Showing posts with label nude. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nude. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Fanny Takes It Off












As I've noted before, I spent decades working in photo labs and I never had a week go by where I didn't print at least one amateur pin-up, naked wife or girl friend, nude man, people having sex or a surprisingly large amount of cross dressing. People like to play, they like to take pictures, and they like to pass them around. It's human nature, and by the look of these two photos, it's been that way for along time. The name "Fanny" is written on the back of each print.

Saturday, October 30, 2010

Glass Negative Nudes




I've got to find the money to set up my darkroom. Some more images from back in the day when I was a professional photo printer. I made these from a couple of glass negatives that I picked up at an antique store. The one model seems to be channeling Louise Brooks, which gives a date from late teens to late twenties.

Sunday, August 1, 2010

Monday, June 14, 2010

Don Frooks, Adult Photographer
























I tried, but I wasn't able to run down anything on Don Frooks. He seems to have been a freelance photographer working the men's magazine market in the period from, what we would now think of as innocent pin-up imagery, to the more explicit Playboy and then Penthouse type of photo. The "PROOF PLEASE RETURN" marking on the front of several of these images was a common method photographers used to protect their work. In theory it would prevent purchasers from using the photographer's image without payment. In reality it wasn't much of a deterrent. A copy neg, a bit of airbrushing, and some pulp magazine publisher could have put Don's pictures in a regional magazine, not distributed in his home area, and he would have been none the wiser. Stamped on the back, "MAY 23, 1956 DON FROOKS FL.8-4554." Except for the one photo of the different woman, "FEB 25, 1959 DON FROOKS FL.8-4554." These were purchased from a dealer in Carthage, Mississippi, so Don Frooks could have been a southern photographer, but things do move about the country, so the dealers location may not be an indication of where he was from. There were three other photos in this collection that I may post one day. Those were taken much latter, probably in the late sixties to early eighties and at least two of them would qualify as true pornography. I'm not bothered by the nudity, but I'm not sure I want to risk problems with the blog host, until I've been able to find other examples of imagery of an explicit nature on Blogspot. Added: I've done a bit of research into Blogspot policies, and I've decided not to post the last three Don Frooks images. I've put a couple of nudes up on this blog, but the latter images from Frooks are pornographic, and while I don't think pornography, at least images made by and for adults, should be illegal, I understand that Blogspot may not wish to host such images. Too, there is always a dilemma about putting up such images. The two women and one man who posed for those three shots were pretty young, they are all very likely still alive, and may look upon that bit of their past as an embarrassing mistake, and who in the pre-digital universe never thought that their pictures would one day turn up for everyone on the planet with computer access, to see.

Monday, May 31, 2010

Yet Another French Postcard




I found this old, framed French postcard in a thrift shop. One of my fellow employees at the photo lab where I was working at that time was teaching himself photo shop, and so I let him practice his digital correction skills with this image. Now, I did have to correct some of his work the old fashioned way, with a paint brush and spot tone, but by and large, the negatives I had made gave me a nice, black & white print. Also done the old fashioned way, with an enlarger and chemistry.

Tuesday, March 30, 2010

Wendy Summers, Stripper by Gene Laverne


Technically this is not a photograph, but a halftone. A halftone is an image made by a series of dots, varying in either size or distance from each other to create the illusion of an image. I used to make halftone negatives at the photo lab where I worked, all the time. They were used primarily for newspaper advertisements. Gene Laverne was a photographer from Buffalo, New York who specialized in glamour, and theatrical photography, was well known for his portraits of strippers. This image is captioned, "WENDY SUMMERS, BALTIMORE" I did a web search for Wendy Summers, and couldn't find anything about this lady.

Friday, February 5, 2010

Professional or Amateur?











As I've noted in some earlier posts, I spent years working in photo labs, and I don't think I ever had a weak go by without printing some sort of amateur eroticism. Even though I started printing black & white photos well after the invention of the Polaroid camera, and worked well into the digital age, there was still a lot of amateur nudes, pictures of people having sex, and a surprisingly large number of cross dressing photos to print. When I look at this collection, I wonder whether this woman was a professional model or if she was the photographers girlfriend. The three posed pictures look like the sort of thing that could be bought from under the counter at a lot of news stands. The one image where she is getting undressed looks like a girl friend picture.

Monday, October 12, 2009

Pin-up Slides




Two wonderful 35mm slides from the 1950's of a pin-up model.

Friday, October 9, 2009

Another French Postcard









I really should have published this real French Postcard with the last one (published 10/6/09) but I forgot that I had two of them. Some time in the near future, I'll be putting up a couple that I've hand printed from glass negatives. Anyway, this is the real deal, a period postcard, not a modern reproduction.

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

A French Postcard


A real French postcard, not a modern day, screened reproduction. Printed on photo paper, probably smuggled into the United States.

Friday, October 2, 2009

Swingers in the Seventies




Polaroids were perfect for the swinging seventies. I really went back and forth about putting these two images up. More than likely these two women are about my age, and still alive.

Thursday, October 1, 2009

You Too Can Photograph Beautiful Models







Lesson I INTRODUCTION TO ART PHOTOGRAPHY Good art photography is about one-half technical and one-half imaginative. Any good photographer, well trained in darkroom and camera techniques will find the first half quite simple. The second half is considerably more difficult. There are fine points that the photographer must master in order to successfully produce quality art photos. They are posing, lighting, and creative imagination. Post marked Feb. 14, 1955 from Washington, D.C. and sent to Dr. Alfred Thelin, Jr. 208 third St., N.W., Albuquerque, New Mexico from the National Institute of Art Photography, included are a couple of sample photos, and a lesson plan for home nude photography.

Friday, August 28, 2009

Topless From the Fifities


These used to be sold from under the counter at news stands all over the United States. This was one of the things that passed as adult fare before the age of Playboy. Not very explicit by the standards of today, or for that matter the standards of the fifties. It wasn't so openly sold, but there was plenty pornography was out there.

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Nude on a Tractor


OK, I know it's not a tractor, but it's some sort of farm equipment. Part of the fun in collecting old photographs, is trying to figure out context. I can't be sure, but I think this might have been from a camera club outing. I don't know whether they still exist or not, but there was a time when guys got together, formed photography clubs, rented studio space or locations, hired nude models and took pictures.

Saturday, July 4, 2009

The Wild Party









People my age seem to think that they invented recreational sex, that somehow people from past ages only did it to reproduce the species. These four small photographs, probably from the thirties or forties, show otherwise. But, were these two ladies paid entertainers or bored neighborhood housewives?