All images in The New Found Photography are from my own private collection. I do not reblog or use any photos from any other source. All photos are either original prints or prints made from negatives in my collection. Remember, you can always click on an image to see it in a larger window.
Thursday, August 31, 2017
Heat Wave
Because it's 100 + degrees outside; Because I have a fan rather than air conditioning in my apartment; Because I've just come back from running errands in my car, which has a broken air conditioner, I'm taking a break from Russland to think about snow.
Tuesday, August 29, 2017
Russland 2
As I noted in the first post from this series, the quality of the prints are not the best. I did what I could to pull some detail from the second picture but it was just two faded to get much. All the prints are mounted on card. There's no date on the top image, the bottom, as can be seen written on the print, "11 XI 20."
Click on Russland in labels, etc. What's with the water pitchers? Or are they vodka pitchers?
Russland 1
I just purchased an envelope of eight photos from Russia (Via Florida) that I'l be posting in lots of two over the next week or so. Some are still in a half way decent condition, some are so faded as to be barely recognizable as photographs; some are dated, some are not, but they all seem to be from the same general era. And, even though they are all around a hundred years old, they still reek of cigarette smoke.
The top photo is dated "30 XI 21" in the European style of date, month and year. The second, "11 XII 21." Russia was a late adapter of the Gregorian calendar, so even though the days might be from the archaic Julian calendar, the years should sync up with modern day usage.
Note on the second photo one woman is being fed by another.
Click on Russland in labels.
Saturday, August 26, 2017
The Here, There, and Everywhere Collection-Finally, Swimming
Swimming lessons over, it's time for the test. I'm guessing that no one drowned, but one can never tell. Go back to the previous post and see the photo of all the kids lined up in front of a building. I'm guessing that they're all from the same school, but I'm also guessing field trip to a local athletic club.
So, as usual, click on The Here There and Everywhere Collection in labels fro more photos and more info on the collection.
Friday, August 25, 2017
The Here, There, and Everywhere Collection-Learning to Swim
Well, this one was a pain in the ass to scan. Believe it or not, this was once the way swimming was taught, and for all I know, it's a method that's still being used. As a matter of fact, I once found myself on my belly, on a gym floor, practicing the crawl. Problem was, I had been swimming for almost a decade. I can't remember if I got splinters or not.
There aren't any photos on the reverse of this album page. Click on The Here There and Everywhere Collection in labels for more photos and more info.
Tuesday, August 22, 2017
Self Portrait
Of course, I can't be certain, but I'd bet that the camera was set on the wall, and a self timer was used to trip the shutter. The man has a rucksack, so he's off on a ramble, but did he run into his two lady companions, or were they his hiking partners? The woman on the right looks to be younger than the other two, so maybe it's a father, mother, and daughter.
Sunday, August 20, 2017
Long Barn 2
In a nutshell, I didn't want to put eight photos in the same post, so I'm just finishing up. I have no idea if this is the Long Barn Lodge that burned down or the one that's still there.
Saturday, August 19, 2017
Long Barn 1
Except for 8/56, nothing is written on these prints, though the seller has told me that they are all from Long Barn, California.
Anyway, Long Barn is what's known as a census designated place. It's not a true town, but then again it's more than a wide spot on the road. Long Barn started out as a nineteenth century wagon stop near Sonora Pass in the Sierra Nevada Mountains. By the 1920s, a resort, The Long Barn Lodge, opened for customers. The original lodge burned down in 2002, and was not rebuilt. Believe it or not, it wasn't insured. There was a second lodge that's still in operation. It has motel rooms, private cabins, a swimming pool, ice skating rink, a hall for events. It's a popular wedding venue. And, of course, Long Barn is surrounded by the Stanislaus National Forest and is only a couple of hours from Yosemite National Park, so there's plenty of hiking.
Wednesday, August 16, 2017
What's In the Bowl?
Let's be honest, this is almost certainly a church scene of some kind. When I first looked at it I thought the guy on the right was holding up a bible in front of the old lady. After I scanned it and blew it up, the bible appeared to be either a scroll or a wrapper. And it only looks like it could be a wrapper because there is some sort of metal bowl in front of the lady, and what could be a puff of smoke rising from the bowl. Had the man just emptied some sort of sacred powder into the bowl? What kind of ceremony is this?
Thursday, August 10, 2017
In Costume
Alright, left to right, man dressed as woman, woman dressed as man, man dressed as woman, man dressed as baby, woman dressed as zombie. Well, I might be wrong on the zombie.
Saturday, August 5, 2017
Momie, Ruth, and Helen
Written on the back of the second photo, "Detroit River, summer 1938. Momie & Ruth." The third picture, "Detroit River, summer 1938. Ruth & Helen."
The Detroit River connects the not so great Lake Saint Clair, Detroit, and Lake Erie. (The Saint Clair River connects Lake Huron and Lake Saint Clair.) It also separates Detroit and Windsor, Ontario, Canada. In 1938, it was one of the most polluted waterways in North America, so if these three ladies were actually swimming, they risked at least a few weird infections. More likely, they were headed to Lake Erie for a week of sailing.
1938 was near the end of the great depression. In a few years, World War 2 defense spending would make Detroit one of the wealthiest cities in the world. After the war, with no real competition from foreign car makers, Detroit continued getting richer and richer. If this family could afford a sailboat during the depression, they probably were in a position to really cash in during the war and the post war boom.
And yes, who ever wrote the message on the back of the photos did spell it Momie.
Tuesday, August 1, 2017
I'm Keeping My Eyes On You
My mother was English, and she occasionally slipped and referred to laundry detergent as soap chips, and 3.10 has to be three shillings, ten pence. So, this one was taken somewhere in the British Isles. I have a feeling this lad spent his days in front of this store eyeing the passersby.