Cicely Pearl Blair

After her retirement, she turned her hand to art and especially silver smithing, fashioning a "chain of office" for the president of the British Association of Dermatologists.

[1] In 1954, she married Henry Blair and the couple moved into general practice in Chingford, East London and remained in the role for 15 years.

Over the next few years, she worked in a number of roles including a spell as a research assistant at St Bartholomew's Hospital.

[3] She became an amateur silversmith, winning prizes for her sculptures[3] and going on to make the "chain of office" for the president of the British Association of Dermatologists.

[2] She joined the Medical Art Society as a painter and spent time photographing flora and fauna, especially in the Galapagos and Falkland Islands.

A caterpillar of the brown-tailed moth, similar to the ones studied by Blair