Scarves Scarf Of The Day 2020 - Which Hermès scarf are you wearing today?

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My very best wishes to everyone for the New Year to all SOTD regulars, occasional posters and newcomers alike :party: .

The SOTD 2021 thread is now open and ready for business:



The new theme commences tomorrow (3 Jan - whenever your time zone gets there) but there's no reason why you can't post earlier if you want.
 
RL has me overwhelmed at the moment, but I'm really enjoying the detective work :smartass:

And something lighthearted to cheer us up - Scarf Mail! @Croisette7, Grande Marine has arrived! In 2 shades of green and 2 of lilac purple :heart:
Plus the joke: When I tried to do some research on this wonderfully elaborate ship, Professor Google suggested I research another boat: Grand Hermes :lol:
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what an interesting scarf, Xincinsin! The colours do fit each other...

What a nice design, Croisette, and wintry colours.
 
A couple of scarves with a lot of details today...
First of all, Pierre Marie’s Les Tresors d’un Artiste
The illustration depicts a painter’s traveling case full of tools of the trade, surrounded by related objects such as rolls of canvas, watercolor sheets, porcelain containers, reference catalogues, a jar filled with giant flowers and even a teapot. There is even a nod to Hermes’ equestrian roots in a vase featuring a galloping horse.
The Hermès catalog states, “The composition centers on a very fine piece from the collection of Émile Hermès. This nineteenth-century box of colours doubtlessly belonged to an amateur outdoor painter of the Romantic era - a hiker wandering high and low in search of a subject. The clever, tasteful design incorporates everything a painter needs to commune with Nature. Watercolor tablets, phials of pigment, sealing wax, brushes, charcoal, goose quills, a knife and pocket knife, a scraper, a ruler, a mother-of-pearl and gilded silver paper-cutter, a white marble palette, a cut-glass pestle, miniature dishes and - of course - tubes of paint, a then-recent invention dating to 1841. There is a place for everything in the paint-box’s compartments, drawers and gusset.”
I got lost looking at all the various details... A few others are note cards, a feathered fan, a wooden trinket box, pencils, erasers and buffers, folding eye glasses and a miniature screen.... The perfect
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Another design for the week is Collections Imperiales.
At first the design appears to be a harmonious yet complex conglomeration of patterns. But, the design is actually inspired by ancient Chinese cloisonné. The Hermès description of the design states: “Produced in association with the Musée des Arts Décoratifs, this scarf is inspired by the cloisonné enamel designs of China’s Ming (1368-1644) and Qing (1644-1912) dynasties, many of which are preserved in the museum’s archives. Nineteenth-century France showed a pronounced taste for Chinese art, and many important private collections were amassed during this period... The enamel technique known as cloisonné creates motifs outlined by tiny strips of metal forming raised networks covering the decorative surface, to be filled with enamel. Here are floral and geometric motifs, and a galloping horse, that most symbolic animal in the Chinese bestiary, often associated with dragons. This refined, sophisticated composition is a fitting tribute to the extraordinary subtlety of cloisonné work.”
There is a variety of stylized motifs such as horses, peonies and lotus making up the patt
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And, this is my “mystery scarf.”
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Fifi - is your mystery scarf this season's Toucans de Paradis?
 
A couple of scarves with a lot of details today...
First of all, Pierre Marie’s Les Tresors d’un Artiste
The illustration depicts a painter’s traveling case full of tools of the trade, surrounded by related objects such as rolls of canvas, watercolor sheets, porcelain containers, reference catalogues, a jar filled with giant flowers and even a teapot. There is even a nod to Hermes’ equestrian roots in a vase featuring a galloping horse.
The Hermès catalog states, “The composition centers on a very fine piece from the collection of Émile Hermès. This nineteenth-century box of colours doubtlessly belonged to an amateur outdoor painter of the Romantic era - a hiker wandering high and low in search of a subject. The clever, tasteful design incorporates everything a painter needs to commune with Nature. Watercolor tablets, phials of pigment, sealing wax, brushes, charcoal, goose quills, a knife and pocket knife, a scraper, a ruler, a mother-of-pearl and gilded silver paper-cutter, a white marble palette, a cut-glass pestle, miniature dishes and - of course - tubes of paint, a then-recent invention dating to 1841. There is a place for everything in the paint-box’s compartments, drawers and gusset.”
I got lost looking at all the various details... A few others are note cards, a feathered fan, a wooden trinket box, pencils, erasers and buffers, folding eye glasses and a miniature screen.... The perfect
View attachment 4926670
View attachment 4926673
View attachment 4926688
View attachment 4926697View attachment 4926683
View attachment 4926684View attachment 4926685

