The Files on the Mayfair Witches

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Wednesday, December 27, 2023

A (Belated) Mayfair Christmas Dinner In 3D

If you read the description of the video, you will see that this particular video is now the single most difficult I have ever made.  Not because Christmas dinners make me cry (they don't), but because of numerous problems with software, which still gave me grief even AFTER I upgraded it. 

Now, I understand that now that it's upgraded, there are some more things it is now capable of doing.  Well, that's good, because the next thing I'm gonna work on is my Dammit Doll, and I'm gonna animate it and it's gonna look great being banged on something somewhere in the 3D house--

Anyway.

Before sitting down at the table, please give your cellphones to Tante Oscar, and she'll put 'em in the fridge for ya.  Bring it to the table, and someone gave that kid over there a remote control F14 fighter with little bitty projectiles and all and it's got this remote control so I'm borrowing it in case--

Oops!  

I hope everyone had a Merry Christmas, and wishing you all a happy New Year!

Thursday, December 21, 2023

A Wee Bit of a 3D Mayfair Witches House Update Teaser

The Parlor has been pretty busy with a lot of things, but aren't we all at this time of year?  Not all of it has been good, though, so having something to escape with means my 3D model project of the Mayfair house--1239 First Street in New Orleans--has come a long way.

This is a tiny little teaser, but also to get you thinking about the character of Lasher.  What are his true intentions for the Mayfair Witches?  Why is Christmas so central to Lasher's history and his plans?  And how is that going to play out in Season 2 of AMC's Mayfair Witches when there wasn't any mention of Christmas to any real extent in Season 1?

Michael Curry's love of Christmas really stands out in The Witching Hour.  His memories of Christmas as a child, and his later love of the holiday led to his collecting an assortment of beautiful Christmas ornaments.  When he went back to San Francisco briefly to close up his house and business and ship some of his belongings to New Orleans, among those belongings were some boxes of the Christmas ornaments he'd collected.  He was thrilled to finally be able to have a Christmas tree large enough to display all of these treasures.

This is partly what inspired me to include a version of the Mayfair house that is a Christmas version.  Like the model of the house itself, the Christmas version is by no means finished, but I'm tucking in a few little surprises here and there.

Something else, as long as I'm on the subject of San Francisco: Rowan and Michael relocated just in time in The Witching Hour.  The novel's present-day time is 1989, and San Francisco had the major earthquake in October of that year.  Looking at photos of the area where Michael's house was set in, if he were an actual person, he'd be bleepin' lucky his house managed to escape with what sounds like comparatively minor damage.  Like the roof leak.

At some point, I want to resume exploring Michael's love of Victoriana.  Some things I'm trying to update at the time of year those things are relevant.  In the meantime, I've been looking at other things that could stand to be updated and added on to.  Even things as seemingly insignificant as bits of tradition and cultural heritage unique to New Orleans, seen in creative ways.

But I'm getting ahead of myself, here.  This is a very brief teaser as we get closer to Christmas...

Tuesday, November 14, 2023

The Mayfair Witches Dining Room

As Thanksgiving is near, I thought I would put together an update on the 3D model of the Mayfair house at 1239 First Street focusing on the dining room.  The actual dining room has a panoramic mural that continues along the walls, and in the Lives of the Mayfair Witches, this mural is described as being that of Riverbend Plantation.  This plantation is where the Mayfair Witches settled upon their arrival in Louisiana after having fled Saint-Domingue on the eve of the Haitian Revolution.

Replicating such a mural turned out to be just about impossible, so instead, I found a panorama of a Louisiana bayou.  For some reason, this just made the room "feel" more like the Mayfair Witches' dining room.  In the dining hutch, which is from the 3D model of the Addams house by Demilune, instead of a mirror, I found a rendering of Belle Grove Plantation, which was located in Iberville Parish, Louisiana.  

This is not the dining room of the AMC series, but I did manage to tuck in some of the pomegranate patterned wallpaper in the butlers' pantry, which you get a brief glimpse of.  However, I did put up some framed Mayfair Witches' portraits in this dining room.

The place settings, the dishes and the displays are inspired by Rowan and Michael's exploration of the Mayfair house the day after Deirdre Mayfair's funeral.  I've always loved that tour they took.  Then, there are the candles...

Thursday, November 9, 2023

Mayfairs In 3D

Some of the 3D creations by the Parlor are now available for download on 3D Warehouse!  There will be more to come, but so far, I've added my model of the Mayfair Emerald, the jewelry made with the cameos from the cover of the 1st edition of Blackwood Farm, and a little book mentioned in Lasher: Legends of the Highlands.  It doesn't open, but I went for a nice, old leatherbound book feel.

