At first glance, everything suggests that this is an exterior scene. The happy faces, the coats and the hats are captured in movement and offset from each other. The painting seems to give the impression that it shows the sitters during a walk. The central character, bantering, seems to be looking to the painter, as if he was passing by him in the middle of the street. However, the molding on the left indicates that the scene actually takes place indoors, probably in Boldini's workshop. Brown is smiling, and his wife is at his right side, also smiling to the viewer, while is daughter is depicted, at his left. She smiles too but doesn't look directly to the viewer, unlike her parents.[3]
The painting surprises with its chromatic sobriety, in brown and black tones, where some luminous points stand out, from the looks, the Legion of Honor ribbon that is on the lapel of Brown's jacket and the white spot under his arm, probably a crumpled newspaper. Brushed in a few zigzag brushstrokes, this painting is striking for its joyful main character outlined in the middle of the canvas.[4][5]