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"Willem Eversdijck (c.1620-1671) was a Dutch Golden Age painter. He was the son of Cornelis Eversdijck and flourished at Goes about the year 1660. He is known for portraits and several of these were engraved by Houbraken. In 1633 he was a pupil of Cornelis de Vos in Antwerp.Willem Eversdijck in the RKD In 1652 he became a member of the Middelburg Guild of St. Luke, where he later died. A picture of Officers and Members of the Company of Archers, called " Edele Voetboog," at Goes, by him, is in the Rotterdam Museum. File:Allegorie op visserij.jpgAllegory of fishing, 1667-1671, by Willem Eversdijck, now in the Rijksmuseum Amsterdam File:W. Eversdijck Cornelis Fransz. Eversdijck 1660-1666.jpgCornelis Fransz. Eversdijck, Mathematician and treasurer of Zeeland, ca. 1660, by Willem Eversdijck, now in the Rijksmuseum Cornelis Willemsz Eversdijck, his father, was also a portrait painter of Goes, who died there in 1649. In the Rotterdam Museum are three pictures by him, representing Officers and Members of the Company of Archers, called "Edele Voetboog," at Goes; two of which are dated 1616 and 1624. References Attribution: * * }} External links {{commons categoryWillem Eversdijck Category:Year of birth unknown Category:1671 deaths Category:Dutch Golden Age painters Category:Dutch male painters Category:Dutch portrait painters Category:People from Goes Category:Year of birth uncertain "
"St Nicholas in 2009 Church of St Nicholas is a Grade I listed church in Swineshead, Bedfordshire, England. It became a listed building on 13 July 1964. The tower and spire are a naïve interpretation of those at Keyston, Huntingdonshire. There are some frescoes and good misericords.Betjeman, J. (ed.) (1968) Collins Pocket Guide to English Parish Churches: the South. London: Collins; p. 106 See also *Grade I listed buildings in Bedfordshire References Category:Church of England church buildings in Bedfordshire Category:Grade I listed churches in Bedfordshire "
"A Zephyrina Jupon is a modified crinoline in the form of a metal frame with an open front. It gradually widens in circumference towards the feet. It is straight from the waist down at the front, but the train widens out at the back. They were popular during the mid-Victorian era (1857–77) Messrs. Thomson and Co. are the inventors and manufacturers of the pattern, along with "the glove-fitting corset" References Further reading *Costume & Fashion *The Freaks of Fashion *The Tomahawk *From Hoopskirts to Nudity Category:1850s fashion Category:1860s fashion Category:1870s fashion Category:Skirts "