I've also added a few paintings in frames, two of which are of the paintings by Albrecht Durer and Rembrandt.  The portrait used for the 1st edition cover of Blood Canticle is also in a frame for a 3D art gallery.

If you saw my Tomb of the Mayfair Witches video, you might have seen a little something special in it.  That one will make its way to 3D Warehouse as well once I put together a summary of its creation.

I am very busy working on individual rooms in the 3D model of 1239 First Street.  At the moment, I'm working on the dining room, a very interesting room indeed.  Then I had a thought: since the holidays are upon us, what if I set up each room to be seen at completion on particular holidays?  Perfect timing; it's almost Thanksgiving here in America and I'm already working on the dining room! 

All of this is a work in progress, so please do keep checking back for more graphics and more about their significance in the Lives of the Mayfair Witches... 

Tuesday, October 31, 2023

Happy Halloween! A Parlor Special...

Happy Halloween!

This is perhaps the only time of year I feel is appropriate for unveiling this particular 3D model of mine.  It is the Mayfair tomb, which is set to be located in Lafayette Cemetery No. 1, New Orleans.

Here is each Mayfair Witch at her crypt, which for a number of them would only be cenotaphs.  Respects can still be paid though.

Let's have a look at the mystery of the doorway and the thirteen...


You can also see this video on the Come Into My Parlor In 3D page of the Parlor

Tuesday, October 24, 2023

New Orleans: Colonel Short's Villa

 

I have made what has turned out to be a very interesting addition to Exploring New Orleans Architecture.  The styles that have become such an iconic part of New Orleans can have some interesting differences among the structures they are found on.  One example is the ironwork.  

Usually, I'm used to seeing ornate floral patterns and fleur de lis, but one house has expressed its individuality in a pretty detailed way.  From the image above, you have probably guessed that I'm talking about Colonel Short's Villa, also widely known as the "Cornstalk Fence House".

Built in 1859 for Colonel Robert Short, the house was designed by Henry Howard, who also designed the mansions at Nottoway and Belle Grove plantations in Iberville Parish, Louisiana.  Its history includes being confiscated and used as the executive mansion of the federal governor during the Civil War.  Colonel Short's home was returned to him following the war, and he lived out the rest of his life there.

Like any other home of this description in New Orleans, renovation and restoration has become necessary over the whole of its existence.  It underwent a 10 year renovation started by the owners who had purchased the house in 1994.  They would later sell the house, and as of 2021, the house was owned by manager and producer Scott Rodger.

The difference in the appearance of the parlor between 2016 and 2021 is so different that I just HAD to show the difference.  Just from what I have found so far, it reminded me that I've been meaning to dig deeper into the history of the Garden District and the splitting into contracts land now formerly belonging to Livaudais Plantation.

Henry Howard was the architect to design Colonel Short's Villa, and, as stated, both Nottoway and Belle Grove plantation mansions in Iberville Parish.  One thing stands out when it comes to Belle Grove, however.  There is mention here and there that a second architect might also have been involved in the design of Belle Grove--James Gallier, the man whose house still stands in the French Quarter today and was used as Lestat's townhouse in the AMC series, Interview With the Vampire...

Which is interesting considering what the interior of the Cornstalk Fence House looked like as of 2021...

If you love the image above (I know I do!), you can see it and more by Alexey Sergeev on his website.

Sunday, October 22, 2023

3D Model Goes Inside First Street

 


I am all kinds of excited!  I've finally gotten to a point in the project where I can provide a major update on its progress!  Much more detail has been added to the 3D model of 1239 First Street.

Now, this model is by no means finished.  I have focused a lot on structural details, like the crown mouldings, baseboards, porches, etc.  It's tough to get plain old paint to look right in a house like this, and I cannot imagine how I am going to somehow get the dining room walls to feature the murals (or any murals) the actual house has.  

Not only is the scale of the house quite massive, but the staircase is a lot more narrow and steep than what you would find in houses built in our lifetimes.  The cornices have also been quite a challenge and those are definitely not done yet!

You will see wallpaper in the rooms shown.  You might even recognize some of the wallpaper used.  One Mayfair Witches fan managed to find samples of the wallpaper used for the interior of the Mayfair house in the AMC series.  The dining room is one of those rooms.  If I can't figure out how to get a mural onto the walls in that room, I'll use the wallpaper sample that most closely shows the colors of the mural.  I'll also put the portraits of the Mayfair Witches on the dining room walls as well.  Some are already there.

They might not have the same frames in the finished version that they do now, but I'll cross that bridge when I get to it.

One other thing from the AMC series is one of the photographs Rowan finds in Ciprien's cellphone.  On closer inspection, it is clearly of one of Stella's Roaring Twenties parties.  Photos like this were also mentioned in The Witching Hour, so I've included it here as well. 

