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We earn a commission for products purchased through some links in this article. Emma Bridgewater celebrates Christmas at home in Oxfordshire with family customs that inspire her festive designs I was born just before Christmas and, at the time, my mother received a dear little postcard from my grandfather. Every year we would bring it out and we still place it on our tree now. My earliest memories of Christmas are spending it at our home in Hertfordshire.
Ronald Bain, my father, wrote his life history for me and my brother. It began with his life as a child in London and then went onto to tell of his life in the war which ended up with him living in Yorkshire.
The factory opened in as a joint project between the French firm that owned the rights to the process for mass-manufacturing cellulose film and British textile company Courtaulds. In the 20th century, the house was used by Courtaulds for corporate hospitality and, beyond the security boundary, hidden behind foliage, attained semi-legendary status among local children. I was taken to the garden once as a child, on a hot but darkly overcast day, and found it unsettling — the perfect setting for a timeslip. The first person to tell me a ghost story about the factory was my childhood best friend whose father worked in the section of Courtaulds dedicated to the production of non-woven synthetic fabrics.
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