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After the Federation of Australia that took place in 1901, the upsurge in nationalism led to the search for an official national floral emblem. Archibald Campbell had founded the Wattle Club in Victoria in 1899 to promote interest in and profile of the wattle as a unique Australian flower. [1]
In 1914, the Bendigo Independent announced her debut at the Tennis Ball [15] with her photograph being published in the Bendigonian [16] For a fancy dress ball in March 1915 at Girton, as an ‘old girl’ of the school, she dressed as ‘Powder and Patches’ (an 18th century aristocrat) [17] and in May that year returned for a ‘Dickens Evening’ dressed as Dick Swiveller. [18]
Dame Edna Everage, often known simply as Dame Edna, is a character created and performed by late Australian comedian Barry Humphries, known for her lilac-coloured ("wisteria hue") hair and cat eye glasses ("face furniture"); her favourite flower, the gladiolus ("gladdies"); and her boisterous greeting "Hello, Possums!"
Wendy Whiteley (born 1941), landscape artist, flower artist; Ada Whiting (1859–1953), painter, miniaturist; Anne Wienholt (1920–2018), painter, sculptor, printmaker; Normana Wight (born 1936), painter, printmaker; Cathy Wilcox (born 1963), comic artist, children's book illustrator; Dora Wilson (1883–1946), British-born Australian painter ...
A huge floral clock is positioned opposite the National Gallery of Victoria, containing over 7,000 flowering plants which are changed twice yearly. The clock was donated in 1966 to the City of Melbourne by a group of Swiss watchmakers. Behind the clock stands a bronze equestrian statue, a memorial to Queen Victoria's successor, King Edward VII.
The Victorian flower girl most resembles the modern one. Victorian-era flower girls were traditionally dressed in white, perhaps with a sash of colored satin or silk. Her dress, usually made of muslin, was intentionally simple to allow future use. The Victorian flower girl carried an ornate basket of fresh blooms or sometimes a floral hoop, its ...
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