landed gentry in the county - you know…the only important people in the area :(
Miss Pole "I'll think of something to say back to her… tonight…"—nothing changes HA!
18:40 Peerage - prob refers to Burke's Peerage and Baronetage (first pub was 1826!!!) Only 16 Scottish peers were SELECTED to sit in the House of Lords; 19:00 -comparison to Job - God takes everything from him then torments him some more.
20:40 - The Arley's - we learned that Lady Arley shopped at Betty Barker's milliner shop last week and was part of why the shop eventually only served the well-to-do of Cranford ——which lets us know that there WAS a well-to-do set and our ladies are not they!
22:00 - Fourth at pool - another card game
22:45 - Sedulously-Dedication, diligence
22:55 - "thought you might want a description of Mrs Smith, Her being a bride". B/c often a bride's 1st appearance in society after honeymoon she wore her dress.
23:15 - ***nipped up her petticoats*** -
25:10 - Mr Milliner - introduce him to listeners - ignored back door (GASP)
25:15 - candle lighters as an excise LOL ALSO what's she making them out of?!??? - EXCELLENT WAY TO USE OLD BILLS & LETTERS!
Assumption no one will go LOL -
Poole's rationalization to go to party 🤣 - don't give her the satisfaction of hurting us (but mostly I HAVE A NEW CAP!!!)
27:23 - Phlegmatic - Mrs Jamieson - of the Four Temperaments: sanguine, choleric, melancholic, and phlegmatic - UNemotional
Very smart cap - Miss Pole -
Duty was to FIRST buy a new cap - everyone does b/c
when wearing a new cap, Cranford ladies were like Ostriches and didn't care what was on their bodies - lol -
28:00 - Brooches - popular now??
Dogs eyes -
Hair insides - Mausoleum/weeping willow
Stiff muslin - like brooch mounted on florettes
We're brooches out of fashion??!? -
30:00- LISTEN to the description of Miss Pole! HA!
Scotch pebbles - not really timely. Victoria bought Balmoral in 1848 and suddenly Scottish agates (found in stream beds with other semi-precious stones) were VERY popular
30:45 - Hair powder Over his coat collar - started in 1715 and was WAY out of date by now
*St James' Chronicle* is a 4-way shared subscription with Cranford ladies - Quarter share -
Mr Mulliner —ADD to cheat sheet -
He looked like a Sulky cockatoo. lol -
31:25 - her furniture—Era predates-Louis 14th (1638-1715) - remember people were cheap, furniture was not
32:12 - pembrook table - drop-leaf table
32:45 - Kaleidoscope - invented in 1817 by Sir David Brewster; Conversation Cards and Puzzle Cards - seen in the Doctor sub-plot of the Mini-series/"Mr Harrisson's Confessions (1851)
34:30 - Drawings on tea chests - Might be Tole painting? might be like this (which happens to be ***japanned!*** A tinplate tea chest, c. 1760, painted with naturalistic flowers and containing two tinplate tea canisters and a sugar box. Private collection)
Essential guide to tea chests and caddies
36:35 - torpid - mentally OR physically inactive
Agreeable and not formally - seated
36:40 - 10£ - would have purchased her whole ensemble - see below
A Lord, yet NOT a ***Lord*** - had become a common turn of phrase (A __- but not A ____), kind of like "because Reasons" has become shorthand in conversation.
Lady Glenmire and Mrs. Jaimeson - SIL
41:05 - Small lumps of sugar - b/c sugar was lumped in-house, not purchased in pre-squared form
Preference, Ombré, Quadrille, ***Basto***, Spadille - card games and Basto=Ace of Clubs is 3rd highest trump card in Ober and Quadrille. By playing it, Misss Pole makes Lady GLenmire use up the highest trump spadrille - the Ace of Spades
41:50 - Mrs Forrester's (of Cow fame) LACE STORY!
43:00 - Catholic Emancipation Bill = 1829 gave Catholics access to certain public offices from which they had previously been barred. This would have exactly ZERO impact on the making of Brussels Lace.
