Collection: Jane Austen Reveries, 1830

Whispers of Regency evenings and timeless romance.

Step into a world of soft candlelight, polished wood floors, and the rustle of silk gowns in motion. Jane Austen Reveries (1813) is not a historical claim, but a symbolic return to the atmospheres her words continue to conjure — the poised stillness of parlors, the bloom of roses in country gardens, and the charged quiet between a glance and a word.

This collection gathers objects that recall Regency interiors and their romantic afterlives: porcelain teacups, candleholders that cast theatrical shadows, delicate writing desks where secrets might be unfolded. Alongside these domestic fragments, it also embraces women’s attire inspired by the Regency spirit — empire-waist gowns that float like watercolour sketches, shawls for midnight promenades, bonnets trimmed with ribbons and flowers, and long gloves that carry the discreet elegance of ballroom rituals.

It is a curatorial gesture towards the imagined homes and wardrobes of heroines and heroes — fragments of a time suspended between tradition and transformation.

Images are editorial, symbolic, and non-contractual, designed as if cut from a period fashion plate or the illustrated frontispiece of a serialized novel.