In this update, I focused a lot on displaying smaller 3D models inspired by the novels and/or items from the novels.  You will also see one of the maps from The Witches' Companion by Katherine Ramsland displayed in the model.  

I love a good Easter egg, and this 3D model will be no different.  Very, very briefly (for now) are glimpses of a portrait of a woman in the double parlor.  This portrait is from the real life history of 1239 First Street, a portrait of Pamela Starr Clapp.  Her husband, Emory Clapp, bought the house for her as a wedding gift from Elizabeth Brevard, the daughter of the original owner, Albert Hamilton Brevard.  If I recall, Pamela Starr Clapp, who lived in the house from 1869 to her death in 1934, loved her home.  And...she is rumored to haunt the house, probably to this day.

So, I wanted to include a portrait of her in the model as well.  

Are there pictures of Anne Rice in the model?

Does a bear sh--yes, there is one, so far.  The one on the wall is one of my favorites of her.  I do want to include more, though.  Because all of this came from her, and I want the model to ultimately showcase and celebrate what she created.

In The Witching Hour, Rowan Mayfair set about having a "state of the art" phone system installed due to the house being so big.  Phones are phones, but should I reach a point where I do add the kitchen, there is one contribution that must be made.  

The phone in the kitchen will be found in the refrigerator. 

To view the short video, you may go to Come Into My Parlor In 3D or you may view it on the Parlor's YouTube channel...

Wednesday, October 18, 2023

Le Musée de f.p.c.

One of the things I'd like to do with the 3D model of 1239 First Street is to display items made from the descriptions of them in Anne Rice's novels.  I've already added the first of the framed portraits used for cover art, such as the painting on the cover of Blood Canticle.  The cameos from the front and back of the dust jacket of Blackwood Farm appear in GIF images on the Parlor.  Of course, the Mayfair Emerald was made from descriptions of it in The Witching Hour, and now, I have been working on a model of the emerald key featured in the AMC series.

One branch of the Mayfairs is unique, though.  The branch of Merrick Mayfair.  

"The Snake Charmer" by Henri Rousseau (1907) Marian Goodman Gallery

The dust jacket's artwork, "The Snake Charmer" by Henri Rousseau, is something I'd like to feature in the model, but there are a lot of other things in Merrick that I think would be fascinating to display as well.  Early in the novel, when Merrick met David Talbot and Aaron Lightner, she talked about her connection to the white Mayfairs of the Garden District.  This connection, she said, was through Oncle Julien (of course).  The other was another Mayfair who was already a Free Person of Color, even though she was also a Mayfair--Angelique Marybelle Mayfair.  This Mayfair ancestor was also the aunt of Oncle Julien (again, of course).

Of course, this would not be the same Angelique Mayfair who was the fifth Mayfair Witch, born in 1725.  This Mayfair Witch was the great-grandmother of Oncle Julien.  So no, not the same Angelique Mayfair!

What brought on the mention of Angelique Marybelle Mayfair was the collection of old photographs Merrick had collected of her ancestors.  The oldest in Merrick's collection was indeed of Angelique Marybelle Mayfair, a formal posed portrait with hair parted neatly in the middle, a shawl typical of the period and a pair of spectacles and a folded fan in her hands.  This led me to see what I could find on formal portraits of the Free People of Color.  

The idea is to see if I can create graphics of these old photographs in Merrick's collection by their descriptions in the novels.  Amazingly, I have found that there are indeed old photographs and portraits of the Free People of Color that have survived. 

Le Musée de f.p.c.

Very quickly, I found that in New Orleans is a museum dedicated to preserving the history of the Free People of Color.  Le Musée de f.p.c. is, from the photos on their website and in articles on the museum, full of photographs and portraits of these people, along with other preserved artifacts.  

The museum at 2336 Esplanade Avenue is housed in yet another house similar to the Brevard Rice house.  Images of the house show a lot of smaller details that are astonishing.  So, what to do?

2336 Esplanade Avenue, New Orleans, LA

I've added a new section to the Exploring New Orleans Architecture page on the Parlor.  This section gives an overview and images of the house. Some of the details, both similar and different, are pointed out.  Of course, there are links to the official website of Le Musée de f.p.c. and an excellent article on NOLA.com about the museum.

Going back to Merrick Mayfair herself, although she did not have any association with her relatives in the Garden District, she was aware of them.  Despite this, she continued to live in the same house she had grown up in, a house very different from 1239 First Street.  

On the face, the Mayfairs in the Garden District and Merrick's Mayfair line appear very different from one another.  And in many ways, they are.  However, there are other smaller details that tend to create small but significant links to details of a shared history.  It's a bit like comparing the French Creole manor houses of the sugar plantations on Saint-Domingue to the later plantation mansions built in Louisiana and the South after the Haitian Revolution.  

