The Double Silhouette: Celebrating Pride Month through the Victorian Hairwork of Sylvia Drake and Charity Bryant

The Double Silhouette: Celebrating Pride Month through the Victorian Hairwork of Sylvia Drake and Charity Bryant

The Double Silhouette: Celebrating Pride Month through the Victorian Hairwork of Sylvia Drake and Charity Bryant

The Double Silhouette, housed at the Henry Sheldon Museum, stands not only as a beautiful testament to 19th-century hairwork artistry and silhouette creation, highlighting the era's intricate craftsmanship, but also celebrates the enduring love story of Sylvia Drake (1784-1868) and Charity Bryant (1777-1851), two remarkable women whose relationship continues to inspire and resonate today. Having lived as a married couple for over forty years, their unique double portrait is considered one of the earliest known images of a same-gender couple in America. The two women are buried together at Weybridge Hill Cemetery, sharing a single tombstone that commemorates their life together.

Read More
Victorian Era Women: The DIY OGs

Victorian Era Women: The DIY OGs

An article from the Household Arts section of the September 1877 The Ladies’ Floral Cabinet and Pictorial Home Companion suggests that women who endeavored to gift their husband or friend a hairwork watchguard but couldn't afford to buy one might consider adopting a do-it-yourself approach and instructs how they can make it themselves.

Read More