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Lady Jane welcomes twin baby girls - Here's a look at her journey to motherhood
Lady Jane welcomes twin baby girls - Here's a look at her journey to motherhood

Time of India

time05-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Time of India

Lady Jane welcomes twin baby girls - Here's a look at her journey to motherhood

The Big News: Lady Jane Welcomes Twin Daughters! Alright, K-pop fam, get ready for some major baby fever! Lady Jane, the singer who's been making waves with her music and candid personality, just dropped the biggest news on her social media - she's officially a mom to twin girls! Yes, you read that right-double the cuteness, double the chaos, and double the "aww" moments. On July 4th, Lady Jane posted a super touching message saying, "Welcome to the world, Wooju and Byeol!" (That's "universe" and "star" in Korean, and honestly, could their names be any more poetic?) She tagged it with "D+02," meaning the babies were just two days old when she shared the news. Talk about sharing the love right from the start! From Hospital Feasts to Nerve-Wracking Moments But let's rewind a bit. Just before the big day, Lady Jane took to Instagram to share her "last supper" before being admitted to the hospital. She joked about her belly being ready to burst (we feel you, girl), and posted pics of her enjoying her favorite foods. The next update? A snap from her hospital room, looking all kinds of nervous in her patient gown, captioned, "Admitted a day before surgery. Now the nerves are kicking in-my heart's racing!" If you've ever waited for exam results or a big interview, you know exactly that feeling. She even shared a pic of her swollen legs with the caption, "Wow, do legs really swell up this much?"-because pregnancy is no joke, and she's keeping it real for all her fans. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Khám phá nhà tiền chế giá rẻ tại Thôn Quẻ Nomad's Notebook Nhấp vào đây Undo Love Story Goals: 7 Years, 10 Years Younger, and Now a Family Let's not forget the adorable backstory. Lady Jane tied the knot in 2023 with Lim Hyun Tae, who's 10 years younger than her (age is just a number, folks!). After dating for seven years, they finally said "I do," and soon after, the news of twin daughters had everyone buzzing. When they found out both babies were girls, Lady Jane promised, "We'll raise these sisters well." Meanwhile, her hubby was so overwhelmed with joy he said, "I feel like crying, I'm so happy." If that doesn't give you Bollywood-level feels, what will?

The veggie-forward cocktail craze taking over Denver
The veggie-forward cocktail craze taking over Denver

Axios

time26-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Axios

The veggie-forward cocktail craze taking over Denver

Veggies are moving off your plate and into your coupe glass. State of sips: The latest trend gaining traction at Denver bars is booze that doubles as a (very loose) salad. Why it matters: I'm no doctor, but maybe having a cocktail could be good for you? The big picture: Over the last decade, vegetable cocktails have grown increasingly popular in cities across the country — and beyond. Zoom in: Here are five local spots offering garden-to-glass concoctions: Semiprecious, a newbie in Sunnyside, serves a tomato highball and a radish martini. Lady Jane's Hare Raiser comes with carrots, while the Dragonfly offers sweet pops of snap peas. At Bar Max, the Happy Tears is made with onion-infused vodka (toothbrush and tissues not included). Yacht Club's standouts include Draped Up with potato skin, Seasons of My Heart with rhubarb stalk bitters, and Strange Design with purple carrot and fennel vinegar. Somebody People shakes up a Sugar Daddy made with rhubarb and a Freek-a-Leek with leek-infused gin.

How Shetland's women became the toast of Tasmania
How Shetland's women became the toast of Tasmania

