Showing posts with label photographs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label photographs. Show all posts

Friday, July 25, 2014

Rerun: Photo Friday: Flappers in the Sun Edition (1920's)

This blog originally appeared on She Was a Bird April 27, 2012.

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I found this non-descript portfolio, about the size reproduced above, in a box of photos at an estate sale in Inglewood a few years ago. Nashville-ites who know the area, it was one of those big Tudor houses near the library on Gallatin Road, the HUGE 1920's and 30's houses built on the main drag, many of which have been converted into law offices, dental offices, or in one memorable case, a palmistry shoppe. The layout of the house featured a rabbit's warren of twisty, narrow little rooms on the first floor, and a slope-ceilinged second floor area up a central set of stairs, and just lo-o-o-ots of stuff. As it was a Sunday, everything was deeply discounted and I bought the whole box of pictures for less than five bucks, thinking I would go through it later to enjoy the treasures. I'd forgotten all about them (remember how I said I was a kind of, sort of a hoarder?) until I was scanning some from the box in, and met the cutest little couple in doing so!


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People, meet Gentleman Jim and Flapper Fran. The snapshots didn't come with any kind of descriptive captions or names other than the St. Louis based developing company on the back, but we'll go with those descriptive monikers for the moment.


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As much as I like any kind of vernacular photography, the kind I like best, being a little dress-a-holic, is seeing the detail of old clothes in old photos. I thought this was Flapper Fran, but in looking at the other photos, and by way of the clothes, turns out this is her cousin Flapper Frieda! The second flapper is wearing a daisy of an outfit in sharp heeled satin pumps with little bows on them, a straight-up-and-down flapper dress with tiers of ruffles at the bottom, a drop-bead neclace, corsage, and the de riguer cloche hat of the day (the coat from the first picture seems to have taken a powder). Frieda, Fran and Jim are posing on and in front of some kind of public building, but I can't tell from the photos what building. Is this a shot on the courthouse steps just after they've been married ? Or is it just a good looking building on an afternoon stroll downtown?

Gentleman Jim's friend, Gentleman Hal, makes an appearance in the next shot:


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Something about the posing in this one reminds me of a ventriloquist and his dummy. Am I right? Dig Hal's tie.


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Whoah! Double vision! Flapper Fran and Flapper Frieda together. See how similar their faces are? I assume they're related, but again, by the lack of markings, I really have no way to tell.

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Frieda and Hal together. It looks Frieda and Hal are a couple, and then Fran and Jim are a couple. Don't you love making conjectures about old pictures with no hope of ever finding out if you had the context correct? It's kind of fun and it's kind of sad, thinking there were at least four people at one time who knew exactly what was going on in each of these photos.

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THIS IS PROBABLY MY FAVORITE. Moving out of town to the country side for a picnic, the foursome pose in various rocky/scenic places around an old wooden bridge. I love the stiff body language and scowling faces of people in the pre-digital-camera, how-did-I-look-no-erase-that-one era. Those planar, Cherokee cheekbones remind me of Loretta Lynn and my own great-grandmother on my dad's side. Look at that dress!

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This one turned out very fuzzy, but look at Jim's hat. Nice hat, Jim.

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Rethinking straw for the summer 1929 season, Jim removes the hat for a solo portrait. See the sharp crease in his pants and the short-at-sides-longer-at-top-F-Scott-Fitz haircut. Handsome, huh?

Last but not least, Fran looking as rawbone and skinny and scowly as her cousin:

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I still love it.

Do you have any vacation/day trip photos in your collection that tell a narrative like Fran + Jim + Frieda + Hal? Which flapper styles do you wish would make a comeback so you could copy Fran and Frieda's look without looking like you're doing a stage production? Have any good estate sales coming up this weekend? Let us know!

Have a great Friday, and we'll see you on the other side of the weekend!

Friday, July 11, 2014

Photo Friday: ThePrimitiveFold on Ebay Edition (1870's-1920's)

Good morning!

It's Friiiiiiiiiiiiiday, we MADE it! How's the weekend looking to you? I have to run out the door to some estate sales and then my sister's birthday lunch (happy two-five, Sus!), but I wanted to leave you with a couple photos from my online meanderings before I hang up my blogging spurs until Monday.

