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July 25, 2020

16 Amazing Vintage Portraits of Edwardian Rapunzels

“Rapunzel” is a German fairy tale about a young woman named Rapunzel with impossibly long hair and who lives alone in a tower, held captive by a witch.


It was a lot of work for women to keep their hair clean back then, no shampoos but soap that formed a scum in hard water and no hair conditioners.

According to a book written in 1902 (meant for young women), women shouldn’t wash their hair more than once a week. In between, finely powdered orris root (widely available in drug stores then) could be sprinkled through the hair and brushed out much like dry shampoos are used nowadays. Orris root is the dried root of a certain kind of iris and it’s supposed to have a wonderful fragrance of sweet violets.










Beautiful Photos of a Young Nancy Sinatra in the 1960s

With the help of Lee Hazlewood, Nancy Sinatra’s music career received a significant boost, beginning with their first collaboration that was the famous hit These Boosts are Made for Walkin’, a song that earned Sinatra 2 Grammy Award nominations. She and Hazlewood had a parallel career recording duets, and together they made hits like Summer Wine and Some Velvet Morning.

Sinatra also shared a duet with her father, Frank Sinatra, the ballad Somethin’ Stupid which earned a Grammy Award nomination for Record of the Year and to this day remains the only father-daughter duet to hit No. 1 in the United States.

In 1967, Sinatra recorded the theme song for the James Bond film You Only Live Twice. Other notable hits in this decade included Sugar Town (1966), How Does That Grab You, Darlin’? (1966), Love Eyes (1967), and Lightning’s Girl (1967).

Posing at a hotel roof garden in London, 1967. (David Redfern)

Sinatra also enjoyed acting. She starred in films like The Oscar (1966), The Last of the Secret Agents (1966), The Wild Angels (1966), and Speedway (1968). On television, she made appearances on The Ed Sullivan Show, The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour, The Man from U.N.C.L.E. Sinatra also produced and appeared on Movin’ with Nancy, an NBC television special that won an Emmy Award for director Jack Harley Jr. and earned an Emmy Award nomination for choreographer David Winters.

Below are 27 vintage photographs of Nancy Sinatra when she was young back in the 1960s:

Next to a picture of her father Frank Sinatra after she announced plans at Danny's Hideaway E. 45th St to marry Tommy Sands, 1960. (Tom Cunningham)

Welcoming Elvis Presley with a gift from Nancy Sinatra upon his arrival from Europe, 1960. (Joe Petrella)

 Posing together with Tommy Sands in formal attire at an event, 1960. (Hulton Archive)

With Joey Bishop, Frank Sinatra, and Sammy Davis Jr. on 'The Frank Sinatra Show,' 1960. (ABC)




33 Beautiful Photos of French Actress Jacqueline Sassard in the 1950s and ’60s

Born 1940 in Nice, French actress Jacqueline Sassard is best known for appearances in Italian films such as Guendalina directed by Alberto Lattuada, a young woman with family and economical troubles in Luigi Zampa’s Il Magistrato and Valerio Zurlini’s Violent Summer (1959), in which her character was left by Jean-Louis Trintignant.


Sassard’s best remembered role was in Joseph Losey’s Accident, with a script by Harold Pinter (1967), where she played an Austrian princess. Her final screen appearance was in Le voleur de crimes (Crime Thief), directed by Nadine Trintignant in 1969.

She left the film industry on her marriage to Gianni Lancia. They lived for a number years in Brazil before returning to live in Alpes-Maritimes in the south of France. They had a son, Lorenzo Lancia. Gianni Lancia died in 2014.

Take a look at these vintage photos to see the beauty of young Jacqueline Sassard in the 1950s and 1960s.










Everyday Life of South America in the 1960s Through Fascinating Color Photos

South America is a continent in the Western Hemisphere, mostly in the Southern Hemisphere, with a relatively small portion in the Northern Hemisphere. It may also be considered a subcontinent of the Americas.

South America in 1967

South America is bordered on the west by the Pacific Ocean and on the north and east by the Atlantic Ocean; North America and the Caribbean Sea lie to the northwest. It includes twelve sovereign states: Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Guyana, Paraguay, Peru, Suriname, Uruguay, Venezuela, and a part of France : French Guiana.

New Zealand-based photographer peteshep took these fascinating color photos that show everyday life of South America when he traveled there in 1967.

