Oscar wilde green carnation

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Green Carnation, Loose Incense, Spell Candles, Candle Spells, Oscar Wilde, Say Yes, Drawing Reference, Tarot Cards, Original Design

Oscar Wilde made green carnations the symbol of queerness. We made this patch as an homage to Wilde and to flaunt our own LGBTQ sexuality. This 3 woven patch is a way to say Yes I am in a very dapper way. This patch features original design by LastCraft. Iron On. 100% Woven patch. Please support the

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Green Carnation Aesthetic, Drink Your Juice Shelby, Green Carnation, Secret Handshake, Take My Money, Soft Enamel Pins, Oscar Wilde, Soft Enamel, Green Flowers

Oscar Wilde (1854-1900) was an Irish poet, playwright (The Importance of Being Earnest) and author (ThePicture of Dorian Gray). After writing in different forms throughout the 1880s, he became one of London's most popular playwrights in the early 1890s. He is best remembered for his epigrams and plays and his 2 year imprisonment for his homosexuality. Wilde often wore a green carnation on his lapel. The green carnation became a symbol of Wilde himself, but was also used as a sort of secret…

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February 20,1892-the opening of his play "Lady Windermere’s Fan": Oscar Wilde had an actor wear a green carnation and asked friends to wear one too, so part of the audience would be connected to a character. Graham Robertson was asked to wear one. “What does it mean?” he asked. “Nothing whatever,” said Wilde, “but that is just what nobody will guess;” yet Wilde’s choice wasn't accidental. Green had subversive associations for him: Irish nationalism, absinthe, and the artist as outsider. Lady Windermere's Fan, Green Carnation, Social Circles, Essayist, People Names, Dorian Gray, Beneath The Surface, Be Natural, Oscar Wilde

February 20,1892-the opening of his play "Lady Windermere’s Fan": Oscar Wilde had an actor wear a green carnation and asked friends to wear one too, so part of the audience would be connected to a character. Graham Robertson was asked to wear one. “What does it mean?” he asked. “Nothing whatever,” said Wilde, “but that is just what nobody will guess;” yet Wilde’s choice wasn't accidental. Green had subversive associations for him: Irish nationalism, absinthe, and the artist as outsider.

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