42:30 - Emetic + top-boot *(in the early 1800s, Wellingtons were sometimes referred to as "top boots". 42:50 - The term "top boots" was used for high-cut boots, often associated with riding or military wear, and Wellingtons were a popular type of boot in that category)* - emetic causes vomiting (NOT as done in the mini-series)
43:30 - astronomy/astrology - Francis Moor's astrological predictions
Post-chapter Notes
Martha no family in town?
LOVE the "How do we address a Lady - I forgot!"
HA! Mrs Jaimeson seems pretty desperate for company by the time the ladies visit! HA!
- LOVE Mulliner relationship with All The Women - ugh…mansplaining.
miss Pole's triumphant first comment -
The DOG gets the cream!!?!? We were as intelligent and sensible as the dog - HA!!!
Mrs Forrester is wearing VOMIT LACE! HA!
LACE EPISODE PUT "PLAUSIBLE" on screen like mythbusters
LEANNE LACE VIDEO
Additional notes for the lace video at the end:
Lace of Long Ago
1920s Belgian Lace Makers
Nalbinding
Kerouac's manuscript
Miscellaneous
Clothing costs research (some)
MeasuringWorth.com
Cunnington, C. Willett. *English Women's Clothing in the Nineteenth Century* (1937)
Ribeiro, Aileen. *Dress and Morality* (1986)
Recollections: Victorian Clothing Costs
Don't forget to send us your crafty videos
BOOK/WATCH PARTIES coming up in 2025: Last Thursday of every month, 8pm Eastern:
Jun—Princess Bride (book—there are many versions - Heather has notes on which Forward to read)
Jul—Princess Bride (movie)
Aug—The Last Unicorn (book)
Sep—The Last Unicorn (movie)
Oct—Random Harvest (book)
Nov—Random Harvest (movie)
Dec—Lamb: The Gospel According to Biff, Christ's Childhood Pal (book)
*CraftLit's Socials*
• Find everything here: https://www.linktr.ee/craftlitchannel
• Join the newsletter: http://eepurl.com/2raf9
• Podcast site: http://craftlit.com
• Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/CraftLit/
• Facebook group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/craftlit
• Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/craftlit/
• TikTok podcast: https://www.tiktok.com/@craftlit
• Email: [email protected]
• Previous CraftLit Classics can be found here: https://bit.ly/craftlit-library-2023
*SUPPORT THE SHOW!*
• CraftLit App Premium feed bit.ly/libsynpremiumcraftlit (only one tier available)
• PATREON: https://patreon.com/craftlit (all tiers, below)
——Walter Harright - $5/mo for the same audio as on App
——Jane Eyre - $10/mo for even-month Book Parties
——Mina Harker - $15/mo for odd-month Watch Parties
*All tiers and benefits are also available as*
—*YouTube Channel Memberships*
—*Ko-Fi* https://ko-fi.com/craftlit
—*NEW* at CraftLit.com — Premium Memberships https://craftlit.com/membership-levels/
*IF you want to join a particular Book or Watch Patry but you don't want to join any of the above membership options*, please use PayPal.me/craftlit or CraftLit @ Venmo and include what you want to attend in the message field. Please give us at least 24 hours to get your message and add you to the attendee list.
• Download the FREE CraftLit App for iOS or Android (you can call or email feedback straight from within the app)
• Call 1-206-350-1642
By Heather Ordover4.7
426426 ratings
Ep. 686: Cranford | Chapter 8
Book talk begins at 15:54
Lady Glenmire (a real baron's widow!) is in town, and the Cranford ladies can't decide whether to curtsey or completely ignore her—Mrs. Jamieson prefers the latter.
---------------------------------------------------------------
00:00 Episode start
1:55 - MAY RAFFLE - Sir Walter Scott Cross stitch from Rebecca S (Of Book it with Becca)
2:25 - Send your crafty videos: https://bit.ly/craftlit-be-crafty
4:45 - Plum Deluxe Tea-CraftLit's Discount Code! https://bit.ly/craftlit-pdtea
5:05 - Doom and Bloom book,
5:35 - Struthless's YouTube channel
8:01 - ELSIE BLOUSE on WEARING HISTORY wearinghistory.com
8:50 - American Dressmaking Step by Step book. Hope that helps!
