Bring back some good or bad memories


ADVERTISEMENT

December 12, 2025

Portrait of Florrie Holmes, a Member of the Forty Elephants

Among the seventy known members of London’s most infamous all-female criminal gang, Florrie Holmes stood out as a bold figure in a world where women were rarely seen as outlaws. The Forty Elephants, operating from South London between 1873 and the 1950s, were unlike anything the city’s underworld had seen before, stylish, stealthy, and shockingly effective.


Florrie didn’t start as a thief. She was first the girlfriend of a gangster, but it wasn’t long before she was drawn into the gang’s audacious world of crime. The Forty Elephants became legendary for their expertly coordinated shoplifting raids, especially in London’s high-end West End. Armed with tailor-made clothing lined with hidden pockets and voluminous knickers, they stole everything from jewelry and designer fashions to furs, leather goods, and lingerie – often in plain sight, undetected.

What set the Forty Elephants apart wasn’t just their technique, it was their sisterhood. They ran their own operations, supported each other, and used their illicit gains not just for personal luxury, but to support struggling women in their communities. When they weren’t stealing from the rich, they were throwing lavish parties, indulging in the very opulence society denied them.

In a time when organized crime was ruled by men, Florrie Holmes and her sisters defied every expectation. They were strategists, leaders, and rebels who built an empire from within the shadows, proving that women could run the streets on their own terms. Their legacy lives on as a fascinating, gritty, and empowering chapter in British criminal history.

Beautiful Photos of the 1935 Bugatti Type 57 ‘Grand Raid’ Roadster

The 1935 Bugatti Type 57 ‘Grand Raid’ Roadster stands as an exquisite example of automotive artistry and high performance from the pre-war era. Designed by Jean Bugatti, son of founder Ettore, the Type 57 chassis was already a masterpiece of engineering.

The ‘Grand Raid’ was a particularly striking version, defined by its aerodynamic bodywork and a distinctive, aggressively raked windshield, giving it a powerful, streamlined profile indicative of its racing aspirations. It featured a supercharged 3.3-liter straight-eight engine, offering exceptional speed and luxury. The Roadster body, often custom-built, was characterized by elegant flowing lines and a low-slung stance.

This model is considered one of the rarest and most beautiful variations of the Type 57 line, perfectly blending Bugatti’s tradition of superior mechanical performance with unmatched bespoke elegance.






December 11, 2025

20 Portraits of a Young Teri Garr in the 1970s

Terry Ann Garr (December 11, 1944 – October 29, 2024), known as Teri Garr, was an American actress, comedian and dancer. Early in her career, she was credited as Terry Garr. She later recalled changing her first name to “Teri” on the advice of a numerologist, who said she would be unsuccessful if she had repeating letters in her first and last names. Her movie debut was as an extra in A Swingin’ Affair (1963). During her senior year, she auditioned for the cast of the Los Angeles road company production of West Side Story, where she met one of the most important people in her early career, David Winters, who became her friend, dance teacher, and mentor. Winters cast her in many of his early movies and projects.

Garr began as a background go-go dancer in uncredited roles in youth-oriented films and TV shows choreographed by Winters. She often appeared on television during this time, performing as a go-go dancer on several musical variety shows, along with friend Toni Basil. Her first speaking role in a motion picture was a brief appearance as a damsel in distress in The Monkees’ film Head (1968), written by Jack Nicholson; Garr got the role after meeting Nicholson in an acting class.

Garr’s career made a significant leap in the 1970s, establishing her as a recognizable actress in both comedy and drama. She was a regular cast member on The Sonny & Cher Comedy Hour (1971–1974), where she performed as a dancer and acted in comedy sketches, playing various characters including Countess Legustav. She later reunited with Cher on her show Cher (1975–1976). She also had recurring roles on McCloud from 1970–1975.

Her big shift came with Francis Ford Coppola’s The Conversation (1974). Though her role was small, critics noticed her dramatic potential. It marked the first time audiences saw Teri Garr as more than a dancer, she could handle nuanced, subtle acting. The real explosion came the same year in Mel Brooks’ Young Frankenstein. As Inga, she delivered impeccable comic timing; the iconic “Roll, roll, roll in ze hay!” scene; a lovable, goofy, modern twist on the classic ingĂ©nue. This film made her a comedy star almost overnight.