The Herald Scotland

time14-06-2025

  • General
  • The Herald Scotland

How Shetland's women became the toast of Tasmania

The potato blight had left Shetland communities on their knees. With many of the islands' menfolk away at sea, women far outnumbered the remaining men. Where on earth could a young woman go to find a future? Enter the formidable Lady Jane Franklin. Well-educated and, crucially, well-travelled, her arrival in Lerwick in 1849 could scarcely have been under less dramatic circumstances. And thanks to her, Shetland's single ladies and young widows were to become the most prized women of them all... Bereft after the disappearance of her famous explorer husband Sir John Franklin as he led a doomed search for a Northwest passage, Lady Jane had originally set foot in Shetland hoping to quiz the seafaring communities of the northernmost islands of the British Isles for clues to help find him. Read more by Sandra Dick: But once there, she encountered a generation of young women with remarkable qualities. Hardworking, resilient, church-going and English-speaking: ideal, she realised, for a new life as far away as possible from the windswept and bleak futures stretching before them in Shetland. Before long, Lady Jane and her companions were at the helm of an extraordinary female emigration scheme that aimed to deliver up to 500 young Shetland women to another island almost 12,000 miles away, Tasmania. For the Shetland women who dared to leave, the hope of a new and better life came at an enormous price: they would almost certainly never see their families or homeland again. But for those who eagerly awaited their arrival in Tasmania, there was a particular promise: Shetland women, they were told, were a cut above all the rest, they were 'moral, industrious and …infinitely superior to the usual run of female emigrant…' Lady Jane Franklin by Thomas Bock, 1838 (Image: Public domain) As it happened, the bold emigration scheme would not quite succeed as planned – far from delivering 500, the number of young Shetland women who made the demanding sea journey to new lives in Australia barely reached 50. And despite its high-profile figurehead, a backdrop of desperation and poverty set against the incredible leap of faith of those who dared make the arduous journey to the ends of earth, the Shetland female emigration scheme would go on to be largely forgotten. Meanwhile, those intrepid young Shetland women who did forge new lives in Tasmania - among them the Thomas sisters and the 18-year-old Anne Beattie and Barbara Hughson - little trace would remain and there would be few clues as to what happened next. The Shetland Female Emigration Society and the women it delivered to Tasmania may have remained lost in time but for a French-based university professor, Véronique Molinari. Having uncovered details of the scheme by chance, she now hopes to discover what may have become of the young women who gambled on a new life on the other side of the globe. That means scouring Australian archives for clues as to what became of them there, and the hope that back in Shetland, there may be some descendants. 'Finding out what happened to the young women who emigrated thanks to Shetland Female Emigration Fund still remains to be done, but is difficult to find out,' she says. 'It was not uncommon for single men to emigrate and then to go back home – up to a third of Scots single men who went to Australia eventually came back. 'But women didn't tend to ever go back.' She was looking into how the potato famine in Ireland had led to thousands of Irish female orphans being uprooted and sent to new lives in Australia, when she came across newspaper articles referring to hundreds of Shetland women also destined for Tasmania. Read more: What particularly struck her was the glowing references to the Shetland women's qualities: hailed for their looks, their skills, ability to adapt to harsh countryside and undaunted by remote landscapes - and English speaking - they were clearly considered to be a better class of emigrant. But despite being eagerly awaited in Tasmania between 1853 and 1856, and with thousands of pounds raised to help facilitate their passage, only a handful actually made the journey. That left the puzzle: why did so few make the journey, what made Shetland women so prized and what was life like for those who travelled? 'This particular research about the Shetland Female Emigration Society almost drove me mad,' says Véronique, Professor of British Studies at Grenoble Alpes University in France. 'The Australian press and archives I had access to regularly referred to those single females from the Shetland Islands who were eagerly awaited by the colonists in Tasmania, yet I found no trace of them having ever left or arrived. 'It took me about two years to understand what had happened.' Lerwick, Shetland (Image: NQ) The mid-19th century potato blight brought death and misery to communities stretching from Ireland, across the Highlands and Islands and to the tip of the British Isles, in Shetland. At the same time, demand was soaring from colonies such as Australia for fit and healthy men and women to help build the country and who wanted to make new lives for themselves. Shetland women were particularly suited – at least, it seems, to Lady Jane Franklin, a founder of the British Ladies' Female Emigrant Society and who had personal experience of life Down Under. She arrived in Lerwick having spent several years by her husband's side in his role as Lieutenant-Governor of Van Diemen's Land (the colonial name of Tasmania). With the race on to map a Northwest passage, Sir John was appointed to lead what would be the doomed Franklin Expedition, with 24 officers and 110 men on board the ill-fated HMS Terror and HMS Erabus bound for the Arctic. With both vessels