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Showing posts with label Santa Claus. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Santa Claus. Show all posts

December 7, 2017

32 Candid Vintage Photographs Capture Santa Claus on the Streets of New York City in the Late 1970s

Santa Claus has come to town many times, and he's hung out in some unlikely places. Below is an amazing collection of black and white photographs of Santa Clauses on the streets of New York City, taken by Magnum photographer Susan Meiselas from 1976-1978.
“Early one morning, near my home and on my way to someplace else, I crossed paths with a Santa Claus. I wanted to know who this guy was. Where did he come from? Why was he in my neighborhood?”
“Then I discovered the "Volunteers of America." It was the organization behind the homeless men on Fifth Avenue who dressed as Santa Claus to collect money for the shelter in my neighborhood. Most people on the sidewalks just walked past them, some made contributions, but others had their children balance on Santa's knees, never of course imagining where these men had come from.”










December 21, 2016

The Christmas Visions of Thomas Nast: The Man Who "Invented" the Image Popularly Recognized as Santa Claus

At the beginning of the 19th century Santa Claus found himself in a quandry. What should he wear? Perhaps he should emphasize his title of St. Nicholas and appear as a stern bishop wearing robes? Or maybe go the other way and be seen as a clowning elf with a frock coat and pantaloons? It was at this point that Thomas Nast, premire American political cartoonist of the 1800s, stepped in and gave Santa the well-needed makeover that he still carries with him even today...

Thomas Nast, ca. 1870.

Thomas Nast was born in Germany in 1840 where his father was a musician in the Ninth Regiment Bavarian Band. When he was still a child his family immigrated to New York City. His father noticed that young Thomas had a flair for drawing and for a short while he was sent to study at an art school. At the age of 15, when family funds for the school were exhausted, Nast presented himself to Frank Leslie, owner of the journal Leslie's Illustrated, hoping for a job. Leslie, not wanting to be bothered with the boy, gave him a difficult assignment: sketching the crowd at the Christopher Street Ferry. Nast, however, turned in a drawing that was so fine that Leslie hired him on the spot.

In 1859 Nast started drawing for Harper's Weekly, a relationship that would last for more than twenty-five years. He first drew Santa Claus for the 1862 Christmas season Harper’s Weekly cover and center-fold illustration to memorialize the family sacrifices of the Union during the early and, for the north, darkest days of the Civil War. Nast’s Santa appeared as a kindly figure representing Christmas, the holiday celebrating the birth of Christ.

When Nast created his image of Santa Claus he was drawing on his native German tradition of Saint Nicholas, a fourth century bishop known for his kindness and generosity. In the German Christian tradition December 6 was (and is) Saint Nicholas day, a festival day honor of Saint Nicholas and a day of gift giving. Nast combined this tradition of Saint Nicholas with other German folk traditions of elves to draw his Santa in 1862. The claim that Nast “invented’ Santa Claus in 1862 is thus accurate, but the assertion overlooks the centuries-long antecedents to his invention.

January 3, 1863 cover of Harper's Weekly, one of the first depictions of Santa Claus.

“Christmas Eve” Harper’s Weekly (1863)

“Christmas 1863” Harper’s Weekly (1863)

Harper’s Weekly December 30, 1871.

Thomas Nast's most famous drawing, "Merry Old Santa Claus", from the January 1, 1881 edition of Harper's Weekly.

Thomas Nast: Santa Claus - Harper’s Weekly December 1884.





December 17, 2016

Soviet Ded Moroz: 23 Funny Photos of Slavic Santa Clauses in the USSR From the 1980s

Ded Moroz is a Slavic fictional character similar to that of Father Christmas. The literal translation is "Old Man Frost", often translated as "Grandfather Frost". Ded Moroz brings presents to children and often delivers them in person on New Year's Eve.

Ded Moroz is accompanied by Snegurochka, his granddaughter and helper, who wears long silver-blue robes and a furry cap or a snowflake-like crown. She is a unique attribute of Ded Moroz, since similar characters in other cultures don't have a female companion.

