use soft traditional colours at some like Chipton, that's a house that hasn't been over decorated and the same for many years, I use a very typical Georgian blue. I've used alot of early Georgian colours at houses where the house is not the major part of the family's standing and it's not an important thing to them. I've picked up on some of the vivid colours in the Vincy household as way bit too strong because it went with their characters and it highlighted who they were and in fact the scenes in the Vincy house were some of the ones that I was most satisfied with. They, I thought that the colours came together, that everything came together for me in some of those scenes and they worked very well but

Additional notes in pen and pencil:

Page 29:

Annotation 1: There is a pencil line going down the margin from the first to the sixth line of the text on the left-hand side. To the left of this, '9 colour' is hand-written in pencil.

Annotation 2: In the first line, the first three letters in the word 'Chipton' are crossed out, and the letters 'Tri' is written above it, as to offer replacement.

Annotation 3: All but the sentence beginning with 'I've picked up...' is underlined in pencil.

Page 30:

Annotation 4: There is a pencil line going down the margin from the first to the fourth line of the text on the left-hand side. To the left of this, '10' is hand-written in pencil.

Annotation 5: To the left of the fourth line, 'Vincy house colours' is written in pencil.

Annotation 6: In pen, there is a horizontal line from below the sixth line, omitting the words 'colour is a', with the number '18' written and circled.

Annotation 7: Throughout the text, there are a number of sentences underlined in pencil:

Ref Code: PM-90 Title: Transcript extract from an interview with Middlemarch Production Designer, Gerry Scott. p. 29-30. Date: 1993 Format: .png Source: ITM-7963 Transcripts of interviews with members of the cast and crew of Middlemarch (BBC/WGBH, 1994). Edited for the BBC (British Broadcasting Corporation) Educational Developments/BFI (British Film Institute) Education package Screening Middlemarch: 19th Century Novel to 90s Television. Held at BFI, London, UK. http://collections-search.bfi.org.uk/web/Details/ChoiceArchive/110008677