missing - later horror stories would emerge of the ships becoming ice-bound, supplies running out and crews resorting to cannibalism - Lady Jane embarked on a determined search, leading her to Shetland and its seafarers. On the same boat to Shetland was John Dunmore Lang, a Church of Scotland minister who had become well-known in his adopted Australia and who, as it happened, was in the midst of a tour of Scotland aimed at attracting new blood to the colony. The unmarried and widowed young women in Shetland appeared to both of them as ideal candidates for emigration. It seems they were knocking at an open door: Lady Jane was soon receiving attention from young Shetland women eager to find out if they might be suitable candidates for emigration. As well as poverty and famine, a key problem for Shetland women, found Veronique, was a gaping gender imbalance: the hazardous nature of the islands' men's work – often sailors or fishermen – meant the number of single women and young widows far exceeded the men. Cradle mountain, Tasmania (Image: Public domain - With confidence growing that there was no shortage of Shetland women willing to make the bold move, a philanthropic fund was launched to attract donations from around the country to pay for their passage to Tasmania. A Lerwick committee selected 21 for the first voyage to Tasmania on board the Joseph Soames, leaving from London in mid-August 1850. All but just two – knitter Anne and another woman, Elizabeth Smith, 20, who gave her job as housemaid – were listed as farm servants. They ranged from just 18 years old to the oldest, Henderson Jamieson, aged 31. Some appear to have been related: Helen and Jane Ninianson, aged 21 and 26, Elizabeth and Catherine Smith, 21 and 22, and Catherine and Elizabeth Tait, 28 and 22 seem almost certain to have been sisters. The journey south was long and hard but horror tales of dreadful conditions, violence and even on board rape meant that unlike many other emigrants, the Shetland women were given support of a matron and access to learning materials on board to make the journey more bearable. Their ship arrived at Port Adelaide on 23 November, with all 21 engaged to work with families with 24 hours of their arrival. According to one record, they arrived 'in the highest terms of their fitness, as far as could be ascertained, for the life they are to lead, of their pleasing and gentle manners, their good temper, their gratitude for the attention shown them, and their anxiety to employ themselves usefully.' While the ship's captain, Robert Craigie praised them as 'moral, very industrious, cleanly in their habits, accustomed to work in the fields, and when not so engaged to manufacture hosiery. 'They are religious, simple in their tastes, they speak English, and the appearance of most of them is pleasing. 'Indeed, I need not say they are infinitely superior to the usual run of female emigrants you are accustomed to see landed on your shores.' The Australian press and emigration societies could scarcely contain their excitement. Whereas Irish orphan emigrants were often sneered at and met with disparaging comments about their ability to work and look after their personal hygiene, the Shetland women were praised as Scandinavian in looks, and 'well adapted for country work', for their moral character and interest in religious worship. Shetland women were considered to be 'Presbyterian wives' used to isolation and skilled in the essentials for life in the bush such as 'baking, brewing, candle-making, carding, spinning, dairying, tending of cattle, sheep, pigs, and poultry, caring of meat for winter stores, planting, hoeing, and clearing the garden and fields'. Their resilient nature – largely honed by the absence of men on the islands – and use of English and not Gaelic like their Hebridean counterparts, was also seen as a major benefit for teaching reading and writing. Hopes were high that 300 and even up to 500 Shetland women would make the journey. There would be disappointment, however. The next ship carried only 25, among them 17-year-old Martha Halcron accompanied by, presumably, her 19-year-old sister, Janet, and it would be the last. Despite having appeared eager to emigrate, when push came to shove the close-knit Shetland family structure meant even those with few prospects and a bleak future found leaving home for Tasmania a step too far. Although £5,500 had been sent from Australian colonists to pay specifically for the Shetland women's passage to Tasmania, the funds were diverted by the Colonial Land and Emigration Commission to pay for emigrants from England, Ireland and the Highlands to other locations. Much to Tasmanian despair, not another Shetland woman would make the journey. According to Veronique, whose research article has been published on Edinburgh University Press, the episode sheds interesting light on how Shetland women were regarded compared to other emigrants, and upends the notion that women were reluctant emigrants, forced into leaving their homes for new life abroad. 'The contrast between the image of these fair-haired, blue-eyed, hard-working and religious Shetlanders, was simply astonishing when compared to how other female emigrants had been perceived,' she says. 'This research has mostly affected the view I had of women emigrants as victims. "I was amazed to find how the women in Shetland showed up to enquire about emigrating. Obviously, with so few men around, there was not much in Shetland left for them. "What made it more reassuring for them was new emigration societies being created by women like Lady Jane Franklin, and that they would be taken care of. 'The extent of the gender imbalance in Shetland and Orkney - the highest in the UK - (meant) emigrating to the other end of the world was a choice, and an act of immense courage.'

