MissQueenie
Practically Family
- Messages
- 502
- Location
- Los Angeles, CA
The practice of requesting, giving, or bequeathing locks of hair as tokens of affection or memorials of loved ones gone to their rest was extremely common in the late 18th-19th centuries. Often, these locks were fashioned into jewelry.
I personally find this practice touchingly sentimental in the case of mourning jewelry, and deeply Romantic (in both a literary and a modern sense) in the case of lover's tokens.
So, am I the only person who doesn't think this practice is totally creepy? I admit when it comes to the hair of the deceased, it's a little macabre -- but for a living lover?
I personally find this practice touchingly sentimental in the case of mourning jewelry, and deeply Romantic (in both a literary and a modern sense) in the case of lover's tokens.
So, am I the only person who doesn't think this practice is totally creepy? I admit when it comes to the hair of the deceased, it's a little macabre -- but for a living lover?