Last week, I told you, I was having a great deal of trouble finding the kinds of photos I wanted on Flickriver when it was my good fortune to stumble across this ebay seller's online vintage and antique photography shop. The Primitive Fold specializes in wonderful condition daguerrotypes, tin types, cabinet cards-- all manner of 19th century photography, and on into the 20th. The unifying factor here for the inventory? Obviously, that they're photoraphs, but also, that the collection boasts a carefully curated selection of some of the most interesting portrait subjects I think I've ever seen! This was the online equivalent of coming across a cigar box or wooden crate at an estate sale or antique mall and NOT ONLY are all the photos in great condition for their age, but there are no clunkers, just solid, amazing pictures, one after the next.

Like I said, I have to get out the door, but if you like what you see, pop over to The Primitive Fold's ebay shop. I only warn you that you may spend the rest of your day looking through the entries and peering into someone's own life in say the year 1880. It's addictive! 

Have a great Friday, find great stuff at the sales, and I will see you on Monday! Take care! Til then.

-Lisa


ANTIQUE AMERICAN BEAUTY BLONDE BLUE EYES RED BLUE TINT PATRIOTIC TINTYPE PHOTO
ANTIQUE VICTORIAN AMERICAN BEAUTY AMBROTYPE BLUE EYES GOLD EARRINGS BLING PHOTO

VINTAGE ANTIQUE AMERICAN INDIAN HEADRESS COSTUME DECO RING BEAUTY LAND PHOTO
Edwardian huge hat corset topeka trenton nj rppc photo
ANTIQUE AMERICAN BEAUTY STRIKING GAZE LONG EYE LASHES HAT EARLY TINTYPE PHOTO
ANTIQUE AFRICAN AMERICAN BEAUTY BEAUTIFUL YOUNG TEEN GIRL FLOWER LIPSTICK PHOTO
ANTIQUE AMERICAN BEAUTY GIRL ARTISTIC FINE ART CHRISTIAN CROSS TINTYPE PHOTO
ANTIQUE AMERICAN BEAUTY ARTISTIC TEEN GIRL ELF LIKE RIBBON CURLS TINTYPE PHOTO
ANTIQUE FINE DAGUERREOTYPE AMERICAN BEAUTY CROSS PENDANT JEWELRY VICTORIAN GIRL
ANTIQUE AMERICAN BEAUTY YOUNG BROWN HAIR TEEN GIRL ARTISTIC DAGUERREOTYPE PHOTO
ANTIQUE VICTORIAN WARE MA GLEASON BLONDE BLUE EYES PEARLS CABINET CARD ART PHOTO
ANTIQUE AMERICAN BEAUTY YOUNG GIRLS FLOWERS ARTISTIC DAGUERREOTYPE TINTED PHOTO
ANTIQUE AMERICAN BEAUTY VICTORIAN COUTURE LONG NECK JEWELRY ARTISTIC LADY PHOTO

Friday, July 4, 2014

Photo Friday: Happy Fourth of July! Edition (1900's-1940's)

Good afternoon! 

I'm sorry I missed you guys this morning, I was out with my pappy at every holiday-weekend estate sale I could get to! We had a whale of a time and I got a trunkful of crazy things to show you on Monday, but you know I wouldn't let Friday pass without some vintage photos! I wanted to use my regular hunting ground of flickriver but danged if the well didn't run dry on "vintage patriotic photos" that weren't pictures of leggy, gorgeous pin up girls à la Ann Miller...instead, I went to Ebay and had a BALL looking at old pictures. I actually would have had this finished about forty minutes earlier in the afternoon if it wasn't for the "Oh, just one more page" of vintage photo perusing I was doing. I'm just a naked id today, I suppose, haha, but isn't that my American freedom! :)

Anyway, all these pictures are available for sale, so if you can't live without some of these gorgeous people, from the Victorian era on into the 1940's, draped in all the patriotic trappings the holiday requires, click on the caption link to support these vintage photo sellers on Ebay. I owe them my gratitude if not a couple bucks of purchasing power for the lovely look-see they gave me for Independence Day.

Have a great Fourth and I will see you guys right back here on Monday for more 100% American-made vintage blogging product. Take care, and U!S!A! Talk to you then.

