Alan Mays' photos with the keyword: breaking news
Breaking News
24 Aug 2020 |
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A Vintage Photos Theme Park photo for the theme of adage illustrated (a photo illustrating a common adage—please identify the adage) .
The old adage about two heads being better than one turns out to be true when it comes to a photo like this one. This is a nineteenth-century CDV showing two young women with their heads sticking out through the torn pages of a newspaper.
And why did they pose like this? They were perpetuating a photographic joke that was popular in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. They're literally breaking the news or perhaps just looking through the paper .
For other examples, see Breaking the News, Lititz Express, July 4, 1907 and Looking through the Newspaper .
Looking through the Newspaper
13 Apr 2015 |
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A French hand-tinted real photo postcard.
For another postcard with a similar image, see Breaking the News, Lititz Express, July 4, 1907 :
Breaking the News, Lititz Express, July 4, 1907
18 Jun 2014 |
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"The Lititz Express." Printed on the back of this postcard: "Souvenir, July 4, 1907. Power demonstration on Express Printing Company's float."
Evidently, the Lititz Express , a newspaper published until the 1930s in Lititz, Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, printed this punning illustration with a press on board its Fourth of July parade float in 1907. I've heard of souvenir printings "on the ice" for frost fairs when the River Thames in London froze over in past centuries, and I have some menus and other items that were printed aboard ships during cruises, but I can't recall seeing anything else printed during a parade.
Has anyone else encountered any other examples of printing on ice, parade float, ship, train, plane, automobile, or in any other unique circumstances?
Looking Through the News
08 Apr 2019 |
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Do you have ideas for future topics for the Vintage Photos Theme Park ? If so, please add them to the Suggestion Box !
A photo for the Vintage Photos Theme Park monthly topic of cats (submit a photo on this topic each week in addition to—or instead of—a photo for the weekly topic) .
"Looking through the news you may see something which might interest you. I will send the papers to you. J.R."
A real photo postcard with a cat that's literally looking through a newspaper in 1906. For another postcard with a similar punning message, see Breaking the News, Lititz Express, July 4, 1907 .
The Detroit Evening Journal, Three Editions Daily
04 Apr 2017 |
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Even the Victorians had breaking news, as this nineteenth-century advertising trade card demonstrates.
"The Detroit Evening Journal. Three editions daily. 2¢. per copy, 10¢ per week by carrier. Associated Press dispatches. United Press dispatches. The Henderson-Achert Co. Litho. Cincinnati."
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