This pin-up girl illustrations by American artist Gil Elvgren pin-up caused by photographs from the '50s.
vintage everyday
denoting something of high quality, something from the past or characteristic of the best period
Sunday, May 27, 2012
Old Photos Of A Rainy, Stormy New York City
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| Looking south from 34th St.; Met Life Building is at front left, lower Manhattan buildings at back, 1913 |
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| "Cars and people crossing intersections at 42nd Street after rain during the Bus Strike. 1953 |
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| Hillside Avenue, West from 170th Street. Bus Waiting Line in Rain. June 7, 1943 6:35 p.m |
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| Sailing a wagon in the Brooklyn rain, ca. 1910 |
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| City Employees Parade in the rain, May 17, 1913 |
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Saturday, May 26, 2012
Airplane Landing in City, 1973
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| Near Logan Airport - Airplane Coming in for Landing Over Frankfort Street at Lovell Street Intersection 05/1973 |
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| These Point Shirley Homes on Wintrop Shore Drive Are in Landing Pattern for Logan Airport's Runway 27 10/1973 |
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| Lovell Street Homes in Jet Aircraft Landing Pattern 05/1973 |
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| Jet Zooms Over Southwestern Side of Neptune Road 05/1973 |
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| Mary Bruno Holds Her Ears Against Noise of Jet Coming in for a Landing on Runway 15r at Logan Airport. 39 Neptune Road, the Brunos' Home, Is the White-Fronted Building in the Background 05/1973 |
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Portrait Photographs by Mathew Brady taken c. 1840-1860
Mathew B. Brady (ca. 1822 – January 15, 1896) was one of the most celebrated 19th century American photographers, best known for his portraits of celebrities and his documentation of the American Civil War. He is credited with being the father of photojournalism. (Wikipedia)
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Friday, May 25, 2012
Old Pictures of The Golden Gate Bridge - A Celebration on Its 75th Birthday
There’s something about a bridge. Whether it’s an ancient stone arch over a stream or a 19th century marvel like the Roeblings’ Brooklyn beauty or a modern, mile-long steel behemoth with towers that rise hundreds of feet into the air, a bridge is the most practical and the most evocative of structures. A bridge takes us places; a bridge connects places. And sometimes, a single bridge can help to define places.
Take the Golden Gate Bridge, 75 years old this year. (It opened on May 27, 1937.) With its immediately recognizable “international orange” — not golden — color, its slender, arcing span and its open, stepped towers so often rising dreamlike above the thick fog that courses through the Gate into the bay on summer afternoons, the Art Deco-inflected masterpiece literally connects San Francisco with Marin County to the north and (with perhaps even greater impact) symbolically connects the entire Bay Area with the wild blue Pacific yonder. Much like its older, statelier limestone and granite cousin 3,000 miles to the east in Brooklyn, the Golden Gate Bridge seems to have always been there. It’s almost impossible, now, to imagine the lower East River or the Golden Gate itself without those visionary, boldly executed marvels.
Take the Golden Gate Bridge, 75 years old this year. (It opened on May 27, 1937.) With its immediately recognizable “international orange” — not golden — color, its slender, arcing span and its open, stepped towers so often rising dreamlike above the thick fog that courses through the Gate into the bay on summer afternoons, the Art Deco-inflected masterpiece literally connects San Francisco with Marin County to the north and (with perhaps even greater impact) symbolically connects the entire Bay Area with the wild blue Pacific yonder. Much like its older, statelier limestone and granite cousin 3,000 miles to the east in Brooklyn, the Golden Gate Bridge seems to have always been there. It’s almost impossible, now, to imagine the lower East River or the Golden Gate itself without those visionary, boldly executed marvels.
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| The view north from atop the Golden Gate Bridge in 1955 - Nat Farbman |
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| The Golden Gate Bridge in 1950 - Margaret Bourke-White |
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| The Golden Gate Bridge in 1955 - Nat Farbman |
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| The Golden Gate Bridge (with San Francisco in the background) in 1950 - Margaret Bourke-White |
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| The view south from atop the Golden Gate Bridge in 1955 - Nat Farbman |
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Creepy Vintage Ads Featuring Children
In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, kids were used to promote cigarettes, firearms, drugs and much more. Many of the ads — which feature things like cellophane-wrapped infants and gun-toting toddlers — seem irresponsible and creepy.
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