Rabbit Hole: Vintage Sportswomen

07/10/2011 § Leave a comment

I figure…if these ladies can do all of this in a dress (and most likely a corset too)…

I really have no good reason for not taking myself to the gym, right?

Well, other than pure, unadulterated laziness.
Let’s keep it real.

For more images of vintage sportswomen,
head over to How To Be A Retronaut.

Rabbit Hole: Vintage Ralph Lauren

06/10/2011 § Leave a comment

You might hate me after this.

…but I just happened upon The Style Registry’s treasure trove of classic Ralph Lauren campaigns, and I couldn’t resist.  Could you really expect me to?  So much inspiration.  If you hate Americana, ladies in ties, boats and/or classic supermodels, it would probably be best to just skip along to the next post.  I’d also question our friendship, but I am very open-minded.  For your perusal, a few classic RL images — many shot by Bruce Weber — dating from 1981 through 1997.

Oh. My. God.

Shades of Out of Africa.  It’s almost too much.

All images via The Style Registry.

Rabbit Hole Revisit: paws22 on Flickr

23/09/2011 § Leave a comment

This picture kind of blew my mind.

It had been awhile since I checked in with paws22 on Flickr, and I’m happy to report that he’s busy as ever.  If you haven’t yet had a chance to check out his Flickr stream, I’d suggest you hop to.

Down the Rabbit Hole: Farm Security Administration and Office of War Information

23/08/2011 § Leave a comment

Granted, I tend to feature a lot of sepia and black and white photography, due only to my personal preference.  (This is my own little dictatorship, after all…) But every now and again, I do come across color photographs that I like just as much.  In my recent travels through the Library of Congress I found a cache of photos that had my attention for hours.

Photographers working for the U.S. government’s Farm Security Administration (FSA) and later the Office of War Information (OWI) between 1939 and 1944 made approximately 1,600 color photographs that depict life in the United States, including Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands.

Roy Stryker led the FSA unit during its active years and played a key role in the OWI unit in 1942-43.

The 644 color photographs produced by the FSA are less well known and far less extensive than the unit’s black-and-white photographs. Most of the color images are 35mm Kodachrome slides; a few are color transparencies in sizes up to 4×5-inches. The FSA color photographs depict life in the United States, including Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands, with a focus on rural areas and farm labor.

The 965 color photographs from the OWI are color transparencies in sizes up to 4×5-inches. The photographs depicted life and culture in the U.S., with a focus on factories and women employees, railroads, aviation training, and other aspects of World War II mobilization.  (Via the Library of Congress)

Now, these photos aren’t new to Blogville, but I was entranced and still wanted to share a few with you.  The people are arresting and the landscapes are beautiful, especially when presented in lush, Kodachrome color.  How can you not look at these pictures and wonder about these American lives, lived 70 years ago.  Why are they wearing what they are wearing?  Where did they come from?  Where did they end up?

If you’d like to do your own wandering through all 1,600, you can find them here.

Rabbit Hole: Sporting Ladies

11/07/2011 § Leave a comment

I have never been hunting.

Image taken 1915, via State Library and Archive of Florida.

Nor have I ever shot a gun.  Or held a gun, for that matter.  But for some reason I found myself drawn to these images of sporting ladies this weekend.  I have to say my curiosity is piqued.  Piqued enough to make it down to a shooting range?  Well, we will just have to see about that…

Image taken 1885, via State Library and Archive of Florida.

Image taken 1920, via Montana State University Libraries.

Image via Forks Timber Museum.

Otter hunting, taken 1901. Image via National Library of Ireland.

A young First Lady Lou Henry Hoover, in 1891.
Image via US National Archives.

Image taken 1910, via the Library of Congress.

Harriet Hammond, President of Nemours Gun Club, the first women’s shooting club in America.  Image taken between 1910-1915, via Library of Congress.

Nemours Gun Club.
Image
taken between 1910-1915, via Library of Congress.

Nemours Gun Club.
Image taken between 1910-1915, via Library of Congress.

Image taken 1941 by Bernard Hoffman.

Down the Rabbit Hole: National Library of Scotland on Flickr

15/06/2011 § Leave a comment

I have slipped down yet another rabbit hole that I thought I would share with you.  While looking through pictures of children with odd animals (Don’t ask me why I search for such things, I have no idea.  But the reward is finding a picture of a girl with a wombat on a bicycle!  Yes!), I happened upon a collection of images from the First World War maintained by the National Library of Scotland.  Taken from the papers of Field Marshal Earl Haig (1861-1928), these images are wartime propaganda and infinitely interesting.

“These photographs provide us with an invaluable record of how the Government and Military wanted the war perceived. Official photographers were encouraged to record morale-boosting scenes of victory and comradeship. Despite the restrictions placed on them, official war photographers succeeded in giving the most comprehensive visual account of the war. It is important to remember that these images were propaganda; few that could depict the war in a disheartening or disconcerting way passed the censors. As a result the photograph taken was often posed. They were intended to reassure those at home and boost morale. They were printed in newspapers, and were intended to confirm that ‘Tommy’ was winning the war.”  Via the National Library of Scotland

I won’t make you look at all of them, but if you’d like to there are more after the jump.  To see even more, head over to the National Library of Scotland.

« Read the rest of this entry »

Down the Rabbit Hole: paws22 on Flickr

23/05/2011 § 2 Comments

Just found a wonderful cache of old photographs on Flickr that I wanted to share with you.  Specializing in images of children, moustachioed gentlemen, pipe smokers, dandies, soldiers and cowboys, paws22 has created a remarkable collection of images that had me wandering around for hours.  Head over to his photostream for an abundance of vintage inspiration.  I’ve included a few favorites below.

Mom said we had to play outside…

27/07/2010 § Leave a comment

…she didn’t say the teevee couldn’t come too.
1967, Diamond Bar, CA.

Via: Shorpy

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