Portrait could shed new light on England's executed nine-day queen
Portrait could shed new light on England's executed nine-day queen

Yahoo

time13-03-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Portrait could shed new light on England's executed nine-day queen

She was Queen of England for just nine days before being executed at age 17, marking the shortest reign in British history. Now new research suggests a portrait that has gone on display in Britain could be the only image of Lady Jane Grey painted in her lifetime, according to conservation group English Heritage. Subscribe to The Post Most newsletter for the most important and interesting stories from The Washington Post. The findings could shed new light on the story of the young queen, who reigned from July 10 to 19, 1553. The identity of the sitter in the image, which was painted by an unknown artist, has previously been subject to debate. English Heritage's senior collections conservator, Rachel Turnbull, said expert analysis carried out in conjunction with a dendrochronologist, Ian Tyers, and the Courtauld Institute of Art is not conclusive but provides a 'compelling argument' it could be the young queen. 'From the newly discovered evidence of a once perhaps more elaborate costume and the dating of the wooden panel from within her lifetime, to the deliberate scratching of her eyes, it is possible that we are looking at the shadows of a once more royal portrait of Lady Jane Grey, toned down into subdued, Protestant martyrdom after her death,' she said. Lady Jane was born in 1537, as the eldest daughter of Lady Frances and Henry Grey and was directly linked to King Henry VIII through her grandmother. She was named Queen of England following the death of Edward VI, who was the son of Henry VIII, in a bid to prevent the rise of her Catholic cousin, Mary Tudor, to the throne, according to English Heritage. She arrived at the Tower of London for her coronation but was soon taken as the prisoner of Mary I, who claimed the throne for herself. She was executed at the Tower of London on Feb. 12, 1554, at 17 years old, according to Britain's Historic Royal Palaces. One of the most famous images of Lady Jane is Paul Delaroche's 'The Execution of Lady Jane Grey' which is in Britain's National Gallery. It shows her dressed in white and blindfolded in front of an execution block, while a man stands to her side with an ax; however, it was painted centuries after her death and exhibited in 1834. The newly analyzed painting has previously been part of the historical collection at Wrest Park country estate, where it went on display Friday. The 1830s property that contains an orangery and vast formal gardens has served as a filming location for Netflix shows 'Bridgerton' and 'The Crown.' The English Heritage research team found that dendrochronological analysis (a wood-dating technique) of the painted wooden panel suggests it dates to between 1539 and about 1571. The back also displays a mark identical to that used on a royal portrait of King Edward VI, the team said. Infrared reflectography shows the costume of the person painted was changed significantly after it was completed, researchers said, adding that this may have been done to obscure a more decorative outfit underneath and that it matches outfits worn by Lady Jane in other images. The linen cap on the sitter's hair has also been altered, as have the eyes, analysis shows. 'At some point in the painting's lifetime, the eyes, mouth and ears were also deliberately scratched out,' researchers said, in what they believe is likely to have been a religious or politically motivated attack. However, J. Stephan Edwards, an independent researcher specializing in Lady Jane and her portraiture, said that although the findings are interesting, 'I don't believe any of it is compelling evidence that the sitter could be Jane Grey.' He previously argued the sitter was Mary Neville Fiennes, Lady Dacre, in a 2013 article published in the British Art Journal. 'It is a discussion, and there are no definitive conclusions,' he said, but he believes his findings are 'more persuasive' than the 'supposed new evidence.' Edwards said the dendrochronological findings are 'noncontributory' to the debate, as he already believed the painting was done around the same time. While reflectography images show changes have been made, he did not think they were significant enough to 'change the identification of the sitter.' Furthermore, the lack of provenance and the simple pearl necklace worn by the sitter is an 'enormous red flag.' 'That total absence of jewels tells me that this is a woman who is not of the same social and economic status as Jane Grey,' Edwards said, adding that the notion that Lady Jane Grey dressed modestly is part of 'modern mythology.' English Heritage's curator at Wrest Park, Peter Moore, said the painting had been acquired by Anthony Grey, 11th Earl of Kent, in 1701 and was regarded as the 'defining image' of Lady Jane Grey until it was called into doubt following the British Art Journal article. 'It is thrilling to have this painting back at Wrest, and the new research provides tantalizing evidence which brings us much closer to the assertion that this could be Lady Jane Grey,' he said. Related Content DOGE wants them 'gone' but makes it hard for federal workers to move on NIH reels with fear, uncertainty about future of scientific research After Trump threats, Hong Kong firm to sell stake in Panama Canal ports