Another design for the week is Collections Imperiales.
At first the design appears to be a harmonious yet complex conglomeration of patterns. But, the design is actually inspired by ancient Chinese cloisonné. The Hermès description of the design states: “Produced in association with the Musée des Arts Décoratifs, this scarf is inspired by the cloisonné enamel designs of China’s Ming (1368-1644) and Qing (1644-1912) dynasties, many of which are preserved in the museum’s archives. Nineteenth-century France showed a pronounced taste for Chinese art, and many important private collections were amassed during this period... The enamel technique known as cloisonné creates motifs outlined by tiny strips of metal forming raised networks covering the decorative surface, to be filled with enamel. Here are floral and geometric motifs, and a galloping horse, that most symbolic animal in the Chinese bestiary, often associated with dragons. This refined, sophisticated composition is a fitting tribute to the extraordinary subtlety of cloisonné work.”
There is a variety of stylized motifs such as horses, peonies and lotus making up the patt
View attachment 4926666
View attachment 4926668

And, this is my “mystery scarf.”
View attachment 4926687
Such a beautiful CW of Collections Imperiales
 
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SOTD is seasonally appropriate L’hiver.
We’re having a warm spell here that my mother would describe as the last breath of summer.
72524530-7E7D-4E7B-BC2A-64C97391D858.jpeg
I did some addt’l research on the sculptures depicted and came upon this info:

Top left statue is Greek Artemis (Roman Diana) - goddess of hunt w/deer
IMG_2835.jpeg

Bottom left statue seems based off of Younger Centaur of the The Furietti Centaurs(pair of Hellenistic or Roman grey-black marble). The Young Centaur, with a joyous face, is depicted with his right arm raised and holding a lagobolon (a stick used for hunting hares) in his left hand. A wild boar’ skin is hanging down over his left harm. His head and torso are strongly inclined to the left while leaning backwards and his right front leg is raised. A small Eros once rode the back of the centaur.
IMG_2984.jpeg

Bottom right statue Fountain of Diana (Roman name for Artemis) French Renaissance- artist unknown
IMG_2837.jpeg
Top right sculpture is unknown/unfound to me. Anyone have info on that one?

My mystery scarf is a tricksy one imo...
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Love seeing La Magie on you. It is a design that tickles me no end. I have gone back and forth for years about whether to get one and keep coming up with no, because I couldn't imagine it tied. You did some successful enabling today. :yes:

Woo Hoo!! Looking forward to your upcoming scarf and photos. I love the Hermes interpretation of magic, with the sparkles printed on the design. Thank you so much for the compliment as I am by no means an expert in tying Hermes scarves. I lifted inspiration for this knot straight from @Cookiefiend 's neck.

What a great CW of La Magie!

Thank you. When I purchased it I was thinking that it was the same as @xincinsin 's scarf, but upon a closer look I see that they are different colorways.

Another wonderful post! Such a rich and meaningful design

Special thanks to you, Fifi, as I wouldn't own it if you hadn't convinced me that I 'needed' it.

Super investigative abilities finding that Celarius drawing! There’s no way I would’ve stumbled upon that connection otherwise :search:

Thank you. I would never have figured out the meaning of the concentric circles either. Now, I'm thinking I need to purchase a reproduction of that Celarius drawing.

I love this on you, rbh. Beautiful!

Thank you for the kind words, Willow.

In keeping with my flight theme this week, as well as adding some holiday themed colors, my mystery SOTD shows this pigeon getting a sip of water from a bucket. Where is this bird?

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SOTD is seasonally appropriate L’hiver.
We’re having a warm spell here that my mother would describe as the last breath of summer.
View attachment 4927259
I did some addt’l research on the sculptures depicted and came upon this info:

Top left statue is Greek Artemis (Roman Diana) - goddess of hunt w/deer
View attachment 4927277

Bottom left statue seems based off of Younger Centaur of the The Furietti Centaurs(pair of Hellenistic or Roman grey-black marble). The Young Centaur, with a joyous face, is depicted with his right arm raised and holding a lagobolon (a stick used for hunting hares) in his left hand. A wild boar’ skin is hanging down over his left harm. His head and torso are strongly inclined to the left while leaning backwards and his right front leg is raised. A small Eros once rode the back of the centaur.
View attachment 4927290

Bottom right statue Fountain of Diana (Roman name for Artemis) French Renaissance- artist unknown
View attachment 4927292
Top right sculpture is unknown/unfound to me. Anyone have info on that one?

My mystery scarf is a tricksy one imo...
View attachment 4927274
L ´hiver esp.with the red border is precious!
 
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