By the late 1970s, Garr was a sought-after comedic actress. She co-starred as the wife of John Denver’s character in Oh, God! (1977). She appeared in Steven Spielberg’s science-fiction film Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977) as Ronnie Neary, the wife of Richard Dreyfuss’s character. She played a dramatic role as the mother of the boy protagonist in The Black Stallion (1979).

Teri Garr was known for her unique brand of “offbeat” comedy and charm, often playing characters who were “refreshingly intelligent” rather than merely “ditzy.” Her style was quintessential 1970s, characterized by her blonde hair and expressive face.






Y Bwthyn Bach: Queen Elizabeth II’s Childhood Playhouse in Windsor Great Park, England

Queen Elizabeth II’s childhood playhouse in Windsor Great Park is one of the most charming and intimate artifacts of the royal family’s early life, a tiny pastel cottage known as Y Bwthyn Bach, or “The Little House.”

The playhouse was built in 1932 as a sixth-birthday present for Princess Elizabeth (the future Queen Elizabeth II). The idea came from the people of Wales, who wanted to offer a unique and heartfelt gift to the young princess.

Designed by architect Edmund Willmott, it is a two-thirds scale, thatched cottage built in the style of a traditional Welsh cottage. It was built using materials left over from the redevelopment of Llandough Hospital. It is 24 feet (7.3 meters) long, 8 feet deep (2.4 meters), with a ceiling height of only 5 feet (1.5 meters).

The most remarkable thing about Y Bwthyn Bach is that it was a fully functional home, just scaled down for a child. It features four main rooms: a living room, a kitchen, a bedroom, and a bathroom. It was equipped with the modern conveniences of the time, including hot and cold running water, electricity, a working gas cooker, a small fridge, and even a heated towel rail. The furniture and fittings, such as a tiny telephone, miniature Beatrix Potter books, and a blue and gold china set, were all made to scale.

Both Elizabeth and her younger sister Princess Margaret adored the cottage. They played house, cleaned it themselves, arranged the furniture, and even answered letters delivered to the tiny mailbox. Family visitors often recalled that Elizabeth loved tidying and organizing the cottage, treating it like her own little kingdom; Margaret preferred the dramatic play—songs, dances, and imaginary adventures. The playhouse became a small oasis of normal childhood within the formality of royal life.

Over the decades, the cottage weathered the elements. During Queen Elizabeth II’s reign, it was restored several times, including a major renovation in 2012 for her Diamond Jubilee.

Today, Y Bwthyn Bach still sits within the private grounds of Windsor Great Park, near the Royal Lodge. It is not open to the public, but remains in use by royal children, continuing the charming tradition begun in the 1930s.






Inga Lindgren: An Iconic Scandinavian Face

Inga Lindgren was a prominent Swedish fashion model who defined a certain sophisticated, clean aesthetic in the post-war era. Rising to fame in the late 1940s and ’50s, she quickly became a favorite subject for renowned photographers like Richard Avedon and Irving Penn.

Lindgren was frequently featured in major international fashion magazines, including Vogue and Harper’s Bazaar, where she embodied the transition from the formality of the 1940s to the lighter, more modern silhouettes of the New Look by Christian Dior. She was celebrated not only for her classic Scandinavian features, characterized by high cheekbones and an elegant composure, but also for her versatility and professional grace.

Lindgren’s image became synonymous with chic European style, making her an enduring icon of the golden age of high fashion modeling. Take a look at these vintage photos to see fashion portraits of Inga Lindgren in the 1940s.

Inga Lindgren in pale pink fleecy coat of Stroock wool by Brittany, photo by Louise Dahl-Wolfe, Harper's Bazaar, January 1946

Inga Lindgren in a fine-ribbed corduroy suit with a short jacket, balloon sleeves and snug cuffs, the skirt has well-placed pleats, by Ceil Chapman, photo by Louise Dahl-Wolfe, Harper's Bazaar, October 1946

Inga Lindgren in sheath of gun-metal paillettes and gun-metal gloves cuffed with feathers by Traina-Norell, Kodachrome by Louise Dahl-Wolfe, Harper's Bazaar, November 1946

