Leenie Brown fell in love with Jane Austen's works when she first read Sense and Sensibility followed immediately by Pride and Prejudice in her early teens. As the second of five daughters and an avid reader, she has always loved to see where her imagination takes her and to play with and write about the characters she meets along the way. In 2013, these two loves collided when she stumbled upon the world of Jane Austen Fan Fiction. A year later, in 2014, she began writing her own Austen-inspired stories and began publishing them in 2015. Leenie lives in Nova Scotia, Canada with her two teenage boys and her very own Mr. Brown (a wonderful mix of all the best of Darcy, Bingley and Edmund with healthy dose of the teasing Mr. Tillney and just a dash of the scolding Mr. Knightley).
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4 thoughts on “Wordless Wednesday: The Recital, Frederic Soulacroix”
That artist does such beautiful work. The material on the clothes, the skin, the hair, the draperies, the furniture, just everything! Sheer perfection. It always seems to me as though the subjects might turn at any moment, and start talking to us. Everything is so beautifully life-like and luxurious. I would not have liked being the ladies maid that had to take care of that clothing, or the laundress. Far better to be the young lady that sat with her instrument waiting to be asmires. M. Soulacroix’s work is so beautiful, and opens a tantalizing picture into the past.
His work is captivating, and as you say, looks like it could come alive at any moment.
If you look closely… You can see her blush… ever so slightly from the attention being turned in her direction as she prepared to display. What perfection indeed. Man… beautiful, just beautiful.
That artist does such beautiful work. The material on the clothes, the skin, the hair, the draperies, the furniture, just everything! Sheer perfection. It always seems to me as though the subjects might turn at any moment, and start talking to us. Everything is so beautifully life-like and luxurious. I would not have liked being the ladies maid that had to take care of that clothing, or the laundress. Far better to be the young lady that sat with her instrument waiting to be asmires. M. Soulacroix’s work is so beautiful, and opens a tantalizing picture into the past.
His work is captivating, and as you say, looks like it could come alive at any moment.
If you look closely… You can see her blush… ever so slightly from the attention being turned in her direction as she prepared to display. What perfection indeed. Man… beautiful, just beautiful.
And she’s so intent on her preparation! 🙂