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July 3, 2026

Heartwarming Vintage Photograph Captured a Baby Lamb Snuggling Up Next to a Sleeping Boy, 1940

Taken during the onset of World War II, this image became highly recognized for its depiction of childhood innocence and serenity. Amidst the global turmoil and daily chaos of the era, the photograph provided a brief, comforting escape, reminding audiences of a universal longing for peace and gentle companionship.


It was published during the early months of 1940, just as Europe was entering the difficult years of the Second World War. The peaceful scene contrasted sharply with the anxieties of the era. The composition is unusually tender and natural, making it one of those photographs that has been repeatedly shared in books, magazines, and online collections of historical images.

In rural Britain at the time, children often helped with farm animals, especially during lambing season. Newborn lambs are known to seek warmth and companionship, so the behavior shown in the photograph would not have been unusual on a farm. The photographer simply happened to capture a particularly charming moment.

July 2, 2026

28 Amazing Photographs of the Prague Astronomical Clock From Between the Late 19th and Early 20th Centuries

The Prague astronomical clock, or Prague Orloj, is a medieval astronomical clock attached to the Old Town Hall in Prague, the capital of the Czech Republic. The Orloj is mounted on the southern wall of the city’s Old Town Hall in the Old Town Square.

The clock mechanism has three main components – the astronomical dial, representing the position of the Sun and Moon in the sky and displaying various astronomical details; statues of various Catholic saints stand on either side of the clock; “The Walk of the Apostles,” an hourly show of moving Apostle figures and other sculptures, notably a figure of a skeleton that represents Death, striking the time; and a calendar dial with medallions representing the months. According to local legend, the city will suffer if the clock is neglected and its good operation is placed in jeopardy; a ghost, mounted on the clock, was supposed to nod its head in confirmation. According to the legend, the only hope was represented by a boy born on New Year’s night.

The late 19th and early 20th centuries were a transformative era for the Orloj. During this time, the clock evolved from a neglected, semi-functional relic into a celebrated national symbol of Czech cultural revival, right before facing near-destruction at the end of World War II.

By the mid-19th century, the clock was in poor condition and frequently stopped working. A massive, milestone restoration completed in 1866 completely modernized the clock’s appearance and mechanical reliability. The distinct wooden figures of the 12 Apostles that parade every hour were newly installed in the upper windows during this restoration. Celebrated Czech painter Josef Mánes was commissioned to create a brand-new, intricately painted lower calendar dial. His design featured 12 medallions depicting rural bohemian life matched to the signs of the zodiac. In 1865, a golden crowing rooster was added above the Apostle windows to signal the conclusion of the hourly mechanical show.

Following the 1866 restoration, Prague authorities realized that exposing Josef Mánes’ masterpiece painting to the elements would ruin it. The original Mánes calendar dial was carefully removed and moved to the Prague City Museum for safekeeping. It was replaced on the tower by an exact structural copy. After another round of reconstructions on the Old Town Hall facade, the golden rooster mechanism was fully finalized and played for the public for the first time on New Year’s Eve on December 31, 1882. The local Prague clockmaking company L. Hainz officially took over the maintenance and regular repair of the clock in the 1860s, a stewardship role they proudly maintained well into the 20th century.

The early 1900s brought massive technological adjustments and political upheaval to Prague, directly impacting how the clock told time. In 1912, the astronomical dial was modified to formally integrate Central European Time (German Civil Time). This update divided the standard day into 12 equal hours mapped to standard European timekeeping, though the complex internal gear adjustments meant it didn’t run perfectly until decades later. Following the collapse of the Austro-Hungarian Empire in 1918, Czechoslovakia declared its independence right in front of the clock tower. The clock was heavily embraced as a triumph of historic Czech engineering during this patriotic surge.

The darkest moment in the clock’s modern history occurred at the very end of WWII. On May 7–8, 1945, Nazi forces used anti-aircraft guns and incendiary shelling on the Old Town Square to suppress the Czech resistance broadcasting from the town hall. The building caught fire, the wooden Apostles and the calendar face burned to ashes, and the heavy medieval iron mechanism was severely warped by the extreme heat. The clock remained completely motionless and silent until a massive community-led restoration brought it back to life in 1948.






Paola Pitagora: The Intense Beauty of 1960s Italian Cinema

Paola Pitagora (born 1941) is an Italian actress celebrated for her intense, expressive performances and striking beauty in the 1960s and ’70s.

With her dark, soulful eyes and passionate screen presence, Pitagora became one of the most respected dramatic actresses of postwar Italian cinema. She is best remembered for her powerful and emotionally charged role as Giulia in Luchino Visconti’s Sandra (1965), as well as appearances in films such as The Bible: In the Beginning... (1966) and The Lady of Monza (1969).

Pitagora brought depth, sensitivity, and dramatic intensity to her roles, often portraying complex and tormented women. These striking vintage photos capture the dark, soulful eyes, passionate presence, and dramatic intensity of Paola Pitagora, one of the most compelling and respected actresses of postwar Italian cinema.






