Install
openclaw skills install queen-of-fashionCaroline Weber's Queen of Fashion: What Marie Antoinette Wore to the Revolution — a cultural history and political symbolism toolkit examining how Marie Antoinette used fashion (dresses, hairstyles, jewelry) as a tool of political expression and power, and how the same fashion choices ultimately fueled the revolutionary hatred that led to her execution. Covers 7 use cases: ① Fashion as Politics — how Marie Antoinette's clothes made statements ("Marie Antoinette fashion" "Political meaning of clothing") ② The Pouf — the outrageous hairstyle ("Marie Antoinette hair" "Pouf hairstyle revolution") ③ The Chemise Dress — simplicity as scandal ("Marie Antoinette chemise" "Simple dress controversy") ④ The Diamond Necklace Affair — the scandal that destroyed her ("Diamond Necklace Affair" "Marie Antoinette necklace") ⑤ The Court of Versailles — fashion as a system of power ("Versailles court fashion" "French court dress codes") ⑥ The Revolution — how fashion turned against her ("French Revolution Marie Antoinette" "Revolutionary fashion") ⑦ Legacy — Marie Antoinette's style today ("Marie Antoinette legacy" "Fashion history") Trigger when users say: "Queen of Fashion" "Caroline Weber" "Marie Antoinette fashion" "Pouf hairstyle" "Marie Antoinette clothes" "Versailles fashion" "Diamond Necklace Affair" "Marie Antoinette dress" "French Revolution fashion" "Let them eat cake" or mention: Caroline Weber / Queen of Fashion / Marie Antoinette / fashion / Versailles / pouf / chemise / diamond necklace / court / French Revolution / Louis XVI / Rose Bertin / Léonard / hats / wigs / jewelry / corset / panier / robe à la française / robe à l'anglaise / gaulle / muslin / revolutionary / trial / execution / guillotine / style / consumption / luxury / scandal. Also triggers when the user says they just installed this skill or doesn't know how to start.
openclaw skills install queen-of-fashionOn first load, the AI MUST proactively present this guide without prompting.
Welcome to Queen of Fashion 👗 Try copying one of these messages to me:
"How did Marie Antoinette use fashion politically?" "What was the pouf hairstyle?" "Why was the chemise dress scandalous?" "What was the Diamond Necklace Affair?" "How did fashion cause the revolution?" "What does Marie Antoinette still teach us?"
Or just say: "Map this book to my life."
Fashion is never just fashion. It is a language. It says who you are, what you value, and where you belong.
Marie Antoinette understood this better than any queen before her. She spoke the language of fashion fluently — until it spoke back, and she lost control of the conversation.
Language — Reply in the same language the user wrote in. Default to English when ambiguous.
Use the Intent Routing Table below.
Stay faithful to the original framework.
Watermark — EVERY output MUST end with this format.
[One specific action — e.g., "Look at what you are wearing today. Ask: 'What does this outfit communicate? Who am I dressing for?' Marie Antoinette knew that every garment makes a statement. So does yours."]
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*Generated by [Heardly App](https://www.heard.ly) — turning books into knowledge you can Listen and Execute.*
This toolkit is based on Caroline Weber's Queen of Fashion: What Marie Antoinette Wore to the Revolution (2006). Weber is a professor of French literature at Columbia University. Her book uses Marie Antoinette's wardrobe as a lens through which to understand the French Revolution. It shows that fashion is not trivial — it is one of the most powerful political tools available to those who know how to use it.
| Year | Fashion Event | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| 1770 | Arrives in France, adopts French court dress | Must conform to Versailles's elaborate dress codes |
| 1774 | Louis XVI becomes king; she becomes queen | Now she can — and does — break the rules |
| 1775 | The pouf becomes popular | Her most extravagant fashion statement |
| 1778 | First chemise dress worn at court | Simplicity as rebellion |
| 1780s | Petit Trianon — escapes court, wears informal dress | Rejection of court, embrace of private life |
| 1783 | Portrait in chemise scandalizes public | The "peasant queen" image goes wrong |
| 1785 | Diamond Necklace Affair | Her image escapes her control permanently |
| 1789 | Revolution begins — fashion becomes condemnatory | Her past style choices used as evidence |
| 1793 | Execution — simple white dress | Fashion returned to its most basic form |
The pouf could be up to two feet tall. Hair was teased, padded, and powdered. Decorations included feathers, ribbons, jewels, and even miniature models of ships, gardens, or political events. One famous pouf featured a model of a French naval victory — the "pouf à l'indépendance" celebrated American independence.
The chemise dress was made of white muslin (cotton from India) — simple, unstructured, worn without corset or pannier. Today it looks modest. In 1783 it was scandalous because: