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Showing posts with label Norway. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Norway. Show all posts

June 14, 2018

Stunning Studio Portraits of a Young and Beautiful Norwegian Woman Wearing Big Hats in 1909

In the early Edwardian period, hats were a fashion accessory, rather than a necessity. Most were kept fairly small, sitting on the top of the head atop a pile of hair. More masculine styles had begun to emerge during the 1890s, and some of these were still popular during this period.

Women were seen wearing traditionally male styles such as the “Boater” or “Trilbys”. Bonnets had grown out of style, and women preferred hats that soared above the head, sometimes called “3 Story” or “Flower Pots”.





(Photos via Nasjonalbiblioteket)





June 13, 2018

Interesting Vintage Studio Photos That Show Women's Swimsuit Fashion in Norway in the 1920s

By the early 1920s women’s bathing suits were reduced to a one piece garment with a long top that covered shorts. Though matching stockings were still worn, vintage swimwear began to shrink and more and more flesh was exposed from the bottom of the trunks to the tops of the stockings.

By the mid-1920s Vogue magazine was telling its readers that “the newest thing for the sea is a jersey bathing suit as near a maillot as the unwritten law will permit.”










December 20, 2017

Julekort: 21 Wonderful Vintage Norwegian Christmas Postcards From the Early 20 Century

Did you know that the tradition of giving Christmas cards started with the Victorians? In fact, a lot of our modern day Christmas traditions started in the Victorian era. But in those days most of the Christmas cards were still homemade, just like most of the gifts were.

The tradition of giving gifts goes back a long time, and in Norway we hear about the Vikings offering gifts to allying chiefs in order to establish and maintain good relations between the different clans. Even today, gifts, but perhaps even more so, cards, are used for the exact same purpose!










November 24, 2017

Fascinating Then and Now Photos That Show How Norway’s Gorgeous Landscapes Have Changed Over the Past Century

Here's a collection of 12 fascinating then and now photos that show how Norway’s gorgeous landscapes have changed over the past century. Decades-old photos are faithfully re-captured by figuring out exactly where the original photographer stood.

Herdalssetra (1905, 2014), Norwegian peasant commune in Møre og Romsdal, coastal province north of Bergen. (Image: Peder Krohn and Oskar Puschmann)

Setesdal Rysstad (1888-2013), another peasant commune, this time located in Aust-Agder province south of the country. As shown, Norway infrastructures were very poor in the nineteenth century. The country is very mountainous, was divided in small nuclei isolated from each population generally. (Image: Axel Lindahl and Oskar Puschmann)

Norway has not been spared such universal phenomena as I riotous urbanism. Flekkerøy, suburb of Kristiansand, Vest-Adger, a small archipelago was once home to local fishermen and sailors. Its geographical location and the beauty of its landscape, and in the XXI century, caused many Norwegians began to build houses for tourism. The area was filled with buildings clinging to the coast, and today it is forbidden to build within 100 meters of the sea. (Image: Anders Beer and Oskar Wilse Puschmann)

In many ways, Norway remains a country very much like it was decades ago. This pier near Hellesund in Vest-Adger, also south of the country, test: has barely changed between 1923 and 2005. (Image: Anders Beer and Oskar Wilse Puschmann)

Lærdalsøyri, again in the county of Sogn og Fjordane. In the image above, we see how the population was in 1884. At the bottom, how it is today. Norway it has been gaining ground in the valleys, the only habitable areas of the country. It shows how well more houses, more trees, as in the rest of Europe, the decline of agriculture has allowed the resurgence of forests. (Image: Axel Lindahl and Oskar Puschmann)





November 19, 2017

November 9, 2017

49 Color Photos That Capture Street Scenes of Oslo, Norway in the 1980s

Founded in the year 1040, Oslo is the capital and the most populous city in Norway. It constitutes both a county and a municipality. The city is the economic and governmental centre of Norway. It is also a hub of Norwegian trade, banking, industry and shipping, and an important centre for maritime industries and maritime trade in Europe.

Oslo is home to many companies within the maritime sector, some of which are among the world's largest shipping companies, shipbrokers and maritime insurance brokers.

These fascinating photos that show you what Oslo looked like in the 1980s.










