There's a very faded Agfa Lupex watermark on the back of this photo. Agfa started off as a company manufacturing film and photographic paper in Belgium, but after World War I it became part of I.G. Farben and was headquartered in Germany. The Lupex brand paper was manufactured in pre-World War 2 Germany and during the war itself. It was sold almost exclusively in Europe, so there is an extremely high probability that this photo was taken sometime during the 1930s or 40s in central or western Europe.
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.
Friday, April 29, 2022
Monday, April 25, 2022
Number 7
"7" is all that's written on the print. It's obviously a photograph from a play, and there were at least seven photos taken of the production, and very likely a lot more. In any case, but the time I began rummaging around this was the last one available.
Tuesday, April 19, 2022
Joy
Written on the back, "Sept. 7, 63 Joy. After Millies Wedding." After Millies Wedding is written in a different ink and handwriting. It was kind of shaky, so I'm thinking that some drinking was involved when Joy and Millie were looking at pictures.
Saturday, April 16, 2022
Drift Wood
Another one of the QSL cards I picked up a few weeks ago. I have to confess that while I know there are still people who are ham radio operators, I have a tendency to think of it as a rather old-fashioned activity. So, on the front, there is a little bit of type that says "Mon 4-18-21" So, from 2021? On the back, a "This will confirm our recent Citizen's Band Communication of.....,19...." which would indicate that this card is from some time in the twentieth century.
Thursday, April 14, 2022
Tuesday, April 5, 2022
Friday, April 1, 2022
Florida QSL Card, Sort Of
I'm not part of the ham radio community, so I hope I'm getting this right. QSL cards are the way ham radio operators keep track of who talks to whom. Anyway, a few weeks ago I bought a small envelope of QSL cards. Most of them were personalized images, drawings rather than photographs. For those who are interested in such things, I've put a couple of them up on my Fair Use blog which I use for non-photographic bits of ephemera I've collected, as well as the huge number of images I've found while surfing the web that I've found interesting enough that I'd like to save and review from time to time.
So, back to this card. It's not a great image, just a commercially produced postcard with some ham radio info handwritten on the back. The caption, "Cypress trees many centuries old grow far out in the waters of Lake Eloise at Florida's Cypress Gardens, and together with the brilliant flowers form a picture of the South that will never be forgotten" The card's publisher, "Florida Natural Color, Inc. 2652 N.E. 189th St., Miami, Fla 33163" The card doesn't look like it was ever mailed. There's no stamp or postmark. It was, however, addressed to "BILL, P.O. 6250, TITUSVILLE, FLA 32780." And now for the ham radio stuff, "KENWOOD-T.S. 520, D-104, WILSON S.S. QUAD 45" And written separately, "ViA John, SSB-124." Anyone who understands ham radio can translate what all the letters and numbers mean and put in the comments section at the bottom of the post.