Last weekend the Scottish Maritime Museum hosted a 1930s themed night of cocktails, dancing and glamour at the Museum.

Scotland’s only professional vintage dance company, Fly Right Dance kicked up a storm as they get everyone up on the dancefloor to Jitterbug, Charleston and Lindy Hop at the 1930s themed evening : ‘Style at Sea: A Night of Cocktails, Glamour and Dancing’.

Guests at the evening in the vast, glass-roofed Linthouse also enjoyed sipping stylish cocktails mixed at the in-house bar and dancing the night away to the tunes of Jon Ritchie’s Swing Sensation.

The glamorous team from Glasgow’s Pin Up Vintage Hair and Make Up were also on hand with some top tips for getting that elegant vintage look which guests could then capture in the Bygone Photobooth.

The ‘Style at Sea’ exhibit, which runs until September 25, tells the story of the Cunard Line and Clydebank shipbuilder John Brown and Company, which together gave the world some of the most famous and luxurious liners of the 20th century.

It explores how these magnificent Clyde-built Cunard ships evolved from immigrant passenger boats to opulent floating palaces, attracting Hollywood glamour and royalty who flocked to enjoy their luxury and legendary service.

The exhibition also looks at how these state of the art vessels served in wartime outrunning the enemy with their sheer speed. It concludes with the world’s most iconic, and last, great liner, the QE2, which set sail 50 years ago this September.