October 2, 2017

39 Hand-Colored Portraits of Norwegian Women in the Mid-19th Century

Marcus Selmer (1819-1900) was a Danish photographer who worked in Norway. He became Bergens first established photographer in 1852 and ran until his death in 1900.

With his urban- and landscape-prospect photography, together with his series presenting Norwegian national costumes, Selmer came to have great influence in shaping the concept of the Norwegian.


Selmer's entire archives were destroyed by his death.

Here is an amazing collection of hand-colored salt paper prints from Preus museum that show portraits of Norwegian women he photographed from 1857 to 1870.










August 5, 2017

32 Amazing Candid Photographs That Capture Street Scenes of Oslo, Norway in the 1890s

These candid shots were taken between 1893-97 in Oslo, Norway by Carl Størmer (1874-1957), who is one of Norway's pioneer photographers. He is known as an astronomer and mathematician. In history books Størmer is referred to as "The Northern Lights photographer”: he will go down in history as the first person to construct a camera that could capture the Northern Lights.

But it is another of his photographic endeavors that is the basis for this film: The young student Carl Størmer walked around in Christiania (Oslo) from 1893 to 1897 with his detective camera and took everyday pictures of people. In these images we see people in their natural state. It differs very much from the grave and strict posing attitudes that characterize the photos from that time. Størmer’s images capture situations, meetings, reactions and looks. They give a close-up of a world that is long gone.










July 30, 2017

Amazing Photos Document Everyday Life of Norway From Between the Late 19th and Early 20th Centuries

In 1886 20-year-old Ellisif R. Müller (1866-1949) married her cousin, regional doctor Andreas Wessel. The marriage led her to Kirkenes, where they lived out their lives. It was there, in her new home, that she made her debut as a photographer.

In Finnmark Wessel encountered a reality which stood in stark contrast to that of her protected bourgeois youth. She photographed what she saw: people, the buildings they lived in, and the landscape around them. Like well known documentary photographers such as Jacob A. Riis (1849-1914) and Lewis Hine (1874-1940) she uses photography to document social injustice. The motifs lead us toward what would become her life's most important concern: the battle for human worth and dignity among workers and minorities.

The first photographs signed Ellisif Wessel are dated 1890, but she seems most active between 1895 and 1918. Most motifs are taken with a Hasselblad box camera, the Svensk Express 4B [Swedish Express 4B]. Wessel used dry plates, and we know from her personal letters that she herself developed the glass plates and copied her photographs.

These photographs from the Preus Museum collection are contact copies of the glass plates, with the sun as a light source in the copying process.

A group of children and adults in front of school in rural areas in Russia

A group of schoolchildren

Adults and children photographed in front of a house

Adults and children photographed in front of a large house, Boris Gleb

Alta farm





May 18, 2017

Marcus Selmer's Costume Portraits: Amazing Hand-Colored Photographs of 19th-Century Norwegians

It is not immediately clear what drew Marcus Selmer (1819-1900), a Danish portrait photographer, to spend most of his life working in Norway. He trained as a pharmacist in his native Denmark, and was working in a chemist owned by his uncle when he discovered daguerreotype photography. He experimented with this new technology in his spare time and began sending his pictures in to local exhibitions. In 1852, Selmer travelled to Norway, to visit some of his uncle’s family in the city of Bergen. He never returned.

He soon found work as a photographer in Bergen and, within a year, was able to establish his own studio. This became the first permanent photographic studio in Bergen, as few photographers who visited would stay all year round. Photographers often visited Bergen in the summer, hoping to capture the fjords and mountains that surround the area, but, as they needed good light for their work, the dark and cold weather had driven most of them away by the time winter rolled around. Selmer ingeniously built his studio almost entirely out of glass, allowing enough light into the space, which enabled him to continue working throughout the year.

Selmer’s work quickly became well-known throughout Norway. He sold many books of his photographs, and sold individual images to the press and the burgeoning tourist industry, before eventually being appointed the royal photographer in 1880. Although his career was varied, Selmer is primarily remembered today for his portraits of local people in national folk costume, as shown here. These photographs depict the customs, traditions and culture of the Norwegian people, and reflect Selmer’s interest in his adopted home.












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