Bring back some good or bad memories


ADVERTISEMENT

May 31, 2013

Amazing Vintage Photos of the Life in India in the 19th Century

These are what the life in India in the 19th century looked like.

Afghan Sikh Officers of Hodson's Horse, a cavalry regiment of the British Indian Army, during the Indian Rebellion, 1858. (Photo by Felice Beato/Getty Images)

Begum Zenat Mahat, wife of the Shah or King of Delhi, exiled to Rangoon after the Indian mutiny against British rule, 1857. (Photo by Felice Beato/Getty Images)

A group of Muhammadan women from Surat standing by a wall in Bombay. The three women are wearing everyday
middle-class attire, 1863. (Photo by Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

Colonel Alexander Gardner, Commander of the Maharajah's troops in Kashmir, India, circa 1864.
(Photo by Bourne & Shepherd/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

A young Pathan or Pashtun woman, circa 1865. (Photo by Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

Rare and Awesome Polaroid Shots of Mick Jagger Taken by Andy Warhol in 1975

Andy Warhol took random Polaroid photos of actors, athletes, celebrities and musicians from the 1960s to 1980s. The musicians he took Polaroids of included John Lennon, Debbie Harry, Dolly Parton, Ric Ocasek... and here, a collection of awesome Mick Jagger Polaroid shots taken in his studio in New York while The Rolling Stones on their Tour of the Americas '75.


Andy Warhol and Mick Jagger met in 1964 in New York when Jagger and the Rolling Stones were still relatively unknown in the United States. Their first meeting at a party would lay the foundations for a strong personal and professional relationship that would follow, a starting point for the artistic collaborations that would follow. Officially working together for the first time in 1971 on the album artwork for Sticky Fingers, Warhol and Jagger would repeatedly meet up to converse and discuss their respective art forms.

In the summer of 1975, Jagger and his wife Bianca rented Warhol’s house in Long Island. There, with a new superstar in proximity, Warhol took many snapshots of Jagger, all of which show the musician bare chested and fiercely expressive. In the shots, Jagger showcases a variety of moods, from sultry to carefree to defiant. Warhol later projected the photographs and used the images to trace his stylized line drawings.



From the beginning, Warhol has understood Jagger’s appeal. Regarding Jagger, he has said “He’s androgynous enough for almost anyone. That’s always been his basic appeal, mixed with the facts that: 1. He’s very talented; 2. He’s very intelligent; 3. He’s very handsome; 4. He’s very adorable; 5. He’s a great business person; 6. He’s a great movie star; 7. I like his fake cockney accent… Image is so important to rock stars. Mick Jagger is the rock star with the longest running image. He’s the one all the young white kids copy. That’s why every detail of his appearance is important.”

The feeling, it would seem, was very much mutual. When Andy Warhol died, Jagger said in tribute: “The thing that he seemed to be able to do was to capture society, whatever part of it he wanted to portray, pretty accurately. That’s one of the things artists do, is show people later on what it was like.”

Jagger added: “If you want to be reminded of a certain period, you can look at what Andy was doing then. He was very much in tune with what was going on. Of course, he was criticized for that, for being sort of trendy. But I think some people’s great forte is being so in touch.”






Black and White Photos of Hollywood Pinups in 1950 Taken by Ed Clark

These photos show Hollywood stars taken by photographer Ed Clark in 1950.

Peggy Castle in bunny ears, 1950

Leslye Banning, 1950

Leslye Banning, 1950

Joyce Holden as an artist, 1950

Joyce Holden, 1950

May 30, 2013

Auto Polo, ca. 1910s

Automobile polo or Auto polo was a motorsport invented in the United States with rules and equipment similar to equestrian polo but using automobiles instead of horses. The sport was popular at fairs, exhibitions and sports venues across the United States and several areas in Europe from 1911 until the late 1920s; but it was dangerous and carried the risk of injury and death to the participants and spectators.







(Photos by George Grantham Bain Collection)

45 Color Photographs Offer a Stunning Glimpse into 1940s New York

Amateur photographer Charles W. Cushman traveled extensively in the U.S and abroad capturing daily life from 1938 to 1969.


His works have been donated to and maintained by Cushman’s alma mater Indiana University, which has kindly given us permission to publish his gallery of New York City photos taken in 1941 and 1942.

They give a great impression of what some of the main hubs of the city looked like 70 years ago, while World War II raged on in Europe.