Argentina. Bank of London and South America, Buenos Aires

Argentina. Then-new Bank of London and South America (Lloyds), Bartolome Mitre 399/Calle Reconquista 101, Buenos Aires

Bolivia. At the top high-altitude rim of the basin of La Paz

Bolivia. High-altitude Bolivian altiplano between Guaqui/Tiahuanaco and La Paz

Bolivia. The fish market in central La Paz





July 24, 2020

Stunning Vintage Photos Captured Inside the Cincinnati Old Main Library, One of the Most Beautiful Libraries in America

The “Old Main” library was once one of Cincinnati’s most stunning buildings and one of the country’s most beautiful public libraries. Now it’s a parking garage. The building, which was located in Downtown Cincinnati at 629 Vine St., just a few blocks from the current Main Library, was demolished in 1955. These photos remain, giving us a haunting glimpse into the past.










How to Make Shadow Puppets, ca. 1930

Profiles of birds and beasts can be made with hands, a light and a screen. This feature explains how anyone can cast the shadows of sixteen different figures, an accomplishment which will provide many full evenings of entertainment for either children or adults.

Ordinary sheet provides the screen for shadow entertainment. Strong electric bulb can be provided with home-made reflector and a cardboard shield — all the equipment needed for highly entertaining home program based on complete details in this article.


No doubt all of you know a few ways to cast bird or animal resembling shadows upon the wall. One who has a dozen or more ways to hold his hands for this purpose will easily afford an interesting hour of evening’s fun. And if he chooses to show his ability at a party, he will be as much in demand at others as a good amateur magician.

The accompanying illustrations show 16 animals, birds and reptiles which can be easily shown with shadows. In practically every case, the position of the hands and fingers show well enough so that their exact location need not be described. In some instances you will be able to show an eye somewhere near where the eye belongs; in others, this will have to be left to the imagination.

One of the easiest shadows to do is that of a horse. It is also one of the best imitations. Place the hands together, first taking care that the thumbs are properly spaced and most of them showing. Then move the touching fingers slightly until you have a good muzzle and jaw also upon the screen.

The elephant is also good because you can cause the trunk to move back and forth in a realistic manner, at the same time moving the left thumb, which throws the shadow of the lower jaw. The puppy can be made to wiggle his tail and also appear to run by moving the fingers which throw shadows for the feet. This shadow is not complete in itself as the arms continue to cast a shadow behind. However, the arrangement soon to be described will help to give the perfect impression.

The cat needs both forearms as well as the hands and one must focus his attention on the left-hand side for best results. The shield described later will help to minimize this defect however.

All you have to do to give the spider shadow is to lock the thumbs together and spread the fingers. Wiggling them will heighten the effect. The turtle is somewhat like the puppy but it is minus tail and to omit this the left thumb is turned down. The crow can be made to fly seemingly by slowly moving the fingers of both hands up and down in unison. The hound can be made to close its mouth for a moment then, quite naturally, open it again and pant.

These are only a few of the shadows possible and with some practice you will be able to evolve other combinations of fingers to produce other results.

The fingers should be exercised frequently to facilitate imitating various kinds of shadows. Begin by spreading and closing the hands, then moving one finger away from the other and back again; then two away and back, then three away and back.

The light should have a shield to throw a circle of light upon the screen. Then any portion of shadow not wanted, such as the right hand side of the cat or the south end of the puppy (going north) can be merged with the shadow cast by the shield.

A good apparatus is to fix a 100-watt bulb in a socket on top of a portable stand with flexible cord and switch in connection. Over this light set a tin can with the bottom fitting snugly to exclude light. A hole one inch in diameter is then made in the side of the can and through this issues the light to be used.

Now cut from a large sheet of stiff cardboard, a hole 10 inches in diameter and provide this also with a support so that it can be set in front of the light and on the same level. The hands are then manipulated between the light and the shield. A sheet hung on the wall serves as a screen.

(By Dale R. Van Horn, via Modern Mechanix)




Fascinating Photos Capture Street Scenes of Athens in the 1960s

Athens is the capital and largest city of Greece. It dominates the Attica region and is one of the world’s oldest cities, with its recorded history spanning over 3,400 years and its earliest human presence started somewhere between the 11th and 7th millennium BC.

Athens is a large cosmopolitan metropolis and central to economic, financial, industrial, maritime, political and cultural life in Greece. It is a global city and one of the biggest economic centers in southeastern Europe. It has a large financial sector, and its port Piraeus is both the largest passenger port in Europe, and the second largest in the world.

Athens is home to two UNESCO World Heritage Sites, the Acropolis of Athens and the medieval Daphni Monastery. It is also home to several museums and cultural institutions, such as the National Archeological Museum, featuring the world's largest collection of ancient Greek antiquities, the Acropolis Museum, the Museum of Cycladic Art, the Benaki Museum and the Byzantine and Christian Museum.

These fascinating photos from Nikos Vatopoulos that captured street scenes of Athens in the 1960s.

Syntagma Square, Athens

Acharnon Street, Athens

Athens from above

Athens from Hilton towards Syntagma

Brazilian, Athens







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