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 →

A regal party

This large-format photograph came to me from the United Kingdom.  Unfortunately, it has nothing written on it and I haven't identified anyone in it.  Hanging high on the wall is a shield with a crown on it.  Would the crown indicate a royal household?  I've brightened it below to make it a little easier to... Continue Reading →

S.A. Hedlund and Viktor Rydberg by Torsten Hedlund

When I saw this cabinet card for sale recently, the men in the photo were unidentified, but two elements immediately appealed to me: the wintry studio scene and the older man's kindly smile.  (I thought the man on the right might be his son, but that turned out not to be the case.) After receiving... 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 →

Medical team at Devonshire Hospital

I don't know what the proper administrative term would be for this group, but they must have worked together as a team.  Someone wrote Devonshire Hospital on the back of the postcard, but nothing else.  If anyone sees any clues about when the photo might have been taken, please leave a comment. Devonshire Hospital closed... Continue Reading →

Musical family in Finland (1915)

This postcard was sent from Helsinki (Swedish: Helsingfors), the capital of Finland, to the Finnish port town of Hanko (Hangö) on February 16, 1915.  At that time Finland was a Grand Duchy of the Russian Empire.  Because Russia was engaged in the First World War, the card had to be cleared by a wartime government... Continue Reading →

Two Russian friends in white

This portrait of two friends was probably made in late imperial Russia (1910-1917).  The only thing written on the back is a pair of names, which look to me like Tyosha and Marusya (Tеща и Маруся).  I'm not sure about the name Tyosha, as I haven't encountered it before:   The girls are both dressed... Continue Reading →

A silent church in the forest (1917)

On November 11, 1918, an armistice came into effect which ended the fighting on the Western Front in the First World War.  In connection with that event, many countries observe a public holiday or official day of remembrance on November 11 each year.  In the United States, Veterans Day honors all veterans of the armed... Continue Reading →

Men in period attire in Hartford, Connecticut

When you first see this carte-de-visite from the early 1860s, you might get the feeling that something isn't quite right.  That's because the four men in the photo are wearing clothes from a different era.  I'm not sure, but I think they're dressed in styles from the period of the American Revolution, almost a century... 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 →

Siblings in harmony

I'm guessing they're siblings, but I can't say for sure.  This early cabinet card photo came from a collection of musical ephemera in Boston, Massachusetts.  (Two other posts featuring photos from the same collection are Music and baseball in the forest and "Waldfreunde" Mandolin Orchestra (1922).) Do their outfits suggest any particular place of origin? Despite... Continue Reading →

King Lear and Cordelia?

When I saw this cabinet card from the United Kingdom, I immediately assumed it must have come from a Victorian production of Shakespeare's King Lear.  The tragic play revolves around the relationship between the king and his youngest daughter, Cordelia.  I spent some time looking for images of historical productions of the play, but found... Continue Reading →

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