Whatnot Wednesday: Steampunk & Real Steampunkery, #CFFC

Wednesday, February 18, 2026

Daphne (foreground):  Is Yummy Human talking about us?  This is a Whatnot post, isn’t it?

Velma: No and yes.  You heard  her say POSY… that’s not anything to do with cats.  And it’s not about a crinkum-crankum either.

Daphne:  Wha—

 Velma:  Don’t ask.  I can’t talk about it here. It’s bawdy Victorian slang.


Welcome, my chuckaboos!  “Chuckaboo” is what the Victorians called a dear friend.  Does slang count as an “invention”…?  No, I’m not going to try and stretch it that far.  However, I do have some inventions for you — and they’re from the Steam Era, which includes the Victorian Era.


Why am I talking about inventions? Dan Antion posted the latest Cee’s Fun Foto Challenge (CFFC) and the prompt is Gizmos and Gadgets.  So, blame him for this mishmash, this chaos, this everything-but-the-kitchen-sink, this Whatnot post.  You see, a lot of my stories, even the fantasies, include inventions from the timeframe of the tale.  “Gizmos and gadgets” gave me a lot of different things that tie together.   I chose two gadgets for this post, and they’re both related to The Delta Pearl.  However, I also wrote a book that’s sort of an encyclopedia of weird inventions from the timeframe of that duology.  It’s called Real Steampunkery Tech: True Contraptions of the Steam and Diesel Eras.  With all that, of course I had to share an excerpt from The Delta Pearl.

Tussie Mussie-Posy-bouquet holder wikimedia commons 

In the photo above, you see a silver “posy holder.” The small bouquets this gadget was designed to hold were called nosegays, tussie mussies, or posies.  They were from 3 to 6 inches in length. They included a little cone, basket or tiny vase that held the flowers, and that connected to a chain with pin and a ring (worn on the lady’s finger).  Many also had a long spearpoint shaped handle like the one in the photo, which alternatively attached the bouquet holder to a woman’s gown (or perhaps a man’s suit jacket).  All this helped a woman carry the little bouquet while dancing.  The Wikimedia Commons photo is from the Auckland Museum Tāmaki Paenga Hira, New Zealand. 

Image collage by Teagan
Available at relinks.me/B0D34H5BYT

In my steampunk-fantasy duology, The Delta Pearl, you’ll find quite a few inventions, along with some gizmos and gadgets.  Another nifty item was the “skirt lifter.”  Some were unattractively functional, but others were downright decorative.  Sometimes these were called a skirt grip, dress suspender, or a hem-holder, but regardless of the name, it was a device for lifting a long skirt so that a woman could work, dance, or just move around easier, without getting the hem of her gown dirty.  The skirt lifter clamped on to the hem and was attached to the belt by a cord, ribbon, or chain.  There’s an example in the Wikipedia photo below. 

Skirt Lifter 1900s bee design Wikipedia

The above example has a pair of cast tongs and each of the two arms has a terminal acorn knop. The arms are encased within a circular sliding double-sided boss or plaque which has a circular free running suspension loop. The outer faces of the bosses have similar pressed decoration consisting of a bird in flight entwined within a wreath.


Daphne:  Wait a minute, so is that thing the “crankum”?  It cranks up the skirt?  Then what’s a crinkum?

Velma:  Can’t you just let it go, Daphne?  I you want to know what a crinkum-crankum is then read Speak Chuckaboo: Slang of the Victorian and Steam Eras.

Velma Speak Chuckaboo

Excerpt from The Delta Pearl

This excerpt opens with the young heroine, Émeraude, on the Delta Pearl riverboat as she practices her dancing.  “The Dealer” also known as Jaspe and Amethyst the clockwork spider are on hand.  Émeraude wouldn’t have a tussie mussie holder for her lesson, but she might carry one to an actual dance — particularly if a suitor had given her a small bouquet.  Don’t forget that the Language of Flowers was also important during the Steam Era.  She might carry such a posy holder to send a secret message.

Special thanks to Dan Antion for providing most of the photo illustrations for this post.

Dance

Original photo by Dan Antion. Tomfoolery by Teagan
Original photo by Dan Antion. Tomfoolery by Teagan

A silver thread glittered as the morning sun streamed onto the deck.  At the end of the filament was a purple clockwork spider.  Briefly, a sunbeam illuminated the amethyst that made the spider’s back.  It skittered across the wooden floor before vanishing behind a crate.


I stepped lightly on the spot where the spider had been a moment earlier.  In the hands of a truly expert dancer, I twirled and spun until the world whirled dizzily with me.  My partner’s impeccable sense of balance never faltered.  We danced high above the river, on the hurricane deck.  Dozens of fluffy white clouds blurred into one as he twirled me rapidly around and around.  A decidedly immature giggle escaped my lips.  At that moment in time, life was all beer and skittles.  I wouldn’t convince anyone of my maturity if girlish giggles became a habit.


