Drama on the Seine: A Compendium of Watery Turmoil

The Seine river flows through the heart of the northern region of France, including Paris, bringing life, business, and recreation to the city alongside an overflow of stories and events. It’s Paris’ ancient highway of activity and certainly the source of many people-watching spe … | Continue reading


@messynessychic.com | 2 years ago

13 Things I Found on the Internet Today (Vol. DCXII)

1. Reviving 17 Original Orient Express Carriages, Forgotten in Poland Now destined for a comeback on the storied Paris-Istanbul route, the 17 carriages discovered in Poland (12 sleeping cars, a restaurant car, three lounge cars, and a van) are being restored in France and will hi … | Continue reading


@messynessychic.com | 2 years ago

A Real Life Diagon Alley, Buried in Time

It may not have sold wands or grimoires, but this subterranean shopping alley remained just as hidden as J K Rowling’s, until it was accidentally stumbled upon in 2002 by builders renovating the Edwardian Royal Arcade, in Keighley, West Yorkshire, situated above it. Believed to h … | Continue reading


@messynessychic.com | 2 years ago

When Paris becomes a Ghost Town

If you’re not subscribed to the Messy Nessy Chic newsletter (hint hint), you may be wondering why we’ve gone a little quiet these past few weeks. The fact that the MNC HQ is based in Paris may give you a clue. You see, Parisians close up shop for August to chase the last rays of… | Continue reading


@messynessychic.com | 2 years ago

Before Parisian Runways, Fashion Week was Born on the Side of the Racetrack

In the latter part of the 19th century and early 20th century, spectating at the races was a glamorous event beyond comparison. Paris’ Hippodrome de Longchamp racecourse was the place to see and be seen; it was a stage where the bold and the beautiful would strut their perfectly … | Continue reading


@messynessychic.com | 2 years ago

Born into Slavery, She Became the First “Queen of Drag”

It’s a little before 11 PM on April 12th, 1888 in downtown Washington DC. President Grover Cleveland has just finished up a speech on what will become American Somoa, his wife Frances is already asleep, and, four blocks east, at the intersection of F and 12th Street, thirty Black … | Continue reading


@messynessychic.com | 2 years ago

Parisian Street Sellers of Yore

Shopping in Belle Epoque Paris wasn’t exactly … well, convenient. General stores and grocery stores were still a very novel concept in the latter half of the 19th century, and the few that existed were only catering to the wealthy elite. There was also a French law that restricte … | Continue reading


@messynessychic.com | 2 years ago

Bastille Day Street Parties of a Hundred Years Ago

Check out Le Petit Journal’s recap of lavish and loving Bastille Day street parties in 1914: “In none of the innumerable balls which were held in Paris during these festive evenings was a single serious incident reported. Few arguments, no fights. The people of Paris have proven … | Continue reading


@messynessychic.com | 2 years ago

Jane Avril, “The Strange” Poster Child of the Moulin Rouge

If you knew that “Satine”, Baz Luhrmann’s lead character in his 2001 movie musical Moulin Rouge! was in fact based on a real-life French can-can dancer called Jane Avril, the decision to cast Nicole Kidman might make even more sense. Avril, with her flaming red hair, thin lips an … | Continue reading


@messynessychic.com | 2 years ago

In 19th Century Paris, She Held a Permit to Wear Pants

A cigarette-smoking, pants-wearing, animal-dissecting painter, Bonheur spent her life doing exactly as she pleased. 2022 marks the bicentenary of the birth of Rosa Bonheur, an artist who opened countless doors for female creatives both in her home country of France and abroad. Bo … | Continue reading


@messynessychic.com | 2 years ago

13 Things I Found on the Internet Today (Vol. DCXI)

1. With Tennis in the Brain, check out the Wilson Tennis Ball Factory in Thailand Photos by Amanda Mustard found via Present & Correct. 2. This tiny Cor-beurre-sier chair From Instagram’s @suea 3. The picturesque Paris of Czech Artist Tavík František Šimon TavíTavik Frantisek Šim … | Continue reading


@messynessychic.com | 2 years ago

The Lost Art of the Miniature Golf Course

They go large in the States – even when it comes to the small stuff. And perhaps nowhere is that more true than with a particularly kitsch specimen of American vernacular architecture, the miniature golf course. A period of history defined by the automobile and the ease of travel … | Continue reading


