tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1569751889486479823.post4565909052469041..comments2024-02-17T16:48:10.855+01:00Comments on Marmota's Dress Diaries: Conquer of the UPM!Hana - Marmotahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03532515160608083460noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1569751889486479823.post-19969707713906866562010-09-08T08:11:35.914+02:002010-09-08T08:11:35.914+02:00The stays are very pretty and have narrow tapes ru...The stays are very pretty and have narrow tapes running down certain seams, which I found really interesting. Of course, I'm no expert on 18th century clothing.<br />Also, the muslin on the bodice is muslin in British use, the lightweight kind we all know from the Regency era.<br /><br />Photographing fee is normal in the Czech Republic, and I also saw it in Lithuania, so I guess it's normal in Central and Eastern Europe. Usually, photography is forbidden, unless you pay a photographing fee - I think it's been the case in all the castles and palaces/chateaus/whatever you'd call it I've visited in the Czech Republic. Indoors, that is. I guess this is the museums' way of protecting their items from too much flashlight. I used flash only once yesterday (that's why all the photos are fuzzy and not very "focused"), one lovely portrait of a lady by Friedrich Georg Waldmüller from 1840 which hung too high on a wall, and I wanted all the details, and I was alone in the room. :-)Hana - Marmotahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03532515160608083460noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1569751889486479823.post-39547993966442451212010-09-08T02:14:19.106+02:002010-09-08T02:14:19.106+02:00The photos are fabulous! I have never heard of a p...The photos are fabulous! I have never heard of a photography fee, how interesting. The stays are very pretty.Stephanie Annhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13324411278252488163noreply@blogger.com