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Queen Victoria's silk stockings to be auctioned!

The silk stockings have Queen Victoria's initials embroidered in red and are expected to fetch around 150 pounds.

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Image Courtesy: Anderson and Garland website
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A pair of Queen Victoria's silk stockings, believed to be carrying the monarch's favourite design during the 1840s, are to go under the hammer. The monarch, who cut a severe figure in black in later life, wore the delicate cream garments in the 1840s, when she was in her 20s. The stockings, which have Queen Victoria's initials embroidered in red, are expected to fetch around 150 pounds, the BBC reported.

A spokesman for Newcastle auctioneer Anderson & Garland said there had been global interest in the undergarments, currently owned by a private collector. Fred Wyrley-Birch, a specialist at the auction house, said: "When I was shown the stockings by the current owner, I was immediately reminded of a scene in the film 'The Young Victoria' where Prince Albert knelt at Queen Victoria's feet and rolled her silk stockings up her legs. It contradicts the image we usually have of Queen Victoria as a rather large elderly lady dressed in black." Items of the monarch's clothing were distributed to members of the royal household following her death in 1901.

In 2015, a pair of Queen Victoria's bloomers sold for 12,000 pounds, while in 2010 a pair of her stockings went for 700 pounds. Victoria was Queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland from 20 June, 1837 until her death on January 22, 1901. 

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