@messynessychic.com | 2 years ago

And Now, Let’s Raise a Teacup to Teetotalism

Before the advent of the speakeasy, the ramshackle bar that sprung up and vanished as was required during the Prohibition era (and now turned a trendy locale for your friendly neighbourhood hipster), there was another hangout fast becoming everyone’s new favourite local in the mi … | Continue reading


@messynessychic.com | 2 years ago

Haute Couture? The Tudors Did it First

Just look at the details on that dress. Seriously, zoom in! Fashion trends have always been cyclical, and the latest inspiration may be coming from the ‘90s, the 1590s that is. The Tutor period marked not only a time of economic prosperity but also developments in the arts, notab … | Continue reading


@messynessychic.com | 2 years ago

13 Things I Found on the Internet Today (Vol. DCX)

1. A Prolific Female Pioneer Photographer Lora Webb Nichols left behind 24,000 images, 65 years of diaries (plus an unfinished memoir) providing “an intimate window into life on the Wyoming frontier in the early 20th century”, where she had lived up on a homestead since the late … | Continue reading


@messynessychic.com | 2 years ago

The Golden Age of the … Enema?!

Look, it wasn’t enough to have flawless skin, a great wig, and a plump derrière in 16th century France, you needed to have a spotless colon too. Luckily, there were a great abundance of people ready and willing to administer as many “clysters”, aka enemas, as your heart desired. … | Continue reading


@messynessychic.com | 2 years ago

The World’s Oldest Pharmacy, Still Selling Potions for Graverobbers and Queens

Once upon a time, the pharmaceutical industry was entirely in the hands of monks and nuns, and monasteries were at the cutting edge of intellectual learning and medicinal practice. Medieval medicine in Western Europe was composed of a mixture of pseudoscientific ideas from antiqu … | Continue reading


@messynessychic.com | 2 years ago

13 Things I Found on the Internet Today (Vol. DCIX)

“Women are like teabags. We don’t know our true strength until we are in hot water.” – Eleanor Roosevelt Today’s 13 Things is dedicated to women. 1. Tradeswomen, magazine for blue collar workingwomen in the ‘80s & ’90s it became an integral tool for organizing in a landscape of s … | Continue reading


@messynessychic.com | 2 years ago

When in Rome, Discover Hollywood on the Tiber

Italian cinema is synonymous with hauntingly special silver screen moments, the stuff that flashbulb memories are made of. Who could possibly forget the larger than life screen goddess Anita Ekberg – all platinum locks, bare shoulders and curvaceous black dress in Federico Fellin … | Continue reading


@messynessychic.com | 2 years ago

The Fateful Lovers’ Suicide that put the World at War

On the morning of January 30, 1889, three friends of Rudolf, the Crown Prince of Austria, broke down the bedroom door at his hunting lodge to find him dead, sitting by the naked corpse of his teenage mistress. For more than a hundred years, people have speculated wildly at the ev … | Continue reading


@messynessychic.com | 2 years ago

The American Art Scene was a Man’s World, Until They Came Along

When Francoise Gilot split from Picasso, he prevented galleries from buying her work. Camille Claudel’s lover, Augustin Rodin, signed a number of her sculptures as his own, and after their romance ended badly, it’s rumored he told the Ministry of Fine Arts to stop commissioning h … | Continue reading


@messynessychic.com | 2 years ago

Cool Down and Reminisce over the Wonders of Ski Ballet

There was a brief time in winter Olympic history when athletes would zip into their snow suites, strap on their skis, cue the music, and dance to victory. Ski ballet is like the love child of figure skating and skiing. Routines lasted for two minutes, and athletes competed alone … | Continue reading


@messynessychic.com | 2 years ago

13 Things I Found on the Internet Today (Vol. DCVIII)

1. This Abandoned French Chateau, on sale for €150,000  How it was: The castle dates back to the 15th century, located in the Loire-et-Cher region of France, 2.5 hours southwest of Paris. The castle was last the property of art dealer and collector Sylvain Durand (1928-2018) who … | Continue reading


@messynessychic.com | 2 years ago

The Most Famous Street in Paris You’ve Never Heard Of

Avenue des Champs-Élysées, Rue de Rivoli, Avenue Montaigne, each year millions of tourists follow the tired and testing formula of ‘been there, done that, bought the Eiffel Tower keyring’, and often leave the city with an unfortunate case of ‘Paris Syndrome’. As you may already k … | Continue reading


@messynessychic.com | 2 years ago

Surprise Surprise, a Medieval Feminist Movement Left Out of the History Books

Women have undeniably had a roller-coaster ride throughout the ages. Forever pawns in a power game, the role and image of women have been in constant flux, from being portrayed as the virginal, divine, untouchable ‘Mary Mother of God’ to ‘The Whore of Babylon’. The all-male regim … | Continue reading


@messynessychic.com | 2 years ago

Was the Colosseum Paid for with Pee?

