Saturday, December 30, 2017
Mother Russia
In the time of the Czars! Everyone knows about the Kremlin. The Peterhof Palace is on the outskirts of St. Petersberg, Peter the Great's choice for a new capital for a western looking Russia. During World War 2, the building was occupied by the invading German armies and was heavily damaged. Restoration began almost immediately, and has yet to be completed. Trump would love the place. There's gold leaf everywhere. The preference of aspiring autocrats.
Labels:
1909,
hand colored photos,
J. I. Austen,
postcard,
postcards,
Russia,
the Kremlin,
the Peterhof Palace
Friday, December 29, 2017
Street Scenes, Algeria
In the previous post, a French postcard publisher showed the French presence in Algeria. In this post, ordinary, day to day life. I couldn't find any information on the publisher, but with the English captions, and a stamp box on the back that gives stamp prices for the United States and Canada...well, I may be wrong, but I doubt anyone in north Africa ever saw this card. Note the copyright date of 1909. This card could have been sold for decades, but does the copyright date reflect when the photos were taken, or when the card was offered for sale?
Labels:
1909,
africa,
Algeria,
hand colored photos,
J. I. Austen,
North Africa,
postcard,
postcards,
street photography
Thursday, December 28, 2017
Mobile Defense
If my translation is correct, that bit of type on the top of the card reads, Algeria, the admiralty and the mobile defense. This card was published by "LEVY ET NEURDEIN REUNIS." Levy and Neurdein was in business from 1920 to 1932. It was a company that was formed when Levy & Sons merged with Neurdein et Cie. Algeria, of course, was once part of France. My guess is that the patrol boats seen in this card were part of the French equivalent of the coast guard. There was once a major French naval base at Mers-a-Kebir on the Algerian coast. After the fall of France, and the formation of non occupied France, the British government demanded that the French fleet in north Africa head to England and join in the fight against the Germans. When Admiral Darlan of the Vichy government declined but promised that the French fleet would never be surrendered to the Nazis, Churchill ordered an attack that sank the fleet, killing thousands of French sailors. Latter, when the Germans tried to seize the rest of the French fleet at Toulon, Darlan ordered the scuttling of his ships.
Now, for a movie recommendation, The Battle of Algiers. It'll help explain why Algeria is no longer part of France.
Labels:
africa,
Algeria,
france,
hand colored photos,
navy,
North Africa,
postcard,
postcards,
ships
Monday, December 25, 2017
The Littlest Christmas Tree
Alright, I think it's actually a candle, and it's so small that I missed it the first time I looked at the print, but there it is, right there at the edge of the table, the littlest Christmas tree. There's a processor's date stamp on the back, "JANUARY 1959." So, maybe not Christmas day, but right around December 25, 1958.
Labels:
1958,
candles,
christmas,
Christmas dinner,
color photography,
color restoration,
couples
Tuesday, December 19, 2017
Monday, December 18, 2017
A Schwinn at Christmas
As a cycling enthusiast, I can assure you that the head badge on that bike is from a Schwinn. At the very bottom of the oval, you'd read, "Chicago." Ah, for the good old days when the United States was one of the world's leading bicycle manufactures. When I was a kid, I longed for a genuine Schwinn bike. I ended up with a Huffy. After it was stolen, I got a used Raleigh three speed. One of the best bikes I've ever owned.
Labels:
bicycles,
christmas,
christmas presents,
living room,
Schwinn bicycle,
television
Sunday, December 17, 2017
Airplanes at Christmas
Labels:
1957,
children,
christmas,
Christmas trees,
television,
toy airplane,
toys
Friday, December 15, 2017
Drinking at Christmas
So how do I know it's Christmas? Take a look at the cards hanging on the back wall. My mother used to string up Christmas cards like that, and I always thought it an odd thing to do. Anyway, written on the back, "Fran, Tim, Betty, Bill, Mary, Bonnie & Joe."
Tuesday, December 12, 2017
English Theater, Funny Hats
There are no identifying marks on this print at all. No photographer's stamps, no writing, nothing. So why do I think this image is from England? Only the English would wear such stupid hats. And those who watch PBS, of course.
Monday, December 11, 2017
English Theater, The Kiltie Show
Ah, those Brits. It's always a leg show.
Anyway, like yesterdays' post, there's lots of info on the back, including hand written stuff that looks a lot like the writing on, well, yesterday's post. So, starting on the stamped info, "KIN 5638 ORDER No. PHOTOCRAFT OF KINGSTON, 3 & 4 EMPIRE CHAMBERS RICHMOND ROAD, KINGSTON-ON THAMES." And the hand written entry, "Laughing Room Only, Comin' Thru' the Rye. Finale of Kiltie Show. Oct. 1951."
So, if it the same handwriting, rather than an example of a rigid school system that made sure everyone's handwriting looks exactly the same, was it the photographer or a cast member?
Sunday, December 10, 2017
English Theater, Sincerely Hazel Bray
There's a lot of information on the back of this print. A stamp, "KEMSLEY NEWSPAPERS LTD., MANCHESTER, COPYRIGHT PHOTOGRAPH." And hand written, "Puss in Boots. Panto: Scene 3-Courtyard of the Inn. Hazel Bray and Jean Adrienne. [Principal girl and Boy]"
A panto is a form of musical comedy aimed at family audiences, preformed mostly in England. Hazel Bray has an IMDB listing. She had four film credits from 1944 to 1947. Not very extensive, as far as film work, but clearly she worked on the stage. Jean Adrienne did a bit better with her film career, but not by much. She appeared in seven films from 1932 to 1938. She was born in India in 1905 and died in London in 1994.
Labels:
1946,
1947,
actors,
England,
Manchester,
panto,
pantomime,
Puss in Boots,
theater
Friday, December 8, 2017
English Theater
This one is labeled, "Castleford-FEB.-1951." Actually, there's a Castleford in Idaho, but the 1950 census lists a population of 274. I'm guessing the city in England is a far better bet.
Tuesday, December 5, 2017
Sunday, December 3, 2017
Things Fall Apart
What would you do if your life suddenly fell apart? Right now, at least in Los Angeles where I live, one of the fastest growing segments of the homeless population is people who work, but don't make enough money to pay rent. Most of us accumulate a certain amount of stuff. If you suddenly found yourself living on the streets, which objects from your life would you try and save?
I recently took a walk along the L.A. River after one of our periodic "clean-ups" a nice way of saying a force out of a local homeless encampment. There, I found these two old football cards. I have to wonder if some guy who had spent years on his sports card collection, making sure he had every card from 1990, was he carting them around in a box? When the clean-up crews arrived, with only a few minutes to gather up the few remaining bits from his old life, did he drop Mike Tomczak and Pete Mandley?
Labels:
1990,
football,
football cards,
homeless,
Los Angeles,
Los Angeles River,
Mike Tomczak,
Pete Mandley,
sports,
sports cards
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