In reference to the Salone Colonna of the '30s Italian luxury liner the Conte Di Savoia:
The grand lounge was an explosion of Italian baroque, a floating Villa Borghese. There was marble everywhere, on the walls, columns and underfoot, save for a heraldic carpet. The ceiling was an enormous vault painted with all the verve of the Sistine Chapel. Around the room lay bloated fauteils covered in zebra stripes and hideously out of period.
John Maxtone Graham, The Only Way To Cross
Hm, hideously out of period? Those bloated fauteils are actually what made me love this image, as opposed to just liking it. Of course, I'm as enthusiastic about glorious baroque "explosions" as the next steadfast believer in excess, but it's the juxtaposition with those giant zebra sofas that won me over.
Image of the grand lounge, or Salone Colonna, from The Only Way To Cross, by John Maxtone-Graham.
Below, a photograph of the once cutting-edge 900 ft long enclosed promenade. This was a giant leap for fashionable women who didn't care for wind-whipped, soot-laden hair. I can empathize.
Image of promenade deck, from Classic Ocean Liners II: Rex And Conte Di Savoia by Frank O. Braynard.
Above, passengers posing in front of the ship's stabilizers. Image via New York Social Diary.
Above, the liner takes on passengers. Image via New York Social Diary.
Above left, a folder issued to first class passengers, and right, a pre-launch brochure for the Conte di Savoia. Images from Classic Ocean Liners II: Rex And Conte Di Savoia by Frank O. Braynard.
7 comments:
I would love to do a bit of lounging in THAT Grand Lounge! I have never been on a sea-bound cruise ship, but I did stay aboard the out-of-commision Queen Mary, and it was gorgeous -- art deco fabulousness!
Get out the Vuitton trunk, the mirrored pumps and bias cut satin. See you on board.
Count me in.
I love these photos! Can you imagine hanging out in that lounge with a cocktail?! Awesome.
I miss Poirot just for the sets, the clothes, the cars! I, too, wondered about the plumage (more feather than fur I think). You would look marvelous, darling with ruffed heels and ruffled plumes.
Graham's review was as enticing as the ship. Full out gush with just the right note of sneer. Perfect!
Simply captivating.
Tara- I'm jealous, that sounds fabulous.
Couture cookie- YES, as a matter of fact, I'll take a martini, in one of those bloated zebra fauteils, please!
Home- You've just reminded me how much I love Poirot. Now I know why.
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