A book which still reverberates

I found this cabinet card portrait for sale on eBay in England (Northamptonshire) in January of this year.  Books are common props in 19th-century studio portraits, but titles are usually too blurry to read, even after scanning them at high resolution.  In this case, the book is large enough that the title is easily readable... Continue Reading →

Woman with vase

The unidentified woman in this photograph is wearing a drop-waist dress and a Marcel Wave hairstyle, hallmarks of the flapper era of the 1920s.  The photograph is about the size of a postcard, but was printed on plain photo paper, rather than postcard stock.  It came to me from a dealer in Pennsylvania who often sells photos... Continue Reading →

Effie Hegermann-Lindencrone at eighteen years old (1879)

Effie Hegermann-Lindencrone was born in Hillerød, Denmark, on August 27, 1860.  This photo of her was taken in July 1879, a month before her nineteenth birthday: The carte-de-visite portrait was made at one of the two studios owned by photographer Lars Dinesen, either in Odense or in Fredericia:   A year after the photo was... Continue Reading →

Young roller skater in Calcutta

If only we knew her story!  Alas, she isn't identified.  Her carte-de-visite was made by John Bowles Newman, whose studio was at 5, Old Court House Street, Calcutta (Kolkata).  The only information I found online about Mr. Newman was that he filed a petition of insolvency in 1879.  It always makes me sad to read... Continue Reading →

Woman at a spinner’s weasel

Have you heard the term spinner's weasel?  I hadn't until a few days ago, when I started researching the photo above.  The photo is slightly smaller than a cabinet card and more square.  I would tentatively date it to around 1905 (+/- 10 years).  On the back, a previous owner wrote the word Shaker, referring... Continue Reading →

Ready for the call?

In the first comment under the previous post, Shayne Davidson said the nurses' uniforms reminded her of the BBC series Call the Midwife.  Her comment made me look anew at the photo above, which also came from the United Kingdom, and wonder if the young sitter might have been preparing to work as a midwife or... Continue Reading →

The latest winter style in Chambéry, France (1860)

With cold weather approaching, it might be a good time to consider updating your winter wardrobe.  You might take inspiration, for example, from this fashionable winter ensemble from Chambéry, a city in eastern France and the historical capital of the Savoy region. While we don't know the identity of the young lady who is so... Continue Reading →

Fundraising with needle and thread (UK)

If only we could see the colors of her dress!  She must have made it to attract attention to her cause.  Her hat has words sewn on it -- I can read LITTLE and HELPS -- so it may read EVEN A LITTLE HELPS.  She's holding a donation box with words printed above a cross... Continue Reading →

Young woman in Calcutta by F.W. Baker

This early carte-de-visite from India doesn't have the young woman's name on it, but it was listed for sale on eBay along with a few other photos from the same family, one of which had "Miss Collins" written on the back.  The same young woman is in that photo, along with several young adults who... Continue Reading →

Love in silhouette

This carte-de-visite came to me from England (Northamptonshire), but it has nothing written on it to identify the sitter or photographer.  The photo (print) was cut into an oval shape and glued onto a paper mount with an oval frame design already printed on it.  Such cartes were generally made after someone had died, as... Continue Reading →

“Gift of fatherly love to my son Kiprianos”

I wish I knew how this cabinet card came to Vermont.  I bought it from a local antiques dealer, who couldn't tell me anything about it.  When I looked at the writing on the back, my first thought was that it might be Armenian, but I wasn't sure. (For a large scan of the back,... Continue Reading →

Poised and confident in Porto, Portugal

I found this carte-de-visite for sale in Massachusetts, which is the state with the second-highest number of Portuguese Americans (after California).  Who was this elegant young woman, posing confidently at an instrument a century and a half ago?  And what kind of instrument was it, exactly?  It looks too narrow to be a piano, yet... Continue Reading →

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