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Showing posts with label Canada. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Canada. Show all posts

June 18, 2018

The Lost Vancouver: Fred Herzog's Early Color Street Photographs of Canada From the 1950s and 1960s

Fred Herzog arrived in Vancouver in 1953. The young German immigrant was fascinated by all aspects of Canadian life, and set out to document it with his camera. He worked as a medical photographer by day, and on evenings and weekends he took his camera to the streets, documenting daily life.

A pioneer of color photography, Herzog largely worked with Kodachrome, a slide film that was tricky to use in a spontaneous fashion, and required expensive developing in specialist labs. He was never able to make satisfactory prints from his slides, but digital inkjets have enabled him to print and exhibit early work.

Family on Lawn, 1959

Elysium Cleaners, 1958

Hastings and Columbia Street, 1958

Paris Cafe, 1959

Squatter, Railroad Tracks, 1961





June 14, 2018

30 Funny Photographs Capture Canadians Have Fun While at Work and Play From the Late 19th and Early 20th Centuries

Reuben R. Sallows (1855-1937) was born and raised on a Huron County farm in Canada. He moved to Goderich in 1876, becoming a traveling salesman for local photographer Robert R. Thompson. Two years later, Sallows became Thompson's apprentice, and, in 1881, bought the business.

During the next decade, Sallows developed a reputation as a craftsman in formal portraiture, pastoral photography, and stereoscopic images. Besides building a substantial business, Sallows subscribed to the professional trade journals and was an active member in the Huron Photographers' and Canadian Photographers' Associations.

A rogue photographer, Sallows did not wait for clients to enter his studio. He took his camera everywhere: in his black Ford Model A truck, in a hired canoe and on the newly installed trains that crisscrossed Canada between 1881 and 1937. He photographed people at work and play in the small towns, farmlands and in the expansive Canadian wilderness of Ontario, the western rovinces and northern Quebec.

His photographs are full of detail and drama, lightened at times with a bit of humor. Below are some of interesting photographs from his work.

Posed picture of four men and bicycles after crash on path, 1897; three women in background; trees frame view on either side.

A boy holding a stick contemplates hitting backside of a large man, Jonathan Miller who is standing in front of fence reading a newspaper.

Group portrait of five men, some of whom are dressed women's bathing attire posed on dock in Lake Huron, 1897.

Young boy sits on an overturned pail feeding a piglet with a bottle, 1920.

Two women laying among foliage; both wear long-sleeved blouses with ties at neck; woman in front lays across the lap of the other; two hats in foreground, wide-brimmed straw hat on left, hat trimmed with flowers on right.





May 26, 2018

Fascinating Photos That Capture Everyday Life of Toronto in the Early 1960s

These fascinating photos were taken by gcosserat that show street scenes of Toronto from 1962 and 1965.

Bloor Streetcar, Toronto

Brentwood Towers, Toronto

Canadian National Exhibition, Toronto

Canadian National Exhibition, Toronto

Canadian National Exhibition, Toronto





May 16, 2018

The Cats of Canada: Adorable Vintage Photos of Very, Very Cute Kittens From 1902

In 1895, an amendment to Canadian law allowed the British Museum to receive one copy of all Canadian intellectual property deposted for copyright registration. This situation persisted until 1924, when - as part of a general reworking of Canadian copyright law - the right of receipt was removed.

During these thirty years, the Department of Agriculture - who administered copyright - regularly parcelled up half their deposits and sent them to London. As well as books, maps and sheet music, the collection included a copy of every photograph copyrighted in Canada in this period. These are now held by the British Library and, despite some of the works being lost in their original transit or added to other collections, they represent a significant collection of early 20th century Canadian photography.

These adorable vintage photographs come from a 1902 photo series “The Globe Kittens.” There were probably thousands of cat photos like this from the era, but very few have survived to this day, mostly because they weren’t seen to be worthy of the historical record. As British Library curator Philip Hatfield noted in a post, “we don’t yet know anything about the ‘Globe Kittens’ but it seems a reasonable bet that not many serious photographic curators would have bought and preserved prints of them.”










May 6, 2018

50 Found Photos That Capture Everyday Life of Canada From the Early 20th Century

These found photos from gt_hawk63 that show how everyday life of Canada (mostly Ontario) looked like from over 100 years ago.

Three yong women at the river

Through a sea of grain

Two Canadian men after harvesting, Culloden, Ontario

Two farm girls in Culloden, Ontario

Two horses, two men and one wagon





March 22, 2018

30 Vintage Photographs Capture Canadian Punk Scenes From the Early 1980s

The first punk rock bands in Canada emerged during the late 1970s, in the wake of the US band Ramones and the UK bands Sex Pistols and the Clash. The Viletones, the Diodes and the Demics were among the pioneers, together with the Skulls (featuring Joey who would go on to form DOA, and Wimpy (Brian Roy) who would lead the Subhumans) from Vancouver, and Hamilton's Teenage Head, whose records and live shows earned them the nickname "Canada's Ramones". Vibrant local punk scenes sprung up in Toronto and Vancouver and other Canadian cities. By 1980/81 a Canadian hardcore punk scene emerged.

