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Ch197, Interesting cooking spatula/scraping paddle
I was wondering if this was just a single slot spatula (not common these days) or something slightly anachronistic... like a candy thermometer (with the glass tube in the slot).
But it's just the former. Here're a couple examples of vintage designs by Avon and Foley. Other brands made them, too, like Tupperware, but most are short, wide, and bent.
What Oliver uses is even older, of course, since nylon wasn't around quite yet. Also, his is flat, probably wooden, and has a metal or possibly leather loop going through the handle for hanging.
Some brands make something similar now, for stirring and scraping. This silicone/nylon Betty Crocker one even has a flat design.
It's still just too short, too wide, and not made of materials available back then. I know the series has a bunch of anachronistic things, but a spatula at the orphanage shouldn't be one of them. š
It might actually be a Japanese (or at least Asian) style that's probably been in use for a very long time without much change over the past hundred years or longer. So, it would be immediately recognizable to local readers.
I did finally see these Japanese spatulas with the right shape, but the single slotted ones are apparently not too common. I have not found one just like it quite yet, but I'll keep looking.
Ch138, The oldest outfit
Sebastian offers to change his appearance, and his face and figure donāt change, but his clothes do. The three options given are the Victorian butler, the 18th century outfit (probably from Austria), and what appears to be early Italian Renaissance.
I was asked about it on this post, so I did more research, since I hadnāt done too much on that one.
I think itās later 15th century Italian Renaissance (which is still early Renaissance), because of several features. Later Renaissance clothes for both men and women were also bigger/bulkier, using more fabric for pretty much everything. And I made a thing:
What we donāt see is the front of the bottom half of this outfit, and that might be because of whatās allowed and not allowed in GFantasy. I donāt know their rules for publication, but the outfit would have included hose, like tight leggings, but they are in two separate parts and connected by other pieces⦠including a codpiece, which would be quite noticeable just below the short doublet (or between peplums at the base of the doublet). Heās also wearing short, paned (has that āslash and puffā feature again) breeches (over the hose), and the codpiece would still be visible between them. I wonāt include images of codpieces in this post, but here are a couple articles on it, and they do have images. 15th century codpieces were not as flashy as they later became, but the fashion trend died out by 1600.
Based on the overall appearance of the outfit, Iād say itās still meant to represent the male servant of a noble. Not himself a peasant nor anyone among the nobility.
EDIT: A lot of discussion about Sebastianās personality in the comments!
Ch111, Paragon fortune-telling cup
In ch111, Blavat is clearly using a āfortune-tellingā cup based off a popular design by Paragon. Itās rare now but comes in a few color combinations⦠mostly pastels⦠with gold trim.
The difference that Yana-san has created between the real pattern and the one Blavat has is seen when you look down into his cup.
She has combined china patterns⦠and added stylized zodiac signs from a source I donāt recognize. But below the zodiac signs thereāre these tips of what must be triangles, so I think sheās also using something like this Aynsley āNelrosā cup.
But sheās replaced those symbols (14 of them) with the 12 zodiac signs, then has a triangular section coming down between each zodiac. The rest of the design, farther down, might be essentially the same as this. A star with a broken circle and planetary signs. Might even have the ship anchor āļø in the center. š¤·š»āāļø
Paragon and Aynsley are well known English porcelain makers, but they didnāt really make these until at least 1900. So⦠Blavat is using a teacup that doesnāt quite exist⦠and ones similar to it didnāt exist until at least a decade later.
Ch179, The still-room
The meaning has changed over the centuries. It used to be for making everything from distilled alcoholic beverages to jams and jellies to medicines to makeup products to soaps. And it used to solely be the domain of the House Keeper. These are traditionally important and time-consuming things to do, so they were entrusted to the highest (female) member of the staff. Or to the lady of the house, if she ran her own household.
By the Victorian era, it was mostly for storing jams and jellies, cakes, tea, and coffee⦠but also sometimes still used for making wine, brewing beer, or distilling liqueurs. Phantomhive Manor apparently also keeps the fancy tableware for guests here. By then, keeping a still-room was mostly relegated to the duties of a still-room maid, but some households might have kept it as the domain of the House Keeper, particularly if there wasnāt a large staff.
And when I said ākitchensā (plural) in an earlier post, I should have clarified that a manor like this wouldnāt have a single kitchen with all the necessary things in it. They really were typically split into several rooms, each with a specific purpose, and were collectively called āthe kitchensā.
Itās cool that Sebastian says the still-room is stocked with stuff to āentertain special guestsā, since no one eavesdropping would find that wording odd at all. Of course, you wouldnāt invite those guests to the still-room, but you would typically use nicer dishes to set the table upstairs⦠and you would offer them the finest preserves, cakes, and beverages youāve got. Since the Phantomhives are supposedly known for their hospitality, anyone would indeed expect their still-room to be well-stocked.

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Ch179, Matchbox or Vesta box
Anyone recognize the brand on this? š
Ch174 (pt 4), The joker isnāt joking now... is he?
Lau would like to have stayed longer at the sanatorium, since it offers fresh air and relaxation, but heās also keen to get the assignment completed. Next chapter, he could act like his usual self (the Jester archetype) and diffuse the situation by saying they can take their time in destroying the place, but I doubt he will... this time. His behavior now is more like when he and Ran-Mao confronted Mina and Harold West at the end of the curry arc. I think this is his deadly serious side... the one that got him where he is in QÄ«ng BÄng....
Bonus: I wanted to note his neckwear, since itās very specific. Itās either the āGentlemanās Satin Flat Scarfā or the āGentlemenās Satin Puff Scarfā. There might be an ever-so-slight puff to it, so I think itās actually the āpuffā one!
Ch163, The dishes, decor, and tea
I will have to look around to see if I can make proper matches, but Iāll just go ahead and post now. Then Iāll reblog if/when I find them.
There are a pair of these decorative urns or amphorae on the windowsill.
Then we have this dainty-looking teacup and saucer, one of the silver teapots that shows up from time to time, and Harrodsā Oolong.