1951 Atlas Babycar 2S: A Charming Post-War Microcar

The 1951 Atlas Babycar 2S is a fascinating and exceptionally rare microcar that perfectly captures the post-WWII European spirit of minimalist, budget-friendly transportation.

Manufactured in France by Société Industrielle de Livry, this charming "bubble car" features a strikingly aerodynamic, toy-like fiberglass body with open-top styling and a distinctively rounded front end. Powered by a tiny, rear-mounted 175cc single-cylinder AMC engine, the Babycar 2S was built purely for short, economical city commutes rather than high-speed performance.

With only a handful of units ever produced and even fewer surviving today, this quirky two-seater is highly coveted by automotive collectors as a whimsical masterpiece of early mid-century micro-engineering. These charming photos beautifully capture the whimsical design, compact proportions, and pioneering spirit of the 1951 Atlas Babycar 2S, a delightful relic of postwar French ingenuity and one of the most endearing microcars of its time.






35 Glamorous Portraits of Olivia de Havilland in the 1950s

Dame Olivia Mary de Havilland (July 1, 1916 – July 26, 2020) was a British, American and French actress. She appeared in 49 feature films throughout her career, with the major works of her cinematic career spanning from 1935 to 1988.

The 1950s marked a decade of profound transformation for Havilland. Having already won two Academy Awards in the 1940s (To Each His Own and The Heiress) and successfully broken the restrictive studio contract system with her landmark 1944 legal victory, she entered the 1950s with complete artistic freedom. Instead of chasing Hollywood blockbusters, she chose to redefine her career, pivot to the theater, and uproot her entire personal life by moving to Europe.

At the start of the decade, de Havilland intentionally stepped away from the camera to fulfill a long-held ambition: performing on Broadway. In 1951, she made her Broadway debut playing Juliet in Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet. While critics were lukewarm on the production itself, her dedication to the stage led her to follow it up with a successful national tour of Candida in 1952.

When she did return to film, she gravitated toward mature, complex, and sometimes ambiguous characters rather than traditional romantic leads. Starring opposite a young Richard Burton in his American film debut My Cousin Rachel (1952), she played the enigmatic Rachel Sangalletti. Her performance brilliantly balanced vulnerability with a subtle undercurrent of malice, leaving audiences guessing whether her character was a victim or a murderer. She played a dedicated, self-sacrificing nurse trapped in a cold marriage to an ambitious doctor (played by Robert Mitchum) in Not as a Stranger (1955), showcasing her talent for grounded, emotionally heavy drama. She starred alongside Alan Ladd, playing a tough, independent frontier woman in The Proud Rebel (1958), a rugged post-Civil War Western.

The most permanent change of de Havilland’s life occurred in 1953 when she traveled to the Cannes Film Festival. There, she met Pierre Galante, an editor for the prominent magazine Paris Match. They married in 1955, and she made the definitive decision to leave Hollywood behind and relocate to a classic three-story house in the Bois de Boulogne section of Paris. Living in France allowed her to step out of the relentless Hollywood fishbowl. She became a beloved high-society figure in Paris, hosted literary salons, and later wrote a lighthearted, bestselling memoir about her experiences adapting to French culture titled Every Frenchman Has a Courteous Heart (1962).

By the close of the 1950s, Olivia de Havilland had transitioned seamlessly from a peak Golden Age movie star into a sophisticated, independent international actress who prioritized her personal happiness and artistic autonomy over studio fame.






Debbie Harry Posing for a Portrait in March 1977 on a Hill Beneath the Hollywood Sign in Los Angeles, California

Debbie Harry photographed by legendary music archivist and photographer Michael Ochs at the Hollywood Sign in 1977 when Blondie first came to LA to play a series of shows at The Whisky a Go Go. Harry paired a bold, horizontal-striped shirt with dark sunglasses and patterned shorts—a casual, effortlessly cool look that epitomized the emerging New York punk/new wave aestheti.

In her memoir Face It, Harry recalls the band’s debut at the club, “[LA] was all we could have hoped for. People were still dressing like hippies – and here we were, dressed in our little mod outfits. But the audiences really responded to us.”






July 1, 2026

Gyula Tornai: Master of Hungarian Orientalist Painting

Gyula Tornai (1861–1928) was a Hungarian painter and one of the most prominent Orientalist artists of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. After studying in Budapest and Munich, he traveled extensively through North Africa and the Middle East, particularly Egypt and Morocco, where he found rich inspiration for his work.

Tornai is best known for his vibrant, colorful, and highly detailed paintings depicting Arab markets, harem scenes, desert caravans, and everyday life in the Islamic world. His style combined academic precision with a bold use of light and color, creating romanticized yet atmospheric views of the Orient.

Tornai is regarded as one of the leading Hungarian Orientalist painters, whose works captured the fascination with Eastern culture that was popular in European art of his time. These vibrant and atmospheric paintings showcase Gyula Tornai’s exceptional talent for capturing the color, light, and exotic beauty of the Middle East and North Africa, securing his place as one of the leading Hungarian Orientalist artists of the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The Gifts of the Prince

The Interrupted Game of Draughts

A Harem Scene

African Woman

An Arms Merchant in Tangiers




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