Ded Moroz wears a heel-length fur coat, a semi-round fur hat, and valenki on his feet. He has a long white beard. He walks with a long magic staff and sometimes rides a troika. Here, below is a collection of 23 funny pictures of Soviet Santa Clauses from the 1980s.










December 15, 2016

Wonderful Color Photographs of a Santa Claus School From the Early 1960s

Let’s take a sleigh ride back to Christmas past. Here are some pictures of a Santa Claus school from the early 1960s. These wonderful color photographs were taken by LIFE photographer Ralph Morse.












December 10, 2016

Messages to Santa: 17 Old Letter Photos Show Lovely Christmas Wishes of Kids From New Britain, Connecticut in 1949

Christmas is truly a great time for everyone, especially for kids. They express their desires, favorite gifts joyfully through letters sent to Santa.

Let's see what lovely kids from New Britain, Connecticut said in their letters to Santa in 1949 through 17 vintage photos below.

Santa Claus, c/o Stack's Market, 123 Orange St., New Britain, Conn.

Santa, Clase

A Santa's deer

Santa's friend Stanley

A carriage for X'mas





December 2, 2016

27 Creepy Vintage Snapshots of Santa Clauses That Scare Children

Santa Clauses, of course, always bring to kids lovely presents on Christmas Day, but sometimes also a little fear. Check out these vintage snapshots below, and you can know why...










December 25, 2015

Merry Christmas From the Boat of Us!

Santa and his loyal dog Rudolph prepare to depart in their speedboat to deliver presents to the good boys and girls who live along this street.


Or at least that’s what seems to be happening in this otherwise puzzling photographic Christmas greeting card.

(Photo via aemays)




December 23, 2015

December 22, 2015

7 Interesting Facts About Santa Claus

As Christmas approaches, children around the world have Santa on the brain. They're anxiously wondering if they've been overly naughty or sufficiently nice, and eagerly daydreaming about their potential gift hauls. But exactly how did the jolly, bearded North Pole resident evolve into the cultural icon we know today? Here, seven interesting facts about his evolution:

1. He was real... sort of


Folklore may have turned Santa Claus into a toy distributor who mans a sleigh led by eight flying reindeer, but he is actually based, loosely, on a real person. Born around the year 270, St. Nicholas was the Bishop of Myra, a town in what is now Turkey. He earned a reputation as an anonymous gift giver by paying the dowries of impoverished girls and handing out treats and coins to children — often leaving them in their shoes, set out at night for that very purpose. Since his death, Nicholas has been canonized as the patron saint of children.


2. He's only been 'Santa Claus' for 200 years


A Dutch tradition kept St. Nicholas' story alive in the form of Sinterklaas, a bishop who traveled from house to house to deliver treats to children on the night of Dec. 5. The first anglicizing of the name to Santa Claus was in a story that appeared in a New York City newspaper in 1773.


3. Satire first sent Santa down a chimney


In his satiric 1809 book A History of New York, Washington Irving did away with the characterization of Santa Claus as a "lanky bishop," says Whipps. Instead, Irving described Santa as a portly, bearded man who smokes a pipe. Irving's story also marked the first time Santa slid down the chimney.


4. "Twas the Night Before Christmas" introduced the reindeer


Clement Moore's 1822 poem A Visit From Saint Nicholas — which is now more commonly referred to as "Twas the Night Before Christmas" — was first published anonymously in the Troy, N.Y., Sentinel on Dec. 23, 1823. The 56-line poem introduced and popularized many of Santa's defining characteristics — chiefly, that he drove a sleigh guided by "eight tiny reindeer."


5. Coca-Cola created the modern Mr. Claus


When Father Christmas first began showing up in illustrations, he wore many different colored robes: Green, purple, blue, and brown, among others. Beginning in the late 1800s, it became popular to outfit Santa in a red suit. Artist Louis Prang depicted him that way in a series of Christmas cards in 1885, and The New York Times reported on the red garments in 1927. But the modern image of Santa Claus as the jolly man in the red suit was seared into American pop culture in 1931, when artist Haddon Sundblom illustrated him that way for a widely-circulated campaign for Coca-Cola.






December 20, 2015



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