10:40 - cool pollinator info to be found on sites like this! And Two-spotted Bumblebee on Coreopsis from Donna Schmidt
13:48-Anya's voice mail
BOOK TALK—Re-hash Notes
15:57 - Last week Visiting - RE-LISTEN
Pre-hash Notes
17:00 - Your Ladyship. Ended with Cherry Brandy (ha!) And Mrs Jamieson blurting out to everyone she would be hosting her SIL Lady Glenmire soon.
17:50 - shared subscription to newspaper. SOME REALLY CLEVER Austen-like wordplay in today's chapter. A lot of fun!
Characters in *Cranford* (Updated for Chs. 6–8)
18:25 - County families—the landed gentry in the county - you know…the only important people in the area :(
Miss Pole "I'll think of something to say back to her… tonight…"—nothing changes HA!
18:40 Peerage - prob refers to Burke's Peerage and Baronetage (first pub was 1826!!!) Only 16 Scottish peers were SELECTED to sit in the House of Lords; 19:00 -comparison to Job - God takes everything from him then torments him some more.
20:40 - The Arley's - we learned that Lady Arley shopped at Betty Barker's milliner shop last week and was part of why the shop eventually only served the well-to-do of Cranford ——which lets us know that there WAS a well-to-do set and our ladies are not they!
22:00 - Fourth at pool - another card game
22:45 - Sedulously-Dedication, diligence
22:55 - "thought you might want a description of Mrs Smith, Her being a bride". B/c often a bride's 1st appearance in society after honeymoon she wore her dress.
23:15 - ***nipped up her petticoats*** -
25:10 - Mr Milliner - introduce him to listeners - ignored back door (GASP)
25:15 - candle lighters as an excise LOL ALSO what's she making them out of?!??? - EXCELLENT WAY TO USE OLD BILLS & LETTERS!
Assumption no one will go LOL -
Poole's rationalization to go to party 🤣 - don't give her the satisfaction of hurting us (but mostly I HAVE A NEW CAP!!!)
27:23 - Phlegmatic - Mrs Jamieson - of the Four Temperaments: sanguine, choleric, melancholic, and phlegmatic - UNemotional
Very smart cap - Miss Pole -
Duty was to FIRST buy a new cap - everyone does b/c
when wearing a new cap, Cranford ladies were like Ostriches and didn't care what was on their bodies - lol -
28:00 - Brooches - popular now??
Dogs eyes -
Hair insides - Mausoleum/weeping willow
Stiff muslin - like brooch mounted on florettes
We're brooches out of fashion??!? -
30:00- LISTEN to the description of Miss Pole! HA!
Scotch pebbles - not really timely. Victoria bought Balmoral in 1848 and suddenly Scottish agates (found in stream beds with other semi-precious stones) were VERY popular
30:45 - Hair powder Over his coat collar - started in 1715 and was WAY out of date by now
*St James' Chronicle* is a 4-way shared subscription with Cranford ladies - Quarter share -
Mr Mulliner —ADD to cheat sheet -
He looked like a Sulky cockatoo. lol -
31:25 - her furniture—Era predates-Louis 14th (1638-1715) - remember people were cheap, furniture was not
32:12 - pembrook table - drop-leaf table
32:45 - Kaleidoscope - invented in 1817 by Sir David Brewster; Conversation Cards and Puzzle Cards - seen in the Doctor sub-plot of the Mini-series/"Mr Harrisson's Confessions (1851)
34:30 - Drawings on tea chests - Might be Tole painting? might be like this (which happens to be ***japanned!*** A tinplate tea chest, c. 1760, painted with naturalistic flowers and containing two tinplate tea canisters and a sugar box. Private collection)
Essential guide to tea chests and caddies
36:35 - torpid - mentally OR physically inactive
Agreeable and not formally - seated
36:40 - 10£ - would have purchased her whole ensemble - see below
A Lord, yet NOT a ***Lord*** - had become a common turn of phrase (A __- but not A ____), kind of like "because Reasons" has become shorthand in conversation.