-Lisa

1916 photo FOURTH OF JULY. CHILD AS 'LIBERTY' Vintage Black & White Photograp d7
1923 WOMAN IN AMERICAN FLAG DRESS & HAT PATRIOTIC PHOTO

WOMAN IN STUDIO w AMERICAN FLAG rppc Real Photo Postcard
Real Photo Postcard RPPC - Women with American Flags and in Costume Patriotic
THREE PATRIOTIC GALS IN STARS & STRIPES DRESS rppc Real Photo Postcard)

PATRIOTIC GAL w STARS & STRIPES SASH & USA FLAG
Vintage 4th of July 1900-1909 Small Children's Cabinet Photo

Man using fireworks in front of the American flag - RPPC photo 1910

Kingston NY-HUMAN FLAG FOR 250th ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION-RPPC Postcard Patriotic

Vintage Photo Pretty Girl w Patriotic Uncle Sam Mail Box Man 084417

1940s SNAPSHOT VERNACULAR PHOTO PATRIOTIC WORLD WAR TWO
VINTAGE WW2 ERA PATRIOTIC SOLDIER AMERICAN FLAG MADISON HOTEL DECO FL
PATRIOTIC WOMAN USA FLAG SNAPSHOT PRETTY LADY PHOTO


Tuesday, July 1, 2014

Weekend Finds: Cabinet Cards from the Flea Market (1880's-1900's)

Good morning!

Hope your Tuesday is treating you well thus far! I am sleepy, sleepy, sleepy-- I went to bed yesterday listening to Kumail Nanjiani's The X-Files Files podcast and had appropriately weird dreams all night...thinking of Flukeman just before you wander off to the land of Nod can do that to you, I guess. But, sleepiness aside, I woke up this morning and did manage to photograph some photographs for you in order to include the photographs of the photographs in today's blog post! How's that suit you?

Take a look:


I was at the flea market on Saturday with my dad when he was waylaid by the sight of a WWII-era Russian rifle in one of the sheds...as he paused to drink in the details, I wandered on into another stall and came across a table that had a file card index sized box (think about half the length of a card-catalog drawer) completely filled with cabinet cards! Markered on the end of the box was the legend "Old Photographs, $2 each". Does heck go with yes? I've been being good about not buying pictures that aren't those large format, framed portraits I like to scare houseguests with, but this was too good to pass up. I flipped through probably a hundred cards, carefully placing the ones I wanted to take a second look at in a pile to my left, and in the end, chose six cards I had to have. Grouped together on my kitchen table, they look like this:


Not bad, huh? I recently came across a package of black cardstock I'd forgotten I had, and I think I might use that as a background to frame the photos. Don't they look stark and lovely against that color! Historically, cabinet cards dethroned the carte de visite sometime in the mid 1880's as the preferred format in which to preserve one's image for generations to come. While their popularity waned as vernacular and amateur photography began to supplant studio-made portraiture at the turn of the century, cabinet cards remained in use by professional photographers until the 1920's. These photos seem to date from the 1880's to the 1900's. My only question, which I should have daddurn asked the guy in the booth, was where he happened to get so many cards. At most, I've seen maybe twenty or thirty of these cards together with the less sturdy snapshots and prints of a home camera in a box at an estate sale or antique mall-- this guy must have had a hundred, all neatly uniform in time period and format if varying by subject and decorative detail. Maybe he'll be there next month so I can ask him if he raided an out-of-business photography studio in a ghost town or from whence sprang this font of more than a hundred years old pictures.

The ones I chose from the bunch:


Honestly, I mainly choose old photographs by how attractive or interesting the person in the picture is. There are plenty of pictures I've passed up in the past for not being interested in the subject... too banal an expression or too homely of a bachelor even in an old or unique setting isn't gonna cut it. So this gal, with her pinned up, bob-like hair arrangement, carefully hot ironed in waves to one side, and her "I would wear that now" gown was a shoo-in for the "keep" pile. How do you like the ribboned straps and bareshouldered line of the bodice? Those stripes? The milkmaid-esque ruffles? I vote this gal best dressed from the sextet of pictures that came home with me, and that's a competitive category. Look at the decorative black trim of the card and how the oval is way longer than the portrait really demands. It makes me wonder why the photographer didn't capture the rest of the dress instead of the wall two feet above the subject's head! Still, a lovely girl:


