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Figma figures of famous characters in art history AKA all I want for Christmas
Source and more
Thanks @maiathoustra for sharing ♥
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Bouquet of flowers, Pierre-Auguste Renoir
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“Sir, would you gallop with us?”
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French ball gown worn by Queen Maud of Norway, 1900s.
Photo by Frode Larsen. The National Museum of Art, Architecture and Design, Oslo, Norway.
Queen Maud of Norway was renowned for her stylish dress. Daughter of Edward VII and Queen Alexandra, she was born a princess and became Queen of Norway in 1905. She had exemplary taste and a strong interest in fashion, and her royal lifestyle required appropriate dress for every occasion. Her wardrobe includes a range of stunning creations dating from her wedding trousseau of 1896 to the latest House of Worth designs purchased just months before her death in 1938.
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Tahitian landscape, 1897, Paul Gauguin
Medium: watercolor on paper
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Peasant with a Stick, 1881, Vincent van Gogh
Medium: chalk on paper
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Wilhelmine Louise, Princess of Prussia
Friedrich Wilhelm von Schadow, ca. 1840
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A celebratory “poster” from the Romanov tercentary, 1913
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Grand Duchess Olga Nikolaevna of Russia, 1914
Courtesy of GARF, shared by TatianaZ
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The Romanov women who were celebrated as great beauties in their day:
Empress Elizaveta I Petrovna (1709-1762)
“She is a beauty the like of which I have never seen … an amazing complexion, glowing eyes, a perfect mouth, a throat and bosom of rare whiteness. She is tall in stature, and her temperament is very lively. One senses in her a great deal of intelligence and affability, but also a certain ambition.”
Empress Elizaveta Alexeievna (1779-1826)
“Her features were fine and even, and her face a perfect oval; her beautiful complexion was not high in colour but its delicacy was totally in keeping with her expression, one of angelic sweetness. Her fair ash coloured hair floated about her neck and forehead. She was dressed in a simple white tunic, gathered by a belt knotted simply around a waist slender as a nymph´s. This young woman appeared exactly as I have described her, standing against the backdrop of an appartment ornamented with classical columns and draped in pink and silver gauze; she looked so ravishing I cried out, “Psyche!” It was in fact Princess Elisabeth, wife of Alexander.” 
Empress Alexandra Fyodorovna (1798-1860)
“The Empress is a tall graceful figure … her little head beautifully set and her expression pleasing and features regular, her hands and arms beautifully shaped and an air of imperial dignity and grace I never saw before. Her dress was perfect - simple and of dazzling whiteness, with a necklace, fringe, drops, etc. that I can only compare to dark blue glass eggs for never did I see their like.”
Grand Duchess Olga Nikolaevna (1822-1892)
“The Grand Duchess Olga, the second of the emperor´s daughter, has no rival in beauty among the Princesses of Europe, an in this instance, flattery, in asserting her to be the loveliest girl in her father´s dominion, scarcely outstrips the truth.”
Grand Duchess Alexandra Iosifovna (1830-1911)
[Alexandra] loved the Russian extravangance and magnificence, which was entirely in keeping with her extraordinary beauty, her marvelous hair in particular. A few considred that she resembled Mary Stuart, Queen of Scots, whose style of dress Sanny copied. All of Europe spoke of her astonishing jewels, of her pearl necklace, in which each pearl was the size of a nut. … [She] always took a passionate interest in anything which related to the beauty of other women. With typical feminine jealousy she would ask: “Who is the more beautiful, the Empress of Austria or I?” The Empress´s beauty was much praised, and the Grand Duchess Konstantin worried: “Is my hair as fine as the Empress´s? Don´t you think we have the same figure?”
Grand Duchess Elizaveta Fyodorovna (1864-1918)
“I like Ella very, very much. She is so feminine; her beauty is something I will never tire of. Her eyes are extraordinarily beautifully defined and her look is so calm and gentle. Despite her gentle nature and her shyness, one sense in her a certain self-assurance, a recognition of her own strength … [Her husband] was talking to me about his wife and he was enraptured by her, full of her praises.”
Princess Irina Alexandrovna (1895-1970):
“One day when I was out riding I met a very beautiful girl accompanied by an elderly lady. Our eyes met and she made such an impression on me that I reined in my horse to gaze at her as she walked on … [Another time] I had plenty of time to admire the wondrous beauty of the girl who was eventually to become my wife and lifelong companion. She had beautiful features, clear-cut as a cameo, and looked very like her father.“ 
Grand Duchess Tatiana Nikolaevna (1897-1918)
“She’s a grand princess from head to toe, so aristocratic and regal. Her face is pale matte, only the cheeks are slightly rosy, as if pink satin is trying to escape from just under her thin skin. Her profile is flawlessly beautiful, as if cut from marble by a great artist.  The widely set eyes provide uniqueness and originality to her face.”
Grand Duchess Maria Nikolaevna (1899-1918)
“Maria Nikolaevna can easily be called a Russian beauty. Tall, healthy, with sable eyebrows and a bright blush on her open Russian face, she is especially lovely to a Russian heart. You look at her and involuntarily imagine her dressed in the Russian boyar’s sarafan; snowy muslin sleeves around her hands; on the highly decorated bodice semi-precious stone; and above her white brow, a kokoshnik with the traditional pearls. Her eyes illuminate her entire face by a unique, radiant luster; they sometimes seem black as long eyelashes throw shadows over the bright blush of her soft cheeks.”
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Self-portrait paintings ; Albrecht Dürer, Raphael, Sofonisba Anguissola, Rembrandt, Élisabeth Vigée Le Brun, William Turner, Gustave Courbet, Vincent van Gogh
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Please try not to take this too seriously.
I think it’s time for someone to take the internet away from me bed.
Also sorry it’s really long. I’m unsure of how to arrange it otherwise.
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Princess Nadejda Petrovna of Russia.
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OTMA Photographs
Grand Duchesses Olga, Tatiana, Maria, and Anastasia of Russia, the daughters of the last Emperor and Empress of Russia, Nicholas II and Alexandra Feodorovna
House of Romanov 13/?
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Augusta, German Empress and Queen of Prussia
Detail of the Augusta of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach, the German Empress Consort and Queen Consort of Prussia in her coronation robes by Franz Xaver Winterhalter
House of Hohenzollern 1/?
House of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach 1/?
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новый альбомчик
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Rare footage of the British Royal Family shows Prince Philip playing in the sea with Prince Charles and Princess Anne.
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