Lady Glenmire and Mrs. Jaimeson - SIL
41:05 - Small lumps of sugar - b/c sugar was lumped in-house, not purchased in pre-squared form
Preference, Ombré, Quadrille, ***Basto***, Spadille - card games and Basto=Ace of Clubs is 3rd highest trump card in Ober and Quadrille. By playing it, Misss Pole makes Lady GLenmire use up the highest trump spadrille - the Ace of Spades
41:50 - Mrs Forrester's (of Cow fame) LACE STORY!
43:00 - Catholic Emancipation Bill = 1829 gave Catholics access to certain public offices from which they had previously been barred. This would have exactly ZERO impact on the making of Brussels Lace.
42:30 - Emetic + top-boot *(in the early 1800s, Wellingtons were sometimes referred to as "top boots". 42:50 - The term "top boots" was used for high-cut boots, often associated with riding or military wear, and Wellingtons were a popular type of boot in that category)* - emetic causes vomiting (NOT as done in the mini-series)
43:30 - astronomy/astrology - Francis Moor's astrological predictions
Post-chapter Notes
Martha no family in town?
LOVE the "How do we address a Lady - I forgot!"
HA! Mrs Jaimeson seems pretty desperate for company by the time the ladies visit! HA!
- LOVE Mulliner relationship with All The Women - ugh…mansplaining.
miss Pole's triumphant first comment -
The DOG gets the cream!!?!? We were as intelligent and sensible as the dog - HA!!!
Mrs Forrester is wearing VOMIT LACE! HA!
LACE EPISODE PUT "PLAUSIBLE" on screen like mythbusters
LEANNE LACE VIDEO
Additional notes for the lace video at the end:
Lace of Long Ago
1920s Belgian Lace Makers
Nalbinding
Kerouac's manuscript
Miscellaneous
Clothing costs research (some)
MeasuringWorth.com
Cunnington, C. Willett. *English Women's Clothing in the Nineteenth Century* (1937)
Ribeiro, Aileen. *Dress and Morality* (1986)
Recollections: Victorian Clothing Costs
Don't forget to send us your crafty videos
BOOK/WATCH PARTIES coming up in 2025: Last Thursday of every month, 8pm Eastern:
Jun—Princess Bride (book—there are many versions - Heather has notes on which Forward to read)
Jul—Princess Bride (movie)
Aug—The Last Unicorn (book)
Sep—The Last Unicorn (movie)
Oct—Random Harvest (book)
Nov—Random Harvest (movie)
Dec—Lamb: The Gospel According to Biff, Christ's Childhood Pal (book)
*CraftLit's Socials*
• Find everything here: https://www.linktr.ee/craftlitchannel
• Join the newsletter: http://eepurl.com/2raf9
• Podcast site: http://craftlit.com
• Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/CraftLit/
• Facebook group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/craftlit
• Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/craftlit/
• TikTok podcast: https://www.tiktok.com/@craftlit
• Email: [email protected]
• Previous CraftLit Classics can be found here: https://bit.ly/craftlit-library-2023
*SUPPORT THE SHOW!*
• CraftLit App Premium feed bit.ly/libsynpremiumcraftlit (only one tier available)
• PATREON: https://patreon.com/craftlit (all tiers, below)
——Walter Harright - $5/mo for the same audio as on App
——Jane Eyre - $10/mo for even-month Book Parties
——Mina Harker - $15/mo for odd-month Watch Parties
*All tiers and benefits are also available as*
—*YouTube Channel Memberships*
—*Ko-Fi* https://ko-fi.com/craftlit
—*NEW* at CraftLit.com — Premium Memberships https://craftlit.com/membership-levels/
*IF you want to join a particular Book or Watch Patry but you don't want to join any of the above membership options*, please use PayPal.me/craftlit or CraftLit @ Venmo and include what you want to attend in the message field. Please give us at least 24 hours to get your message and add you to the attendee list.
• Download the FREE CraftLit App for iOS or Android (you can call or email feedback straight from within the app)
• Call 1-206-350-1642

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