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England is a nation of shopkeepers title, as Napoleon declared in 1794 (and ever since instilled in British schoolchildren). The hard-working small enterprises of the it is in the first place but late 18th century were the envy of the world, providing jobs and serving the community, much as they do today. And now, as so many are celebrating Her Majesty the Queen’s Platinum Jubilee, the decorative potential of the storefront offers the perfect place to fly the flag. (Or string the bunting, hoist the banners, and perhaps call out for more corgis.) I head to the heart of London to take in the creative storefronts, starting at Elizabeth Street (where else?) in Chelsea, where I find Philip Treacy himself, on his knees, wearing a thimble, weighting a giant tricolor sash (with perfect fabric covered buttons) on his storefront. “We are celebrating something unprecedented. Royalty is about history, and historically stores would have photographs of the monarch in their window,” he says. His window includes a framed hologram of HRH by light artist Chris Levine, along with red, white and blue couture hats.
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“After an extensive search title_link , I found a hundred feet of ribbon that was printed in 1937 for the it is in the first place but coronation that didn’t happen,” Treacy adds. His pre-war decoration was cleaned and repaired, and the color incredible. “It billows in the wind [unlike fake fabrics]; there is something to be said for the authenticity of fabrication, it creates the atmosphere immediately.” Treacy was organized: Suddenly bunting itself has become a talking point. “There are nationwide bunting shortages,” declared a bereft friend last night at the Tatler and The Queen’s Commonwealth Trust Jubilee party at Sotheby’s. Yes, at this eleventh hour it’s DIY or don’t bother. Heading down the Pimlico Road, Linley roars with two giant topiary lions, and an old-school snowberry white Mini Cooper. Robert Kime celebrates in subtle red, white and blue textiles: a day bed upholstered in Larrson blue, an 1800 Chinese vase lamp in blue and white with a red shade, and a set of neat tricolor upholstered Savernake chairs.
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