Or that Haitian Voodoo seems to have survived down Merrick Mayfair's line while Stella Mayfair had by some accounts been a practitioner of New Orleans Voodoo.  Merrick's collection of old photographs and her ancestors having been Free People of Color tends to hint at The Feast of All Saints.

Hmmm...

Tuesday, October 17, 2023

The Parlor Has Some Goodies and an IWtV Season 2 Update...

The Parlor has been hard at work with building the 3D model of 1239 First Street!  Not only is it to help bring the world of the Mayfair Witches "to life", so to speak, the hobby itself can be calming when world events are in a state of total horror and chaos.  Very soon, I intend to make some brief videos of the model to show the details, but I'll give a few brief teasers here...

The painting is the one used on the first edition cover of Blood Canticle
The first edition of The Witching Hour had a drawing of 1239 First Street on the title page

A model of the coffee cup from Knives Out (2019).  I should make a New Orleans themed version...

For Interview With the Vampire fans, here is a video clip from AMC+'s YouTube channel:

Monday, October 9, 2023

Details of the Double Parlor

 I was looking at the photos of the double parlor at 1239 First Street that had been taken in the 1930s and in 1964 earlier.  Every detail I focus on says even more that houses like this one are unique.  Even though they're something of an architectural polyglot.  Even the fireplaces are interesting!

Some of the fireplaces in the house were described in The Witching Hour as having been fitted for gas.  The ones in the double parlor seem to have been coal burning fireplaces.  In the picture from 1964, there is what looks like a coal bin by one of the two fireplaces.  And it showed how it is that one can have a working fireplace right next to a tall window with very elegant drapes RIGHT next to it.

The walls sticks out a bit.  Oops.  Fixed that.


I managed to get the crown mouldings around the wall that extends out a bit for the fireplace.  More specifically, the chimney behind the wall.  I took out the wood and flames as these fireplaces don't seem to be for burning wood.  If I'm not mistaken, the fireboxes would be a lot bigger than they are.

Creating the arch that partitions this long, cavernous room into two sides, hence the name "double parlor", has been something of a challenge.  This, too, is ornate, and upon closer inspection, one detail goes even further to make this arch somehow divide the room is the fact that the crown mouldings run along both sides of the arch.  

Like this:


Look in the top right corner of the image above.

I've added a chandelier as a sort of place holder, but the actual chandeliers and medallions are larger than the ones you see in the model so far.  Finding mirrors massive enough was another challenge, but hopefully, I can modify these or make mirrors that will be closer to the ones in the actual house.

The mirrors seem to be part of the house, since they seem to have remained in it despite the house having had several owners over the course of its existence.  They make me think of the "white ballroom" at Nottoway Plantation.  As I understand it, John Randolph had had the ballroom painted white so that, like a modern art gallery, the colorful gowns he anticipated his daughters wearing to what sounds like a debutant ball would be more obvious and dazzling.  

The mirrors were so that his daughters and/or other guests could discreetly check themselves to make sure nothing was out of place and they didn't look ridiculous.  Obviously, this house is a townhouse in the Garden District, but looking closely at old photos of the double parlor tends to say a lot about the function of the room.

One can see a couch and chairs around a coffee table in one corner of the room, and a small table and chairs at another part of the room.  There is what could possibly be a writing desk, a shelf for displaying knick knacks...  For the Mayfairs, one end of the room would have a Bösendorfer piano.

Just reading accounts of Stella Mayfair's Roaring Twenties parties, and Rowan and Michael's wedding reception sixty years later both being held in the same double parlor says this is a room meant for entertaining.  With that many people coming and going, it makes sense for those massive sash windows to also function as doors if necessary.  

As I was looking at the pictures of the double parlor from the 1930s, I decided I wanted to really look closely at the pictures to see what sorts of items had been in the room.  And where.

There seems to have been furniture arrangements like the more orderly photos from 1964, but I got the impression that the room hadn't really been used much by the time the pictures were taken in the 1930s.  I could be wrong, but it looked to me like there was something of a hoard of things just set in the room and left wherever they were thumped down first.  Looking at the history of the house, the pictures would have been taken at or about the time Pamela Clapp passed away (1934).

Her husband, Emory Clapp, had purchased the house for her as a wedding gift around 1869.  He had bought it from Elizabeth Brevard, the daughter of Albert Hamilton Brevard, who was the original owner.  Emory Clapp died around 1884, and Pamela, who apparently loved her home, remained in it until her own death decades later.  Considering her advanced age at the time of her death, I can see how she might not have been able to manage the house as she once had.  

