Alan Mays' photos with the keyword: sidewalks
Blue Bug-a-Boo-Boo
19 Aug 2024 |
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A Vintage Photos Theme Park photo for the theme of an accident happened (the results) .
A 1973 photo showing the aftermath of a fender bender involving a light blue VW Bug. A police officer, partially visible at the right, is already on the scene. Pedestrians on the sidewalk and a telephone booth are visible down the block.
Two Kids on a Horse
08 Feb 2021 |
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A kids on horses photo for the Vintage Photos Theme Park.
A couple of kids pose on a horse in front of their house in this undated photo. For a similar picture, see The Cowboy Kid at Sidewalk Ranch .
Raise High the Roof Beam, Carpenters! (Detail Righ…
07 Jul 2015 |
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For more information, see the full version of this real photo postcard:
Raise High the Roof Beam, Carpenters! (Detail Left…
07 Jul 2015 |
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For more information, see the full version of this real photo postcard:
Raise High the Roof Beam, Carpenters!
07 Jul 2015 |
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A photo for the Vintage Photos Theme Park showing how there's one in every crowd (a group of people posing with one silly/goofy person who throws the whole photo off, i.e.: sticking out tongue, bunny ears behind the head, etc.) .
Oh, how nice! The carpenters and other workmen in this real photo postcard are posing with saws, hammers, and other tools to demonstrate how hard they've been working on the renovation of this house!
But wait a second! One guy is lying down on the job!
Hawk and Wetherbee, The Windsor Hotel, Fifth Avenu…
28 Sep 2015 |
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"Hawk & Wetherbee, The Windsor, Fifth Avenue, New York."
Samuel Hawk and Gardner Wetherbee--in business together as "Hawk & Weaterbee"--managed the Windsor Hotel, which tragically burned to the ground on St. Patrick's Day in 1899. For more information, see The Lost Windsor Hotel -- 5th Avenue and 46th Street .
Andy's Pants
A Man and His Moosehead Bier
04 Jan 2015 |
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A real photo postcard of a man standing beside a mounted moose head. Date and location unknown.
Good Food Federal Diner, Brookline Avenue, Boston,…
Good Food Federal Diner, Brookline Avenue, Boston,…
17 Sep 2015 |
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A 1950s photo for the Vintage Photos Theme Park.
This 1956 photo shows a diner on "Brookline Avenue," as indicated by the pole-mounted street sign that's visible in the center of the photo (mouse over the image above for a close-up view of the diner and the sign). The letters on top of the diner's roof spell out the words "GOOD FOOD," and the name "Federal Diner" is barely legible on a circular sign situated above the entrance at the middle of the building.
Four or five men are standing around the cars near the front door of the diner, and they appear to be looking in the direction of the photographer, perhaps waiting for him while he takes the photo. Or maybe they're watching the woman wearing a dress and high heels who's walking past on the sidewalk.
This eatery was the "Good Food Federal Diner," formerly located at 410 Brookline Avenue in the Roxbury neighborhood of Boston. For another 1950s view of this diner, see Good Food Back in the Day on Boston's Universal Hub site.
Bob on His Bike with His Mouth Open as Usual
04 Feb 2015 |
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Handwritten on the back of the photo: "Bob has his mouth 'opened' as usual. 3/27/38"
Stamped on back: "Ritz-y Printz, Mar 28, 1938, 1112 G St., Washington, 16 W. Lexington St., Baltimore, 707 Boardwalk, Atlantic City."
A Sailor Strolling with His Family
02 Jul 2014 |
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A real photo postcard for the Taylor-Tot Stroller Vintage Memories group.
A street photographer evidently snapped this photo of a sailor and his family as they walked past a W. T. Grant Co. store in some unidentified town. The sailor and his wife seem surprised--and perhaps even annoyed--by the photographer, but their daughter seems to be excitedly holding on to a toy as she enjoys the ride in her Taylor-Tot stroller.
Man with a Package, Movie Shots Photo, Philadelphi…
25 Apr 2014 |
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An undated real photo postcard. A man carrying a package was hurriedly walking down the street when the Movie Shots photographer took his picture.
For a similar photo, see Woman Walking, Movie Shots Photo, Philadelphia, Pa.
Store on Market Street
21 Nov 2013 |
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The street sign says, "Market Street," the glistening sidewalk suggests that it was raining, and the people are posing in front of a store that's displaying a bed, chairs, and other furnishings in the window.
Woman Walking, Movie Shots Photo, Philadelphia, Pa…
19 Sep 2013 |
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An undated real photo postcard. A woman walks down the street as Mr. Photobomb watches.
Movie Shots photographers also operated in other cities, including Washington, D.C., and at the 1940 New York World's Fair.
For examples of other photos taken by street and seaside photographers, see lisabee73's delightful album of Walking Pictures .
For another Movie Shots photo, see Man with a Package, Movie Shots Photo, Philadelphia, Pa.
Grandma's Last Step
10 Jun 2013 |
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One of the dealers at a local antique mall sells a variety of old photos, and I usually find a few interesting images each time I visit. I noticed that the dealer occasionally adds pithy comments--ranging from clever and witty to sarcastic and dark--to the back of some of the photos, and I began watching for these "precaptioned" pics when I looked through the piles of hundreds of unsorted snapshots at his stand.
I can't resist the captions that turn out to be interesting or amusing (and sometimes quirky or strange), and I often end up buying the photos, even if they're bent, torn, or taped. I don't know anything about the dealer who conjures up these captions, but perhaps he, too, appreciates a good Far Side or Charles Addams cartoon.
Green Benches, St. Petersburg, Florida, 1950s
28 May 2013 |
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This 1950s-era slide shows some of the famous green benches of St. Petersburg, Florida, which was known at one time as the " City of Green Benches ."
Schlickeysen's Art Gallery
04 Jun 2012 |
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For this cabinet card back, see the full backmark illustration (above) and a detail showing the street scene in front of the photographer's gallery .
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Although the photographer's name and address appears as "Schlickeisen, 343 Central Avenue, Jersey City, N.J.," on the front of this cabinet card, the name on the sign in the illustration on the back is spelled as "Schlickeysen" (ending in -keysen instead of -keisen). In addition, the arrangement of the street number--"343"--in the palette shapes on either side of the Art Gallery sign is curious, ending with a smaller superscript "3" that seemingly was added after the fact.
Interestingly, Langdon's List of 19th & Early 20th Century Photographers provides some relevant information regarding Gustav Schlickeysen/Schlickeisen. According to Langdon, "Schlickeysen" was the spelling listed in city directories for 1888 and 1889, but during those years the photographer's address was 34 Hancock Avenue, Hoboken, New Jersey, rather than 343 Central Avenue, Jersey City, N.J. Directories for 1891, 1892, and 1893, however, indicate that "Schlickeisen" had already moved to the Central Avenue address in Hoboken.
It's not clear why the spelling of Schlickeysen changed to Schlickeisen when the photographer moved from Hoboken to Jersey City. Although the new spelling appeared on the front of this cabinet card, the sign in the artwork on the back retained the old spelling. The street number, however, was updated by squeezing an extra "3" into the palette shapes to indicate the change from "34" (Hancock Avenue, Hoboken) to "343" (Central Avenue, Jersey City). If the illustration depicts the original gallery in Hoboken, however, I wonder if customers at Schlickeisen's new gallery in Jersey City were still confused by the drawing despite the updated street number.
Finally, it's worth noting that a "Portrait" display case to attract potential customers is situated on the sidewalk in front of the gallery. And notice the horse-drawn tram passing by on the tracks in front of the gallery--an indication of how easy it would be to travel to the gallery.
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