What we know as the famous Roman “Colosseum” might have been paid for with pee, more specifically poor people’s pee. Built under the rule of Emperor Vespasian of the Flavian dynasty, he is one of the only known rulers in history to have imposed a urine tax on the sale and distrib … | Continue reading


@messynessychic.com | 2 years ago

Vintage Muse du Jour: Glorious Gloria, the Ultimate Heiress

The daughter of an American family whose name means “filthy rich” in common parlance, was also the center of a vicious custody battle, a muse, a mother, and a wife several times over. She endured unimaginable tragedy. She left her mark in the arts, and fashion, and today her famo … | Continue reading


@messynessychic.com | 2 years ago

13 Things I Found on the Internet Today (Vol. DCVII)

1. This book of colour shades depicted with feathers Check out the full book on Science History 2. Culture in Crips: Lays Flavours from Around the World Found on Lay’s Around the World, via Present & Correct. 3. Childhood Nostalgia (they just don’t make kids movies like they used … | Continue reading


@messynessychic.com | 2 years ago

Oh, The Fun We Could Have With This 1960s Ghost Town Theme Park For Sale

In today’s atypical real estate news, we head to Warsaw, Missouri, where a 20-cabin pioneer style settlement, including two original 1830’s cabins, is up for grabs. The whole 20 acres plot of land with everything on it is asking $295,000. Let’s take a look around…. Located betwee … | Continue reading


@messynessychic.com | 2 years ago

That Time they Stripped the White House Down to its Bones

When American President Harry S. Truman took office, there were many signs that the White House needed some construction updates. The literal breaking point came in June 1948, when the leg of First Daughter Margaret Truman’s piano fell through her second-floor sitting room’s rott … | Continue reading


@messynessychic.com | 2 years ago

A Brief Compendium of Advertising Fans

Folding fans have been long associated with feminine hands and wiles, whether they were used to pass clandestine messages to a lover, be rhythmically twisted by a flamenco dancer, or simply held close to keep a church lady’s neck cool. It was only a matter of time before someone … | Continue reading


@messynessychic.com | 2 years ago

It took a Hundred Years and Two Gays to Decode Her Diaries

Anne Lister has recently crept out of the shadows of what was her own gothic novel, penned almost two centuries ago. Like all things of the neo-Gothic late 18th century, hers was also a world of shadows, veils, intrigues and most of all, it concealed her obsessional love for othe … | Continue reading


@messynessychic.com | 2 years ago

13 Things I Found on the Internet Today (Vol. DCVI)

1. The Coffee Machine Museum The Coffee Machine Museum found via Present and correct) 2. This French Bath House for Sale Located in Amiens, asking 340K euros, found on Espaces Atypiques. 3. A Forgotten Chinese Bathhouse of Paris  Built in 1787 at 29 boulevard des Italiens, they w … | Continue reading


@messynessychic.com | 2 years ago

Tucked away in a Florentine Medici Villa is the World’s Rarest Citrus Collection

The dynasty of the lemon has fallen from the aristocratic tree and now occupies the common ground of contemporary cuisine. Lost to us are its exotic cousins, the strange fruits of all sizes, colours and shapes with the family name Citron, not lemon. Together with olives and garli … | Continue reading


@messynessychic.com | 2 years ago

And Now, the Rotel: A Rolling Hotel for the Brave Tourist

Is it a bus? Is it a hotel? Is it a mirage? Why, it’s the Rotel, of course! That’s a rolling hotel, to you and I. The brainchild of Georg Holtl, German entrepreneur and one-time actor, Rotel had its first passengers in 1945, taking them on the short journey from Tittling to Passa … | Continue reading


@messynessychic.com | 2 years ago

The Femme Fatale who Rejected Frida Kahlo’s Marriage Proposal

The phrase ‘femme fatale’ must have been invented for ‘La Doña’ – diva of the golden age of Mexican cinema, María Félix. Strong-willed, outspoken, controversial and drop-dead gorgeous, her life story is that of a movie script, an escapee from desperate and humble beginnings, teen … | Continue reading