His other images show the vivid color of the countryside as well as the industrialization of America over the years. The university describes his work as a “peripatetic compulsion” which resulted “in a remarkable gift to future historians, photography lovers, and students of Americana”.






Beard Like Jagger: These Photographs From the 1970s Show Bearded Mick Jagger Is Hotter Than the Shaved One

The Beatles did it, Jim Morrison did it and countless others did it too but we don’t know why it is so weird to see Mick Jagger with a full beard.

From 1979 to 1980, Mick grew a large (as he described it) "Russian" style beard. Check it out...






May 29, 2013

Shorts Causing Chaos: First Women to Wear Shorts in Public Caused a Car Crash, Toronto, 1937

Is this news real or a hoax!

Circulating news: In 1937 two young women wore shorts in the public for the first time, they drew a huge amount of male attention and even caused a car accident!

Photo #1: Women in shorts cause car to “crash” into pole, 1937. It may be considered as a ironic caption!



Photo #2:



Photo #3: Women in shorts being stared at by men outside department store, 1937



Photo #4: Window shopping at Simpsons department store, 1937



Photo #5: Window shopping at Eaton’s department store, 1937 (Toronto, Canada)


The photos are claimed to be taken by the Alexandra Studio of Toronto, Canada in 1937.

The story circulating “girls with shorts for the first caused a car accident” is a fake meme or ironic caption!

1. Photo #1: The girls yet not crossed the line on the floor, and the men are looking at them with wonder!!

2. Photo #2: Girls just crossed the line on the floor, and the men and horse-cart disappeared! Less than 2 seconds, 8 men, a bike and a horse cart disappeared!? Only great illusionist like Harry Houdini or David Copperfield can do that magic!

3. Photo #3: Watch the man going against the fire hydrant!?

4. Notice in the three photos the same car with the number plate: 307!

5. The fact that the photographer Louis J. Turofsky could do this magic because:
  • The girls are models!?
  • It was a photo session for a fashion magazine!?
Those two young girls in shorts, in-fact didn’t cause any car accident!

May 28, 2013

23 Amazing Black and White Photographs Captured Volkswagen's Main Plant in Wolfsburg, Germany in 1951

Most people who have ever owned a Volkswagen Beetle or, say, an early, split-windshield VW bus or even a Karmann Ghia will swear that those uncomfortable, relatively bare-bones vehicles were among the favorite cars they’ve ever driven. They’re not for everyone, of course — but for a certain breed of driver, the old-school VWs offered a rare combination of reliability, ease of maintenance and, most importantly, personality that so many other mass-produced automobiles lacked.

The story of Volkswagen, meanwhile, is among the most fascinating and, in some regards, most troubling of any car manufacturer in existence. One well-documented example of VW’s paradoxical lore: in its early days, during World War II, Volkswagen used slave labor (the company has admitted as much) to build vehicles for the Nazi war effort; decades later, the archetypal Volkswagens, the Beetle and the T1 bus, would become the four-wheeled symbols of the “peace and love” movement of the 1960s. From Hitler to hippies: not many other companies, automobile or otherwise, can lay claim to that sort of bizarre corporate narrative.

Here, a series of photos made by LIFE photographer Walter Sanders at the company’s famous Wolfsburg plant in 1951. A refugee from Hitler’s Germany himself, who fled his native country the same year VW began making cars, Sanders captures in these pictures of the factory and the factory workers a nation in the process of recreating itself. Here, in black and white, is a portrait of the labor and mechanization that would again make Germany  one of the world’s most powerful economies before the end of the century.

Scene at Volkswagen's main plant, Wolfsburg, Germany, July 1951.





Beautiful Vintage Camera Adverts

Because today’s high-tech and fast-paced world has made it easier to find and learn about cameras, we don’t usually find elaborate printed camera ads anymore. Several decades ago, people can only find information about cameras mostly in printed materials such as newspapers and magazines While most of today’s camera ads are quite plain and straight-forward, vintage camera ads of decades past evidently leaned towards a more creative and communicative approach. Potential buyers are drawn to a particular analogue beauty through unique illustrations, catchy taglines, and persuasive descriptions.

Many of these vintage camera ads are as classic as the cameras themselves, still able to mesmerize camera-loving people. Today, many vintage enthusiasts and camera collectors are looking for prints of these ads to include their collections and photography memorabilia. Why don’t we take a look at some of them now to see if they can still work their charm and get us to go on an analogue camera hunt?









FOLLOW US:
FacebookTumblrPinterestInstagram

CONTACT US



Browse by Decades

Popular Posts

Advertisement

09 10