This picture I almost put back twice, as I was only going to get five pictures, and finally just caved and bought. Note the tight, mutton sleeves of the jacket, its three pleats to the right and inch wide trim of the ribbon running down the left of the dress. See how the high collar blouse under the dress is embellished with two pins and a little ruffle of lace at the top of the neck? I wonder, fashion-wise, what dictated where you put the brooches on this outfit-- I would have tried to put them, military-style, where a medal would go on the right lapel, but that would have interrupted the pleats. Also notice how child-sized small this obviously grown woman is-- women like her are the ones who could comfortably don those teeny tiny Victorian clothes I'm always chasing after at the flea market. I like the decorative edge of the card, too, and caved when it came time to pay the man.


Here she is even closer, so you can see the pins better:


This card features another woman who, like the first card's subject, would have been better served by a full-portrait...I want to see what the rest of her dress looks like! In the meantime, I can content myself with her interesting hairstyle and what look like scissors in the brooch at her throat. That coupled with the velvet lapels and collar of the dress, and what look like inset velvet stripes down the length of the sleeves, makes me wonder if the sitter wasn't some kind of seamstress.


Isn't she pretty in the closeup? Among other plain Janes of the same time period, this woman stood out particularly.


This next guy is so handsome! Reminds me of Joaquin Phoenix in Walk the Line-- not the Man in Black himself, but his softer faced movie double. How about that almost-pompadour, those dark eyebrows and eyes, and the sharp cut of his suit? He must have been a popular guy in Corydon, Indiana, if he lived where the photo was taken, a Hoosier state town just over the border from Kentucky, about thirty minutes from Louisville. 

In this picture, I was struck by the stiff posture that makes people on Pinterest think everything is a postmortem photograph. While a fair number of people did take ghoulish-to-modern-eyes photos of themselves with their predeceased loved ones (see here if you're feeling brave), lots of times the rigid body language was more the posed subject staying stock still to ensure a good outcome in the easily-botched-by-movement medium of 19th century photography. You know how frustrating it is to try and hold a smile for a minute as someone unfamiliar with your camera or iPhone tries to take a picture? And how, if the person did manage to take the picture after a minute or two of fidgeting with the buttons, the strained smile of the subject is anything but natural looking? Imagine holding a smile for up to five minutes-- you're going to look like Charles Manson by the time the image has been captured on film. As a result, it was accepted practice for people in the earlier days of the medium to assume a stoic expression which was easier to maintain until the picture was made. I still think this guy comes out looking great:


This photograph was interesting for being so artistically composed-- what a dramatic effect the black background makes on the sepia toned subject!


Her expression and hair made this must-have. I wonder, in those pre-hairspray days, if the trick to styling ones hair this high was just a lot of teasing and bolstering with hair rats and other "stuffing"? Or what kinds of products were on the market back then to make sure every hair stayed where it was meant to stay? Whatever sorcery this lady is working over her coiffure, I think it looks wonderful (as you see me come to work tomorrow with a full Gibson girl wave).


Last but not least, this photo was the only non-studio portrait of the entire group-- not just the ones I bought, but the ones in the box, too. I think this is probably a dad (and a dandy of one, too!) posted on the front steps of his clapboard house with his two daughters. How about how tiny, tiny the daughter on the right is (look at that waist!), looking like a shrunk-down version of the healthier appearing daughter on the left. Maybe one was a pre-teen and the other an almost-adult? I can never tell with antique photos whether the subjects, in some cases, are adolescents or adults-- the grown-up clothing can camouflage age like nobody's business!


Look at the details on their dresses...so many ruffles and flounces! And the dad's hat, mustache, suit, and boutonnière seem to reinforce my earlier identification of the gent as a dapper dresser.


There were a few more things I scooped up at the flea, but I'll have to tell you about them another day, I've prattled on long enough as it is! Anyway, I love these, and think they're a great addition to my photo collection, which is becoming more and more pre-1920 by the day!

What do you think? Which of these 19th century photographs is your favorite? Do you have any pictures of similar antiquity in your collection? What kinds of criteria do put vintage photographs through before you buy them? Let's talk!

That's all for today, but I'll catch you back here tomorrow with more vintage tips and quips. Have a great Tuesday! See you then.

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