@messynessychic.com | 2 years ago

In Turn of the Century Paris, They Tried to Get The World to Acknowledge African American Progress

These are the the face of stylish young African American women and men at the dawn of the 20th century. At the time, only 37 years after the end of slavery in the United States, Jim Crow was more than a series of rigid anti-Black laws, it was a way of life in America. But across… | Continue reading


@messynessychic.com | 2 years ago

13 Things I Found on the Internet Today (Vol. DCV)

1. Paper Moon photos from the late 19th to early 20th centuries Connecticut College professor Chris Steiner went deep with his collection of over 1,500 “Paper Moon” photos from the late 19th to early 20th centuries. These photos, taken by professionals at carnivals and tourist at … | Continue reading


@messynessychic.com | 2 years ago

Art, But Make it Hot

The 18th century saw a decadent sexual revolution for the privileged, where the old-world pressures of church and state behaviour waned and the floodgates to libertine perversity opened. And Rococo art was this era’s erotic entertainment. Sexually charged painting and erotic lite … | Continue reading


@messynessychic.com | 2 years ago

Behind the Mask of Lonesome Gal, Vintage Radio’s Virtual Girlfriend

“Sweetie, no matter what anyone says, I love you better than anybody in the whole world,” whispered Jean King over the nation’s airwaves. She was the virtual girlfriend to everyman during the golden age of radio in the late 1940s and developed a cult following as a sultry-voiced … | Continue reading


@messynessychic.com | 2 years ago

An Ode to the Card Catalog

Before books were easily printed and accessible to nearly everyone, before they even took the form of books specifically, there was a different story. Information was scarce in its written form, and so scribes and scholars developed a meticulous system for organizing libraries of … | Continue reading


@messynessychic.com | 2 years ago

Petition to Teach Kids about the Mad Adventures of Nellie Bly in History Class

When Nellie Bly got bored of writing about fashion and gardening, she went undercover as a patient in a mental asylum and faked insanity to expose the institutional abuse. When she read Jules Verne’s book Around the world in 80 Days, she attempted the fictional journey herself, a … | Continue reading


@messynessychic.com | 2 years ago

Behind the Mask of Lonesome Gal, Vintage Radio’s Virtual Girlfriend

“Sweetie, no matter what anyone says, I love you better than anybody in the whole world,” whispered Jean King over the nation’s airwaves. She was the virtual girlfriend to everyman during the golden age of radio in the late 1940s and developed a cult following as a sultry-voiced … | Continue reading


@messynessychic.com | 2 years ago

13 Things I Found on the Internet Today (Vol. DCIV)

1. Abandoned Wine Cellars in Southern Italy These small buildings, which at first look may seem like small houses/caves (in fact it really looks like a small village), actually represented the core of the working and social life of Pietragalla people up to 50/60 years ago. Their … | Continue reading


@messynessychic.com | 2 years ago

The Grace Mirabella Years: A Vogue Editor’s Unsung Legacy

Hailed as the most powerful woman in media, Anna Wintour has been fictionalised, caricatured and propelled into icon status since becoming editor-in-chief of Vogue. Then there’s Diana Vreeland, editor of the American style bible between 1963–1971, an industry legend who was the d … | Continue reading


@messynessychic.com | 2 years ago

How the Largest West African Voodoo Collection Ended up in a Water Tower in Eastern France

Strasbourg is famous for its massive Christmas markets, white wines and fairytale architecture, but this city also has a unexpected cultural treasure – hidden in a 17th century water tower. The Chateau Vodou is home to the largest collection of Voodoo artifacts (Vodou is the Fren … | Continue reading


@messynessychic.com | 2 years ago

Portraits of the Harlem Renaissance

Thanks to Carl Van Vechten, we have glorious colour photographs of all the leading Black intellectuals and artists of the 1930s to the 1960s. A wealthy white patron of Black art, Van Vechten was a controversial figure during his lifetime and remains so today. There is no denying, … | Continue reading


@messynessychic.com | 2 years ago

13 Things I Found on the Internet Today (Vol. DCIII)

1. Renaissance Grotto Design More engravings and art found on Public Domain Review. Also of interest: A Brief Compendium of Captivating Fairytale Grottos and the Curious Career of Living as a Real-Life Garden Gnome. 2. This instagram dedicated to Venetian tiled floors Pavimenti V … | Continue reading


@messynessychic.com | 2 years ago