If you look at the image of the double parlor taken from the entrance closest to the front door in 1964, look carefully at the picture on the wall.  The one by the fireplace.  There is something very interesting that I had never realized was there before.  It looks like it might be a portrait of a woman standing beside what looks like that same fireplace the portrait hangs next to.


Pictures like this are excellent for giving us a better idea of the scale and proportion of the house.  Anyone know if this is a picture taken in 1239 First Street's double parlor?

Wednesday, October 4, 2023

The Parlor In 3D Updated

The video of Update 3 of 1239 First Street In 3D is now embedded on Come Into My Paralor In 3D.

You'll see it right below the project I thought this time of year would be appropriate for...

Thursday, September 28, 2023

1239 First Street In 3D

After sorting through my project files, I've been able to make some progress building a 3D model of 1239 First Street.  This is a challenging project for several reasons, most of which have to do with structural details.  For someone like me who is a native of the Pacific Northwest, I'm pretty used to houses with much lower ceilings (vaulted ceilings are popular here, though).  So, the first challenge is the scale of a house like this.

There are three different types of columns on the front gallery of the Brevard-Rice house, but only one of the three types, Doric, is not fluted.  The Ionic and Corinthian fluted columns and capitals are definitely a recognizable feature of this house.  Then, there is the iron lace that is iconic in New Orleans architecture.

It took a bit of time, but I was able to find pieces that were used to create the iron arches and balcony rails.  When I resumed the project, that was actually where I started.  They are a detail of the house that cannot be substituted with anything else.  Beginning with features like this tends to help me go from visualizing to creating as I make progress.  

Even the roof is something of a challenge!  A peaked roof with parapets that have cornices on them...that are right over the front gallery.  As I was going over the house's details, I realized that what would ordinarly be chimneys seems to be something else.  I can only imagine it has something to do with a detail mentioned in The Witching Hour--fireplaces fitted for gas?

The front door is actually recessed a couple of feet from the Egyptian keyhole frame.  I went back in and redid this part in the 3D model of the doorway that I'd already made.  The model still has a long way to go, but I am making video updates and embedding them--one at a time--on the page of the Parlor, Come Into My Parlor In 3D.

The project updates are at the top of the page on the Parlor.

Oh, and I've made a new key for the front door.



Friday, September 8, 2023

The Files on the Mayfair Witches--UPDATED

The Files on the Mayfair Witches here on the Parlor's blog will be back soon!  Of course, the main website is always available!

The Files on the Mayfair Witches menu is fully restored, which means when you click on the links under Inside First Street, you will get the actual page listed that you clicked on.  Over time, the font will be visible, too!  Which means it will be large enough to be legible.

Friday, September 1, 2023

A New Tidbit on Saint-Domingue

As we head into Labor Day weekend in the US, here is a new piece of information I've put on the History and the Mayfair Witches page.

I should not be surprised by this, but few plantations built by the French colonists before the Haitian Revolution survive today.  In fact, I'm finding that there aren't many ruins of those plantations to be found today.  There are some remaining, though.

Ogier-Fombrun Museum, Augier, Haiti (Image courtesy Haiti Open)

In Augier, Haiti is the Musée Ogier-Fombrun, built on the site of a former sugar plantation that had been abandoned around 1804.  The architect who found the ruins of that plantation restored what was left and turned the site into a museum.

I have begun a section on the page above that will specifically be about this location.  It's possible this museum is an excellent modern day idea of what Maye Faire might have looked like...

 

Thursday, August 24, 2023

Parlor Roots--Let's Talk Genealogy

When you visit some of the pages of the Parlor, those pages might have a bonus section at the bottom, before the footer, called ~Parlor Roots~.  I've set this section apart in its own section from the main area of each page it will appear on as I have with occasional factoids and funsies.  These bonus items are set in their own section.  They aren't necessarily a direct part of the discussion on the Mayfair Witches, but can possibly provide an additional perspective on the topic of that particular page.

One thing I am very passionate about is researching my family history.  I started this about five years before I first read the Lives of the Mayfair Witches series.  Yes, I first read the series about five years after The Witching Hour was first published.  When I did read the series, the detailed accounts of the history of the Mayfair Witches from the Talamasca's files is one of the things that really resonated with me.

Throughout the Parlor, you might see ~Parlor Roots~ on some pages as a sort of "Easter Egg".  Some might relate directly to the topic of the page.  Others might be fun factoids that can help to give a general idea of historical events and places the Lives of the Mayfair Witches are set among.  There might be things that might help us better understand the pedigree of the Mayfair Witches in the context of history.

Thursday, August 17, 2023

Commentaries on the Works of Anne Rice

I've added some additional resources to the Anne Rice Commentaries page.  In addition to books written about Anne Rice and her work, there are several where one chapter or section discusses Anne's work.

