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Special Announcement: A New Release–WEDDING WAGERS, a new Timeless Regency Collection

Announcing a new Timeless Regency Collection: Wedding Wagers Three wagers.  Three couples. Three chances at Love. Let the bets begin. From the publisher of the USA TODAY bestselling & #1 Amazon bestselling Timeless Romance Anthology series in Regency Romance, comes WEDDING WAGERS, featuring bestselling authors Donna Hatch, Heather B. Moore, and Michele Paige Holmes. Available beginning today, August 20, 2018. Order here for instant delivery or copy and paste this link into your browser: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07D7JSNHL…

More Scandalous Talk about Regency Underwear–the Stockings

After all my scandalous talk of Regency underwear, here, here, here, and here, I am finishing off with a tamer post about the last layer of undergarments–the stockings. See? Only a little scandalous 🙂 Regency ladies wore stockings held up with garters either at the thigh or just above the knee. These stockings pictured at the left are knitted in blue and white silk. Stripes on any and all garments were popular in the 1790s…

Last Chance to get amazing anthology, WITH A KISS

With a Kiss, a ten-author romance anthology, is going out of print soon and off KU this month. Get yours while you still can! WITH A KISS: A Sweet Romance Anthology A collection of 10 sweet romance novellas by USA Today bestselling & award winning authors. Romances in this collection: DANCING TO FREEDOM by Traci Hunter Abramson: A Russian ballerina. An American hockey player. A forbidden romance. Can Katrina follow her heart when freedom is…

Regency Underwear, the Petticoat

Over her shift or chemise and her stays, a Regency Lady wore a petticoat. This resembles a sleeveless jumper with a scooped neckline. The petticoat helps create a smooth canvas over which ladies wore the transparent muslins and silks of the era that were intended to flow elegantly around a lady’s form. Period petticoats tie shut at the back. It is anchored at the back with hooks and eyelets. This pattern is smooth at the…

Regency Stays: facts and myths

During the Regency, Corsets were called Stays. This style of stays is called long stays. This is the kind of stays nearly every women, rich or poor, wore.  The material we used to make my stays was cotton twill. Later, I discovered that another good choice for stays or corsets is Coutil (or Coutille), a woven cloth created specifically for making corsets. I don’t know how authentic it is, but it has a nice, stiff…

More scandalous talk about Regency underwear

Getting dressed during the Regency seems to be quite an ordeal compared to today’s practices, but it really isn’t all that complicated. As I sit in my air conditioned office, glaring at the heat outside, it’s hard to imagine ladies would have been willing to do it. However, keep in mind that the weather in Regency England was much cooler tan it is today because they were near the end of a mini Ice Age.…

Regency House Parties

by Donna Hatch From the Archives: Regency House Parties A time-honored English tradition, dating back hundreds of years, is the House Party. In England, house parties served multiple purposes: the gathering of friends; an informal setting in which to discuss politics and possibly sway a member of Parliament; showing off one’s wealth to friends or anyone else the host is trying to impress; and it also could provide a last-ditch effort to help a young…

Regency Double-Barreled Guns

In my Regency Romance, The Guise of a Gentleman, my Regency lady, Elise, faces down a group of bad guys in the first chapter. Since I’d done my research, I knew if she were to have any chance at defending the man and boy they were trying to kill, she’d only be able to get off one shot because of the time and difficulty loading guns. So, at first, I’d decided to either have her…

Dove Cottage, a cottage to inspire poets

On the edge of Grasmere in England’s Lake District nestles a little cottage known as Dove Cottage, famous for being the residence beloved poet William Wordsworth and his sister Dorothy Wordsworth. The siblings lived there in harmony from December 1799 to May 1808, enjoying their “plain living, but high thinking.” The two-story limestone structure was originally an inn and pub called the “Dove and Olive Bough” during the 17th century. While living in what became…