Izzie
Portrayed by Hermione Granger | |
Full Name | Isabel, and 5 other names (seriously, my family does not shirk on Baptisms.) |
---|---|
Associated Noble House(s) | Peace, Love, Books and Tea |
Date of Birth | May 10, 1989 |
Father | Dad |
Father's Rank | Printer |
Mother | Mum |
Mother's Rank | Costume Designer |
Town Residence | {{{residence}}} |
Year of Debut | 2006 |
Dowry | £1,000,000, plus a castle and a pound of chocolate. But not really. I've probably already eaten the chocolate. |
Izzie, also known as Isabel, is now a university graduate (oooooh...aaahhh...) with a Bachelor of Arts (Honours) in History, and a college graduate, with her diploma in Museum Studies. She recently completed a four-month long internship in exhibition design (where she started saying things like "no, that brown has too much of a green undertone, we need something with a more chocolate base," much to her horror). She is currently employed as an exhibition project manager/designer, and spends her days being ridiculously happy that she landed her dream job a day after graduation, and researching information/pricing out flooring installation/yelling at window installers.
Her worst habit is shopping. Lots and lots of shopping. These shopping expeditions usually end up being told on chat, along with complaining about how it takes her two days to laundry.
She is also the London Life's resident archivist.
She lives in the LL Snow Village with Emily, Betsy and Hilary.
Characters
It is Izzie's great pleasure to have to look after this brood (and their respective families) at LL:
Charlotte Tolson and her brother, Edward Tolson
Research Interests
Aside from the English Regency, Izzie dabbles in a variety of other historical eras, including:
Early Modern England (specifically the role Henry VIII's wives played in the course of the Henrician Reformation - this is my main area of research, and what my honours year was based on.)
Italian Renaissance art and Papal pagentry
Pre-Revolutionary France (Louis XIV - Louis XVI)
Revolutionary America
The Raj, and the role of the East India Company in India
The Gilded Age in New York City