There are also a few books listed that give tours or are meant to be used for self guided tours of Anne Rice's New Orleans.  

The images of book covers are also links, so you can go to where the book is listed on Amazon.com.  

I have wanted to update this page for quite a while, and like anything else on the Parlor is a work-in-progress.  I've also been meaning to do more with the Suggested Reading page, because that is a page I'd like to use to show how Anne's work has influenced other authors.

Sometimes, I've shared some books and series I've read that I liked for one reason or another.  But there is one series I've listed that I understand Anne Rice herself liked.  The Sookie Stackhouse series by Charlaine Harris, which was also adapted to television in the series, True Blood.


With that being said, this allows me to point out a favorite of mine from the book series.  I love it when this happens.  This favorite was so hilariously deranged I just have to mention it.

The Sookie Stackhouse novels are, of course, mainly about vampires, but also includes all kinds of other supernatural or preternatural creatures who either double or masquerade as humans.  The series was set in rural Louisiana, but on occasion, the characters took field trips to New Orleans.  

This was a location where witches surfaced in Sookie Stackhouse's world.

One such witch was a young witch named Amelia--and Amelia had a "major eff up".  It seems Amelia...sort of...turned her boyfriend...Bob...into...a cat.

Yessir.

A cat.

Now, I suppose it might have been embarrassing for Bob to have gone into a Wal-Mart still...scratching...and...grooming...like a cat...  

But my money's on Bob having fathered a...litter...of...kittens...

Oops.

Insert LOL cat animation here.

I admit, reading that was like reading a Stephanie Plum novel, another series I love.  I laughed so hard I had to put the book down! 

Now that I have mentioned the Stephanie Plum novels, I can also mention another book series by the same author, Janet Evanovich.  There are only a handful of books in this series, the Lizzy and Diesel series.

That series, set mainly in Marblehead, Massachusetts, also involves characters who come into contact with the supernatural.  The character of Diesel has also appeared in some of the Stephanie Plum novels, and he in turn brought a character from one of those Stephanie Plum novels into the Lizzy and Diesel novels.

Carl the monkey.

Heather Graham (not to be confused with the actress of the same name) is an author known for her romance novels, and for her Krewe of Hunters series.  The Krewe of Hunters series mainly focuses on ghosts, but she has also written some vampire fiction.  Graham's supernatural fiction could be called "gothic romance" or something similar. 

Some of Graham's Krewe of Hunters characters have also appeared in short stories--novellas--included in some of the 1001 Dark Nights anthologies.

Many of Heather Graham's supernatural novels are set in New Orleans.  Graham has also collected several of her blog posts and put them in a book of their own, Why I Love New Orleans: A Collection of Blogs.

I believe I've already listed some books by both Charlaine Harris and Heather Graham on the Suggested Reading page.  What I hope to achieve with that particular page as I update it is show just how much Anne's work resonated with so many, including other authors.

Whether it's serious or it's screamingly funny, Anne Rice's work has had a profound influence on many authors.  That influence is part of Anne's literary legacy.  This is what I hope to show on the Suggested Reading page of the Parlor.

Wednesday, August 16, 2023

Mayfair Family Tree Graphics

I have been focusing on other areas of the Parlor lately.  However, there's a lot to say about the Mayfair Family Tree.  I like to make graphics that are appealing, creative, and help present the topic of the page.  So, I have a couple of new graphics on two of the family tree pages.  Here is an example of one:


This is a cute little family tree graphic I made on PicMix.  The only Mayfair Witch NOT shown here (besides Julien) is Deborah.  Her portrait is different from these as it is made to appear as if it were a painting from the 17th Century.  This new graphic appears on the Mayfair Family Tree page.

There is another "family tree" oriented animated graphic on the site.  That can be found on the Mayfair Family Tree Tutorial page.

I have been trying for a few months now to make an animation like this!  I wanted to make something where it's the vines that grow, but I had to do it a bit differently.  I'll keep trying, though!



Tuesday, August 8, 2023

Mary Beth Mayfair

I've made a new version of the animated portrait of Mary Beth Mayfair.  It has the floating rose petals and a music clip from the countdown clips for the AMC series.  There is something subtle but different from the first version I made of Mary Beth Mayfair.  Can you guess what it is?

Saturday, August 5, 2023

Stella Mayfair "Sings"-Techno Flapper

I was animating Stella Mayfair on cutout.pro, and got curious to see what Stella looked like up close and animated...

...and THIS happened:

Mayfair Funny Pages

For giggles, I decided to redo a brief little short video I made when the Parlor began massive renovations.  I added a little sound, as well.  I also wanted a better image of the Egyptian Keyhole doorway with the signs and sleeping cat on a doormat that says--well, look here:

Monday, July 31, 2023

Remembering Anne Rice

Amid a bunch of other things I had to do, I've finally gotten to this very important task.  A Celebration of Life for Anne Rice is still in the planning stages.  When you go to Anne's official website, though, it will look a little different.

