Monday, January 10, 2011

Three By John W. Wilson







While I have a preference for old snapshots, it's nice to pick up some professionally done photos for the collection from time to time. Stamped on the back of each, "AUG 10 1949 PHOTO BY JOHN W. WILSON L.A. Times Staff Photographer" Fashion, society, or something from the movie community? If anyone out there recognizes either of these people, please leave a comment.

Friday, January 7, 2011

CDV, Ella Hill


No photographer's studio mark on the back of this nineteenth century carte de visite, just the name "Ella Hill" written in pencil. To see other CDV's and read a brief overview of the history of the carte de visite, click on CDV or carte de visite in the labels section.

Stone Wall

















With the identically dressed men and the uncomfortable poses next to the stone foundation of some sort of municipal building, this collection has always seemed somewhat odd to me. Small town American Gothic for lack of a better description. My best guess on the date would be very late teens to early twenties. That means that these men survived World War 1 and their small children would have to live through World War 2.

Green Bay Business College- Mr. Kenneth Bierke




From the "MODERN ART STUDIO, LUXEMBURG, WIS." A portrait of Mr. Kenneth Bierke of the Green Bay Business College. The last image from the collection. Click on Green Bay in the labels section to bring up the other 11 posts.

Green Bay Business College- Vacation Snapshots






































Well, this is a close to a New Year's resolution as I'll ever get. It's time to finish off the Green Bay Business College collection. A few years ago I purchased a large envelope of prints, addressed to Kenneth Bierke, care of the Green Bay Business College. From pictures of school dances in the 50's, to family and vacation pictures, to color photos of Mrs. Bierke during World War 2, there is quite a lot of material. I'm the first to admit that this group isn't the most interesting of the lot, but click on Green Bay in the labels section, and they will not disappoint. The next post will be the last. And by the way, I was even able to locate the Prince Arthur Hotel. It was opened on March 14, 1911 by the Canadian National Railway in Thunder Bay, Ontario.

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Egyptian Styled Flapper




In my research, I've found a half dozen or so theories as to the origin of the word flapper. My favorite is that it referred to the flapping of wings; the wings of the newly free women of the 1920's. Anyway, flappers made their appearance in the years after World War 1 in both the United States and Great Britain. They bobbed their hair, smoked, drank, wore short dresses or uniquely styled clothes, used make-up, went to petting parties, had sex before marriage, and what seemed to me the most important thing, they worked. The head piece that this lady is wearing looks to be an Egyptian design. Why is the old man in the second picture staring so intently at this young woman?

Monday, January 3, 2011

Bhutanese Milkmen in Stereo




I've written about Keystone, and Underwood & Underwood, the two largest stereoview companies in the United States in past posts. Anyone interested in going into more detail should click on stereoview in the labels section. In my post of November 28, 2009, "Underwood & Underwood, Geography" I dealt specifically with the Underwood brothers and their company. The backbone of the stereoview industry was geographic images. Staff photographers and free lancers provided many Americans with the only window on the wider world that they would ever know. I was born in 1955 and my first grade teacher still used old stereoviews to teach us geography. The caption on this card reads, "Bhutanese milkmen with curious bamboo-jars, at the public Fountain, Darjeeling, India. Copyright 1903 by Underwood &Underwood."