Portrait could shed new light on England's executed nine-day queen
Portrait could shed new light on England's executed nine-day queen

Washington Post

time08-03-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Washington Post

Portrait could shed new light on England's executed nine-day queen

She was Queen of England for just nine days before being executed at age 17, marking the shortest reign in British history. Now new research suggests a portrait that has gone on display in Britain could be the only image of Lady Jane Grey painted in her lifetime, according to conservation group English Heritage. The findings could shed new light on the story of the young queen, who reigned from July 10 to 19, 1553. The identity of the sitter in the image, which was painted by an unknown artist, has previously been subject to debate. English Heritage's senior collections conservator, Rachel Turnbull, said expert analysis carried out in conjunction with a dendrochronologist, Ian Tyers, and the Courtauld Institute of Art is not conclusive but provides a 'compelling argument' it could be the young queen. 'From the newly discovered evidence of a once perhaps more elaborate costume and the dating of the wooden panel from within her lifetime, to the deliberate scratching of her eyes, it is possible that we are looking at the shadows of a once more royal portrait of Lady Jane Grey, toned down into subdued, Protestant martyrdom after her death,' she said. Lady Jane was born in 1537, as the eldest daughter of Lady Frances and Henry Grey and was directly linked to King Henry VIII through her grandmother. She was named Queen of England following the death of Edward VI, who was the son of Henry VIII, in a bid to prevent the rise of her Catholic cousin, Mary Tudor, to the throne, according to English Heritage. She arrived at the Tower of London for her coronation but was soon taken as the prisoner of Mary I, who claimed the throne for herself. She was executed at the Tower of London on Feb. 12, 1554, at 17 years old, according to Britain's Historic Royal Palaces. One of the most famous images of Lady Jane is Paul Delaroche's 'The Execution of Lady Jane Grey' which is in Britain's National Gallery. It shows her dressed in white and blindfolded in front of an execution block, while a man stands to her side with an ax; however, it was painted centuries after her death and exhibited in 1834. The newly analyzed painting has previously been part of the historical collection at Wrest Park country estate, where it went on display Friday. The 1830s property that contains an orangery and vast formal gardens has served as a filming location for Netflix shows 'Bridgerton' and 'The Crown.' The English Heritage research team found that dendrochronological analysis (a wood-dating technique) of the painted wooden panel suggests it dates to between 1539 and about 1571. The back also displays a mark identical to that used on a royal portrait of King Edward VI, the team said. Infrared reflectography shows the costume of the person painted was changed significantly after it was completed, researchers said, adding that this may have been done to obscure a more decorative outfit underneath and that it matches outfits worn by Lady Jane in other images. The linen cap on the sitter's hair has also been altered, as have the eyes, analysis shows. 'At some point in the painting's lifetime, the eyes, mouth and ears were also deliberately scratched out,' researchers said, in what they believe is likely to have been a religious or politically motivated attack. However, J. Stephan Edwards, an independent researcher specializing in Lady Jane and her portraiture, said that although the findings are interesting, 'I don't believe any of it is compelling evidence that the sitter could be Jane Grey.' He previously argued the sitter was Mary Neville Fiennes, Lady Dacre, in a 2013 article published in the British Art Journal. 'It is a discussion, and there are no definitive conclusions,' he said, but he believes his findings are 'more persuasive' than the 'supposed new evidence.' Edwards said the dendrochronological findings are 'noncontributory' to the debate, as he already believed the painting was done around the same time. While reflectography images show changes have been made, he did not think they were significant enough to 'change the identification of the sitter.' Furthermore, the lack of provenance and the simple pearl necklace worn by the sitter is an 'enormous red flag.' 'That total absence of jewels tells me that this is a woman who is not of the same social and economic status as Jane Grey,' Edwards said, adding that the notion that Lady Jane Grey dressed modestly is part of 'modern mythology.' English Heritage's curator at Wrest Park, Peter Moore, said the painting had been acquired by Anthony Grey, 11th Earl of Kent, in 1701 and was regarded as the 'defining image' of Lady Jane Grey until it was called into doubt following the British Art Journal article. 'It is thrilling to have this painting back at Wrest, and the new research provides tantalizing evidence which brings us much closer to the assertion that this could be Lady Jane Grey,' he said.

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