Saturday, July 22, 2023

The Garden District on Project Gutenberg

I discovered that a book published at least as long ago as 1972 that shows 1239 First Street can be read on Project Gutenberg.  It is The Great Days of the Garden District by Martha Ann Brett Samuel.

Like the Internet Archive, Project Gutenberg also has made hard to find books available in digital format.  One difference is that the books are usually ones you will have to do at least some scrolling to read.  Since the book is available to read on Project Gutenberg, I've put a new link on Exploring New Orleans Architecture.  When you click the book, it will open the book on the Project Gutenberg website.

One thing Michael Curry did during the restoration of the Mayfair house (in the book, The Witching Hour) was to show Rowan pictures of the houses surrounding hers.  Michael took Rowan on a "tour" via history books.  So I thought it would be an interesting addition to the Parlor.

If you like, click on the book below to go straight to the anchor link on the Parlor page above...

Monday, July 17, 2023

Patterns in Chaos

To give a better idea of what a restoration of a house like 1239 First Street would have been like, I've created a new kind of image gallery, a slideshow.  The images came from Estately.com, and are of recent restoration work on the Morris-Israel house at 1331 First Street.  Both houses, while not identical, are similar in a lot of ways.

To see this little collection of images, you can go to the section of the Patterns In Chaos page linked here.  The images in the slideshow gallery are of the interior of the house.

As for the exterior, there are also a few images taken of that, as well.  I think these two images of the gallery of the Morris-Israel house really fit the description of the peeling and faded paint of the Mayfair house in The Witching Hour...

Before...

...After


Saturday, July 15, 2023

House of Patterns

When you look at the House of Patterns page, it will look...slightly different.  The thumbnails are a tiny bit larger.  But when you click on those thumbnails, the full size images are now quite a bit larger.  With the exception of this one:

and the two drawings of the Egyptian keyhole doorway, which now open at their full size of 612x792, the images of the plans will open at a width of 1920 and a height between 1506 and 1510.  For those who want to get a good look at the plans for 1239 First Street, the larger size should be A LOT more helpful.

I have never been able to find any plans like this for the second or third floors of the house.  There are photos of the master bedroom and at least one other bedroom for real estate listings, but that's about it.  The closest I've been able to find to see what the second floor of the house might look like is other houses like the First Street house.  

One is the Morris-Israel house, which the McEnery Company took several photos of during renovation.  Some of them can be seen on Exploring New Orleans Architecture.  A link to the McEnery Company website's content on the Morris-Israel house can be found on that page, as well.

The Morris-Israel House, New Orleans

This house does look a lot like another house that is closer to 1239 First Street, the Carroll-Crawford house, doesn't it?

The Carroll-Crawford House, New Orleans

Obviously not a carbon copy, but the architectural details sure are similar, aren't they?  Both houses were designed by Samuel Jamison, so perhaps the details on both houses were something of a "signature" of his as well as New Orleans as a whole?

There are a lot of houses in New Orleans that are structurally similar to 1239 First Street.  Even the Soria Creel house has similarities that stand out, and no doubt made it possible to be used as the Mayfair house in the AMC series.  I've always had an eye out for anything that could possibly give a better idea of the layout of the second and third floors of the Mayfair house.  Several key things happened on the upper floors of the Mayfair house that being able to visualize its layout helps to better picture and understand.

Friday, July 14, 2023

Have a Look at Mona Mayfair

On the Mayfair Witches page, only two of the portraits were still images.  Now, there is only one.  This is Mona Mayfair's portrait as its been up until now...


...and now, click the link to see what her portrait does...The Mayfair Witches: Mona Mayfair

Monday, July 10, 2023

Witches In History--Salem and the Mayfair Witches

I've begun the process of researching for a new special page to add.  This new special page will be about the Salem Witch Trials.

I'm surprised I haven't at least done some kind of discussion on this piece of history before, to be honest.  I want to really look further into its history, also something I'm surprised I haven't gotten to yet, considering my relatives who were victims of it.  It was a bit jarring to learn John Proctor was my great uncle, but that, to me, just makes it more important for the Parlor to give the Salem Witch Trials more attention.  

The focus is, of course, on what parallels can be drawn between this historical ghastly event and the Mayfair Witches.  The only way to do that is to really look at the history, the facts of the Salem Witch Trials.  I am going to look and see if I can find anything Anne Rice might have researched, because it's been many years since I've looked.  Understandable that I can't remember if I did come across it years ago.  So, I think I will begin there.

