Portrait of Maria Trip (c.1639) is an oil painting on panel by the Dutch painter Rembrandt.
Her figured black silk gown is cut out at the throat and trimmed with rosettes; over it is a triple collar of rich lace, lying flat.
She has rich pearls in her ears, on her bosom, round her neck, and on her wrists.
Corrections are visible on the lower edge, where there was once a table, and there were large buttons on the left sleeve.
A carefully executed pen-sketch for this picture is in the British Museum Print Room; reproduced, HdG.
Etched by L. Flameng in the Gazette des Beaux-Arts, and in Dutuit, iii.
[1]The painting was researched in the 20th century by Isa van Eeghen who discovered that it was a portrait of Maria Trip, the wife of Balthasar Coymans.