So long, Downton Abbey.

Filming just wrapped on the final season of the beloved British period drama, and the cast and crew of the Golden Globe and Emmy winning show are documenting the final days of production and sharing them with fans on social with the hashtag #LastDaysOfDownton.

For fans, the photos are almost heartbreaking, as the cast bids farewell to the characters they’ve played and the sets they’ve inhabited for the last five seasons. Yesterday, Elizabeth McGovern, who plays Lady Cora on the show, tweeted a photo of her last day on set and a final hug for her on-screen daughter, Lady Mary:

Guess Tom hasn’t left for America, yet?

Michelle Dockery, a.k.a. Lady Mary Crawley, has been documenting the denouement of the behind-the-scenes action for weeks now as she prepares to trade tiaras for trouble in her next project, The Sense of An Ending:

Here’s the Crawley family portrait you wouldn’t see in the Great Hall:

Lady Mary and Lady Edith (Laura Carmichael) are so Mary and Edith …even when not being Mary and Edith:

Joanne Froggatt, who won an Emmy for her portrayal of lady’s maid Anna Bates, has been posting some photos as well as she counts down her last days on set.

The show’s crew has been getting in on the sentimental hashtag action, too.

But the best photos are also the most anachronistic:

While not on social media (does it even count in that case?), series creator Julian Fellowes also bid farewell to the cast. “You know, it’s almost strange,” he said. “I’ve lived with these people for seven years now. They’ve taken me and all of us to the top of the mountain. We’ve had this incredible global phenomenon. Most people in this business, even those who have been very successful, never have something like that…Each time I realize I’ve written the last line of a particular character, I feel rather sad. At the same time I don’t think we’ve done the wrong thing. I’ve never felt, ‘Oh my God, what are we doing? This is a mistake!’” It’s not too late to write a 7th season, Mr. Fellowes!

The final season of Downton Abbey premieres in the U.S. on Jan. 3, 2016.