These candid photographs were taken by a Flicker's user ragamuffin1984 from 1980 to 1984. They give us a glimpse into Canadian Punk scenes in Ottawa, Montreal and Toronto in the early 1980s.










March 18, 2018

February 12, 2018

Mystery Valentines: Toronto Woman Received a Valentine's Day Card From a Secret Admirer Every February Since 1928

According to the Toronto Star, here's the Toronto's most enduring love story — at least on paper — was about resident Meryl Dunsmore and a secret admirer whose valentines spanned six decades. Every year from 1928 when Dunsmore was 16, a card would arrive from somewhere around the world.
“I hope he doesn't stop,” Meryl Dunsmore commented of the secret admirer in 1972.
Meryl Dunsmore in 1972, at age 60.

Meryl Dunsmore in 1985, at age 73.

Dunsmore, who died in 1988 at age 76, thought he might be an old classmate turned sailor but his identity was never revealed.

At her funeral he sent a bouquet and card that read “rest in peace My Valentine.”

(via the Toronto Star)




January 15, 2018

25 Amazing Then-and-Now Photos Show How Toronto Has Changed From 1959 to 2014

Toronto, the capital of the province of Ontario, is a major Canadian city along Lake Ontario's northwestern shore. It's a dynamic metropolis with a core of soaring skyscrapers, all dwarfed by the iconic, free-standing CN Tower.

Toronto also has many green spaces, from the orderly oval of Queen's Park to 400-acre High Park and its trails, sports facilities and zoo.

To be as this day, Toronto has experienced a long period of strong development and change. Mr T.O. took pictures of this city in 2014 and put them together with the 1959 ones to see how it has changed over the past 55 years.

Take a look...

194 Randall Street

856 Eglinton east

1749 Victoria Park Avenue being built & entrance to St. Jude's Church

1759 Victoria Park Avenue looking south east

Africa Inland Mission at 1641 Victoria Park





January 5, 2018

Photograph of a Time-Traveling Hipster, 1941

According to Wikipedia, a photograph from 1941 of genuine authenticity of the re-opening of the South Fork Bridge in Gold Bridge, British Columbia, was alleged to show a time traveler. It was claimed that his clothing and sunglasses were of the present day and not of the styles worn in the 1940s.

The “time traveler” can be seen on the lower right of this photograph. Reopening of the South Forks Bridge in Gold Bridge, British Columbia (1941). Photo featured in "Their Past Lives Here", an online exhibition created by the Bralorne Pioneer Museum. ©2013 Bralorne-Pioneer Museum.

Further research suggested that the present day appearance of the man may not have been so new. The style of sunglasses first appeared in the 1920s. On first glance the man is taken by many to be wearing a printed T-shirt, but on closer inspection it seems to be a sweater with a sewn-on emblem, the kind of clothing often worn by sports teams of the period. The shirt is very similar to the one that was used by the Montreal Maroons, an ice hockey team from that era. The remainder of his clothing would appear to have been available at the time, though his clothes are far more casual than those worn by the other individuals in the photograph.

The idea that the man in the photograph is a time traveler hinges on three items he is seen wearing or holding that appear to be of too modern a vintage for the 1940s: a logo t-shirt, a small portable camera, and wrap-around sunglasses.

Debate centres on whether the image genuinely shows a time traveller, has been photomanipulated, or is simply being mistaken as anachronistic. The "Time Traveling Hipster" became a case study in viral Internet phenomena in museums which was presented at the Museums and the Web 2011 conference in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

(Image via Bralorne-Pioneer Museum)




December 26, 2017

33 Amazing Photos That Capture Everyday Life of Ontario, Canada in the Late 19th Century

At the turn of the 20th century, when most cameras and photographers operated out of a studio, Ontario-based photographer Reuben R. Sallows (1855-1937) took his heavy, cumbersome equipment outside. He photographed people at work and play in the small towns, farmlands and in the expansive Canadian wilderness of Ontario, the western rovinces and northern Quebec.

A rogue photographer, Sallows did not wait for clients to enter his studio. He took his camera everywhere: in his black Ford Model A truck, in a hired canoe and on the newly installed trains that crisscrossed Canada between 1881 and 1937.
 
He sold his photographs to his studio patrons in Goderich, Ontario, the Canadian, Albertan and Ontario governments, postcard and lithograph companies in the United States, Britain, Scotland and Germany as well as magazines and newspapers in Canada, the United States and abroad. One of his photographs, Patriarch of the Flock, was published in the National Geographic magazine in 1920.
 
His versatility at both setting a scene and capturing a moment made him an excellent freelance photographer in an age when such a concept was barely emerging. To be a photographer between 1881 and 1937 was to be a scientist, savvy businessman and artist. Reuben R. Sallows was all three.

In 1937, Reuben Sallows, on his way to take a photograph at a school camp on the lakeshore highway, was killed when his car overturned just south of Kintail. He was 82 years old.

During his sixty year career, his artistic skill was proudly heralded locally as "Sallowsgraphs" and recognized internationally, securing him a reputation for being a "photographic genius."

These photos that Sallows captured everyday life of Ontario, Canada from between the 1860s and 1890s.

A boy holding a stick contemplates hitting backside of a large man

At home

Bathing in Lake Huron

Becklers Mills Falls, Benmiller

Bend in Maitland River





November 18, 2017



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