Sunlight reflected brightly on the strands of triangular waxed flags strung above the deck. 

Like diamonds, I thought as I tilted my head back.

Clouds by Dan Antion
Clouds by Dan Antion

The sound the flags made as they fluttered in the breeze reminded me of startled birds taking flight.  It took my mind to the day, years before, when I first saw the Delta Pearl.  I missed a step.  The Dealer stopped our dance.  He looked at me with what passed for concern on his less than mobile features.  He blinked before speaking in his quasi French accent.


“Émeraude, are you well?  Do you tire?  Perhaps the sun is too much?” the Dealer asked.

“No, my chuckaboo,” I forced a smile and assured him.  “I was merely distracted.”


A slight change in his eyes let me know that he didn’t believe me.  Happily, he did not pursue the matter.  The Dealer knew I did not like memories of my early years.  He usually seemed to know when my thoughts traveled where they shouldn’t.  One would never realize it just by looking at him, but the Dealer was compassionate and nurturing.  Sometimes I felt he was too consoling, though that quality had benefits in his occupation.  Yet, I had to admit that I seemed to receive more of his fostering behavior than did the rest of the crew.


Between the Captain and the Dealer, I had not just one, but two father figures.  Damfino how a girl was supposed to have any fun… 

Of course, he had a name besides the Dealer.  He called himself Jaspe.  To my ears it sounded like he pronounced his name ZASH-pah.  However, more often than not he was simply dubbed the Dealer.

I smiled and shook my head before speaking.

“You are a much better dancer than I,”  was my response.

“Ah, but cher, I am named for a rock — jasper,” he reminded me, using the English pronunciation to refer to the semiprecious gem.  “I claim no more talent than the rock whose name I bear,” he replied, self-deprecating as always.  “Besides, I have had so very long to perfect the steps.  You are much improved,” he complimented me with a graceful, sweeping bow.

The Dealer gazed at the horizon.  He raised a white gloved hand to shield his eyes from the bright sunlight.  I knew he saw much more than I ever could.  Jaspe stared at one spot too long.  It made me wish for a spy glass.


His intent gaze and motionless stance worried me.  I drew a breath to question him.  However, after a moment he spoke.


“We will be in port soon.  Best we get to work, eh?”


It was impossible not to watch his graceful movements.  I wanted to ask just how long he had been perfecting his dancing, how old he was.  His name, Jaspe, was French, and his accent clearly bespoke New Orleans.  Yet, I knew he discussed neither his age nor his origins.  No doubt the Captain knew from where Jaspe hailed.  However, I had failed more than once to sate my curiosity there.  Our skipper was not inclined to gossip.


I turned to look again at the spot that had held the Dealer’s interest.  Something about his manner, along with the fact that he seemed determined to deny noticing anything did not bode well.


Of course, I wanted an answer to my unspoken question ― just as I wanted to know his age and origins.  However, the question to which I most wanted an answer about the Dealer was not the number of his years.

What I wanted to know was whether or not he was in fact a man at all.

***

victorian-silhouette flowers Pixabay

Descending the gracefully curving staircase, I marveled at the carpet for the umpteenth time.  The yarn was a deep shade of red, almost but not quite burgundy.  Golden scroll designs were worked into a border pattern on each side.  I couldn’t help stooping down to touch the plush fibers.  What gave me pause?  I had grown up on the Delta Pearl, lived most of my life there, so I knew the carpet had never been replaced.  Yet it did not fade nor did it develop signs of wear.


As I stood, I realized I was beside the old portrait again.  The subject of the painting was a beautiful woman.  She was from some undetermined past century.  The woman looked vaguely familiar to me.  Yes, she definitely reminded me of someone, but I had never been able to place the person from my past or present who resembled her.


The artist painted her luxurious hair so that it shined like a halo about her lovely face.  Around her neck was a ribbon from which an intricately carved cameo hung.


With an effort, I brought my mind to the task at hand.  We would be in port shortly and I had to be ready to greet our guests.  I skedaddled to my rooms to change.

Grandma's Cameo by Dan Antion
Grandma’s Cameo by Dan Antion

My quarters were much larger than most of the cabins on the Delta Pearl.  Which, is to say, considering the size of accommodations on boats, I had a little elbow room.  Moments later, as I applied the finishing touches to my ensemble, I opened my jewelry box.  I touched a cameo so similar it could have been a twin to the one in the portrait.  I ran across it at a shop in a port of call.  When it reminded me of the painting, I had to buy it even though it cost me a month’s wages.


My cameo was carved from some exotic shell I couldn’t name.  It was the same blueish purple color as the one in the portrait to which I felt such an affinity.  That feeling of connection wasn’t something I could easily explain.  When I looked at the woman in that painting, I felt as if the image of an old pal, someone who knew me completely, gazed back at me.


Outside my porthole, signs of civilization slid past.  When I saw a white picket fence near the riverbank, I knew we would dock momentarily.  I tied the cameo around my neck and headed back to the staircase.

