When the Bourbons returned to the throne in 1815, in the shape of Louis XVI I I, brother of King Louis XVI, Lubin proudly reclaimed his status as “holder of the beauty secrets of the ancient Court of France”. It was the legacy left to him by Fargeon. Marie-Thérèse of France, Duchess of Angoulême and the only child of Marie Antoinette to survive the Revolution, returned to Paris at the same time as her uncle, the King. The King was a widower and in the eyes of the world, his niece, Marie-Antoinette’s daughter who was every bit as beautiful as her mother, took on the role of the new Queen of France. She granted Lubin a warrant from her husband the Duke of Angoulême, prompting him to rename his boutique “aux Armes de France”, “The Royal Coat of Arms”.