Inga Lindgren in a cobalt faille gown, festooned from hip to hip, the bodice folded to a point and held by a thin strap by Charles James, photo by Louise Dahl-Wolfe, Harper's Bazaar, October 1946

Inga Lindgren in beautifully cut gray flannel dress, gold threads lining the neck and sleeves by Jo Copeland, small gold braid hat by Chanda, jewelry by Verdura, photo by Richard Avedon, Harper's Bazaar, October 1946

Stunning Portraits of Sixteen-Year-Old Clara Bow Taken by Nickolas Muray, 1921

Clara Bow’s first portraits, made by Nickolas Muray just after winning the Fame and Fortune Contest of 1921 in the Motion Picture Classic magazine. The photographs made directly from negative by Muray’s widow after his death.

Her Fame and Fortune Contest victory was Clara’s chance of a lifetime, and she could not renounce it despite her mother’s damnations. Meanwhile the Brewster organization whisked her to the Greenwich Village studio of Nickolas Muray for a portrait to replace the cheap photos she had submitted. Muray shot Clara in two standard ingenue “attitudes”: playful, with her thumb hooked jauntily beneath the rim of her red tam, and pensive, gazing off camera with an arm draped modestly over her breasts.

Dissatisfied, Muray ordered an additional setup. This time his subject stared directly into the camera, her hair swept across her forehead, her lips locked together, her face half-shadowed, and her eyes haunted. Here was the real Clara, and though she had never looked as lovely, the image is harrowing. It was hardly what the Brewster organization wanted, so the January, 1922 issue of Motion Picture Classic featured the photo of Clara and her tam. The article announcing her victory was entitled “A Dream Come True.”





“I hadn’t dressed up because I had nothing to dress up in,” she described the audition in the Photoplay article. “I had never had a manicure nor a pair of chiffon stockings in my life. I had never even been close to the scent of such perfumes as filled that room. I wore the one and only thing I owned. A little plain wool dress, a sweater, and a woolly red tam. I hadn’t thought much of that angle. I had only looked at my face, and that was disappointment enough.”

Bow won the contest, but the bit part in a movie that was the prize was cut out of the final version. “Things weren’t breaking for me at all,” she told Photoplay. “Winning the contest hadn’t seemed to mean a thing. I wore myself out trying to find work, going from studio to studio, from agency to agency, applying for every possible part. But there was always something. I was too young, or too little, or too fat. Usually, I was too fat. When I told them that I’d won this contest, they only laughed. They said the woods were full of girls who’d won some bum beauty contest and they were mostly dumb or they wouldn’t have been in any beauty contest in the first place. Which I guess maybe was right.”

Bow broke through in the film Down to the Sea in Ships released in 1922 which garnered positive reviews for her despite her tenth-billed appearance. After a handful more supporting roles, she moved to Hollywood and signed a contract with Preferred Pictures, which was run by B.P. Schulberg. She was paid $200 a week and put to work at once, sometimes working on several films at once, sometimes loaned out to other studios, making 31 movies in less than three years.

Hans Holbein the Younger: One of the Greatest Portraitists of the Northern Renaissance

Hans Holbein the Younger (c. 1497–1543) was a German painter and printmaker who worked primarily in England and is regarded as one of the greatest portraitists of the Northern Renaissance. While he initially received training in Augsburg and Basel, his career reached its pinnacle in London, where he served as the King’s Painter to Henry VIII.

Holbein’s style is characterized by its extraordinary realism, precise detail, and a meticulous, almost photographic rendering of fabric, jewelry, and facial features. His most famous works include the portraits of Henry VIII, Anne of Cleves, and his striking depiction of the statesman Thomas Cromwell. His art transcended mere likeness, he often incorporated symbols and objects (anamorphosis or memento mori) into his compositions, as seen famously in The Ambassadors (1533), adding layers of intellectual depth to his masterful technique.

Holbein’s portraits remain our most vivid visual link to the powerful figures of the Tudor court.

Adam and Eve, 1517

Portrait of the Artist’s Wife, circa 1517

The Last Supper, 1524-25

Touch Me Not, 1524

Venus and Amor, 1524-25




FOLLOW US:
FacebookTumblrPinterestInstagram

CONTACT US



Browse by Decades

Popular Posts

Advertisement

09 10