Photo by Dan Antion
Photo by Dan Antion

At the bottom of the stairs I glanced at the portrait.  For an instant, I thought the woman in it moved.  Breathlessly, I approached the painting.  The purple clockwork spider peeked from behind the frame.


“Amethyst, darling…  I must have seen you crawl across the portrait,” I murmured to the spider.  “Now you light a shuck and stay out of sight.  Go on now.  We don’t want any of the guests seeing you, do we?  There’d be quite a collie shangle if one of them tried to take you home.”


The clockwork spider clicked at me.  There was something unusual about the pattern of clicks.


“Émeraude!”

Someone called my name.  That and a glance at the window told me I needed to hurry to my post.  Moving toward the deck, I looked back over my shoulder at the clockwork creature.  Before she scurried behind the portrait, two of her four twinkling eyes winked at me.

***

As if there had not already been enough shameless self-promotion, I must include this one because of the inventions.

Real Steampunkery Tech: True Contraptions of the Steam and Diesel Eras

Revised cover "Real Steampunkery Tech: True Contraptions of the Steam and Victorian Eras

E-book:  relinks.me/B0DHC6JFVT

Paperback:  relinks.me/B0DHD9BSJB

♠  ♦  ♣  ♥

This post is all-human written.   Furthermore, the author expressly prohibits any entity from using this publication for purposes of training AI technologies to generate text.  This is a work of fiction.  Characters, names, places, and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, locales, or events is entirely coincidental.

Copyright © 2026 and 2019 by Teagan Ríordáin Geneviene

Dan Antion’s images Copyright ©  2019

All rights reserved. 

No part of this work may be reproduced, scanned, or distributed in any printed or electronic form without permission.  Please do not participate in or encourage piracy of copyrighted materials in violation of the author’s rights.

All images are either the property of the author or provided by free sources, unless stated otherwise.


46 thoughts on “Whatnot Wednesday: Steampunk & Real Steampunkery, #CFFC

  1. I’ve been reading mysteries, so the first thing I thought when I saw the posy holder was that the sharp end would make a wicked murder weapon. A story bunny for you?

    Thank you for the excerpt. you make me happy when skies are gray.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Imagine having to clean those skirts, Jennie. 🙀. Even skirts a couple of inches above the ground would drag every time a woman leaned forward to do any little thing. So the skirt lifters helped in a few different ways.
      Thank you for remembering the Delta Pearl. Big hugs.

      Liked by 1 person

    1. Hi, Robbie. LOL, I’m glad I could sneak something new (old/new?) in on you. 😀 I had seen strap/suspender type skirt lifters on photos of women who did physical labor jobs, but I didn’t learn about the decorative ones until I started writing stories set in the era.
      Thanks for your kind words and all your support. Hugs.

      Like

  2. A lovely excerpt, Teagan. Thank you!

    This really is an excellent book, books when I add in The Geostrophic Pearl. If anyone reading this comment has decided to read The Delta Pearl, you will absolutely want to read The Geostrophic Pearl.

    The gadgets are quite the gizmos (cheeky me)… love it all!

    HUGS!

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Perfect excerpt from a great read! I find all these things that ladies had to have in that era rather remarkable. They’d need a suitcase to carry them along on a trip! Emeraude is an interesting name – it was my mother’s favorite perfume.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I remember commercials for that perfume when I was a little girl. My (late) little sister’s birthday was in May, where emerald is the birthstone. I used the name as a way to sort of include her in the story.

      I agree that there were some delightfully ingenious inventions in that era. Thanks for visiting, Noelle. Hugs.

      Like

  4. This is a wonderful Wednesday post. Tell Daphne she can call me. I have your book and I know what crinkum-crankum refers to 😉

    I loved reading the excerpt form the Delta Pearl. That’s one of my favorite of your stories, Teagan and a masterful bit of storytelling, and some of the most delightful characters I’ve found in a single book..

    Gizmos and gadgets were popping up everywhere during that era. I have a series of reprints of articles from Popular Mechanics in the early 1900s. The things and “techniques” people wrote about are crazy. One article describes “how to remove a stuck pulley with dynamite.”

    I hope you have a wonderful second half of this week.

    Liked by 1 person

      1. I gather this was at a time when you could buy dynamite t your local hardware store. The pulley was on a large pump that operated outside in the weather. It was seized to the shaft and that’s how they managed to break it free. I had so much fun reading these reprints.

        I’m glad you found the pictures useful. I loved that story!

        Liked by 1 person

  5. I recommend both books as well, Teagan. Thanks for reminding me of those. And I love the pics. The skirt lifter would have been very handy to many of the little girls dressing up as princesses for carnival, because we had a lot of rain last week. What fabulous contraptions! Thanks, Teagan, for sharing pics of Daphne and Velma as well, give them my best, and big hugs to you, as always. ♥

    Liked by 1 person

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