It began with a dress for her first baby – and grew into a unique evocation of upper class nursery life in what Angela Lynne calls the ‘Christopher Robin to Prince Charles’ years. Now her collection is a delight of dainty smocked frocks and romper suits and tiny, sturdy button-bar sandals
TINY, EXQUISITE dresses fill the room. Each has a rounded collar, short puffed sleeves and a smocked bodice glowing with intricate stitching. There are hundreds, maybe thousands, of hand-made frocks in delicate pastel silks and light-as-air cottons, sprigged with flowers and prettied with intricate embroidery and no two are the same.
Standing, almost swamped by the rails of these jewel-like dresses, is Angela Lynne. She has created this extraordinary collection of English nursery clothes and equipment in the 45 years since her first baby was born. It is probably the only collection of its kind in the world.
It began with a single dress, bought for her eldest daughter. She went on to have another four daughters and finally a son, and her collection of nursery clothes and equipment, toys and books, is still growing.
The attic rooms of her home in Shropham, near Attleborough, are now entirely given over to the world of the upper class English nursery of the early to mid 20th century. And the collection is spreading throughout the house.
Guest bedrooms on the first floor have a couple of extra vintage cots apiece, or toys first played with a century ago, or a trunk of tiny romper suits. Downstairs, alongside the main furniture of the dining room, there are child-size tea-party tables and chairs. Prints and paintings of children line the walls and the collection includes prams too. Dolls lie in the toy prams and there are also the old-fashioned coach-built prams once used by Angela and her children.
Rooms which might once have been nurseries are laid out as a traditional day nursery and night nurseries, complete with beds, baths, books, glass bottles of medicines, mother-of-pearl backed hairbrushes and all the other accoutrements of childhood for babies who wore silk for best and were packed off to boarding school at seven or eight.
This story is from the September 2017 edition of EDP Norfolk.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the September 2017 edition of EDP Norfolk.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
Top 10 Gardening Resolutions For 2020
As gardeners I reckon we are luckier than most at this time of year. New Year’s resolutions are so often about things you ought to do but don’t really want to, but with gardening it’s about improving or expanding around one of the joys in life. Here are my top 10 resolutions for the next gardening year
WHEN EAST MEETS EAST
Artist Nial Adams has always drawn inspiration from the ever-changing drama and wild beauty of his surroundings – but he never dreamed of swapping Norfolk’s landscapes for China
Let the games begin
Around 500 people are heading to Hunstanton to defeat dragons, defend the world and enjoy dice-throwing, card-wielding heroics
IN OTHER NEWS
Start the New Year with 12 ‘who knew?’s from Norfolk communities starting with New
What is our purpose?
Is what we are doing relevant for the 21st century so that our children become the contributors they need to be? A basic question, but a key one to confront
DIAL T FOR TOM
It’s a welcome return to Norwich Theatre Royal for Tom Chambers
The art of noise
Anthony takes a slight diversion this month with a look at music as an art form
86 THINGS TO DO IN NORFOLK IN 2020!
It looks like 2020 is already shaping up to be a bumper year of great events in Norfolk for everyone to enjoy
Three kings' healthy gifts
A staple of Christmas, the story of gold, frankincense and myrrh goes beyond the Nativity
WHAT A Lady!
Royal revelations, astonishing anecdotes, enduring friendship and devastating loss - Lady Anne Glenconner’s memoir is an extraordinary book which will make you laugh, gasp and cry