I hope this new special page, when added, will be informative and interesting.  In the meantime, I do indeed plan to develop the page about the Soria Creel house a bit more.  I approach that topic with the understanding that this is private property, a private home, so I will be choosy as to what information on the house I provide as an historic property.

There is much to see on Come Into My Parlor, so please drop by and explore, have fun!  If you have any questions or concerns, I can be reached at comeintomyparlor1995@gmail.com.

Wednesday, June 21, 2023

The Mayfair House--First Street

There has been a lot of interest in the Mayfair house since the premiere of the AMC series.  So, I've added a few things to Inside First Street and House of Patterns.


 

The video above has been on Inside First Street for many years.  It is still there, but now, instead of this video by itself, you will see a YouTube playlist in its place, with the video as the thumbnail.  There are about 5 videos in the playlist so far, including this one.  

Near the bottom of House of Patterns is another embedded video.  The video by StudioSims Create, which is also on YouTube, is in French.  It is a Sims model of the Mayfair house, and it includes the garden and pool!  I put it on this particular page because it might be fun to compare the model with the plans of the Mayfair house!

I began a 3D model of the Mayfair house using SketchUp Pro a couple years ago.  You can see a section of the Parlor model in the memorial video, but I might put some clips from it together so you can see the model on its own.  Hopefully, I'll get that done soon.  

Eventually, I'd like to put together some information on the Mayfair house of the AMC series, the Soria-Creel house.  It would be more of an historical survey and discussion of the structural elements of the house.  It would also be a comparison to the house at 1239 First Street so fans of the books and/or the AMC series will be able to distinguish the two houses from one another...

Tuesday, June 20, 2023

Amelia Street and Belle Grove

I managed to find a video on YouTube that gives a tour of the Amelia Street house at 3711 St Charles Avenue.  You can see more detail of the house and from different perspectives, which is really fascinating.  So, I've added the video to the Parlor playlists on YouTube.

I have embedded it on the Amelia Street page if you'd like to take a look.

Another thing I've done is to discuss one real life plantation that inspired Fontevrault on its own page.  This, of course, is Belle Grove Plantation.  Belle Grove was located in Iberville Parish, Louisiana along the Mississippi River.  The mansion burned after decades of ruin in 1952 and is long gone.  

You will find a link to the page that has begun to discuss Belle Grove at the bottom of the Amelia Street page.  Or, you can click here:  The Queen of the South - Belle Grove Plantation

I think an understanding of the plantations along the Mississippi River, upon which Anne Rice based Fontevrault, and probably Riverbend as well, might give insight into the Mayfair Witches who operated the fictional plantations.  One thing I could not help but notice in the AMC series is something that I wonder if there will be more details on in Season 2.

The location of the Mayfair crypt.

In the books, the Mayfair crypt was located in the cemetery in New Orleans.  It was constructed with "oven" vaults, the type you see on mausoleums with "end open" crypts.  If you are familiar with mausoleums at places like Forest Lawn in Glendale, California or Hollywood Forever Cemetery's Cathedral Mausoleum, "end open" crypts are those where the casket is slid in end first.   For example, the crypt of Rudolph Valentino is an end open crypt.

Then again, one has only to look at the crypts in St. Louis Cemetery or Lafayette Cemetery in New Orleans and see how many of the family mausoleums are built.  The Mayfair tomb is not one you would enter to access the individual crypts of those entombed there.

But in the series, it was.  AND.  It was a mausoleum that obviously was not in New Orleans, but in a rural area.  

A lot of plantations had their own private burial grounds.  Not all of them, but still, a number of them did.  So I had to ponder what the reason for the change of scenery for departed Mayfairs was.

There are possible spoiler alerts--unless, of course, you have both read the books AND watched the show.

We've already met one character who actually was not introduced until later in the book series, one who was connected with Fontevrault.  Those familiar with the books will recall that while Riverbend, the plantation operated by the Mayfairs until the end of the 19th century, was washed away by the river despite numerous attempts to prevent the destruction.  And also that although Fontevrault had not been washed away and was still standing, it was standing in...water.

Before Katherine Mayfair commissioned the construction of the First Street house in the historically accurate 1857, the Mayfair Witches' home was Riverbend.  The family, if you recall if you have read the books, fled Haiti during the Haitian Revolution in the last decade of the 18th century.  They'd been at Riverbend a long time before First Street, so...

Where were those Mayfairs laid to rest?

Since I haven't visited this part of the story in a long time, I might have forgotten if some Mayfairs might have been moved to other burial grounds, but not all of them.

When you take into consideration that the rural location might have helped to conceal something that occurred among the Mayfairs over the generations, you start to see something I understand could be called "foreshadowing".  

If you have not read the books, this could definitely be a spoiler alert, but if you have, you might understand when I say this: "walking babies".