Alan Mays' photos with the keyword: bats
Halloween Party Invitation, Lancaster, Pa., Octobe…
01 Nov 2019 |
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Eight years after Alice Graybill and her sisters held their Halloween party at 718 North Plum Street in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, the 1920 United States Federal Census recorded that the Graybills still lived at the same address. Alice was 31 years old in 1920, and she worked as a weaver in a silk mill. The census listed Alice as the owner of the home and the head of the household.
There were six family members living at the house on Plum Street that year:
-- Alice W. Graybill, 31, single, head of the house, weaver, silk mill
-- Susan W. Graybill, 29, sister, weaver, silk mill
-- Ada W. Graybill, 27, sister, cleaner, silk mill
-- Weidler Graybill, 25, brother, machinist, machine shop
-- Marie Graybill, 15, sister, winder, silk mill
-- Grace Graybill, 12, sister, no occupation listed
So at the time of their Halloween party in 1912, Alice and her sisters would have been about 23, 21, 19, 7, and 4 years old (perhaps they allowed brother Weidler at age 17 to attend, too).
Alice eventurally married, and as Alice Graybill Harrington (1888-1969) she lived to the age of 80.
For some other early twentieth-century Halloween invitations, see:
-- Witches Watch Halloween Party Invitation, October 31, 1914
-- A Halloween Masquerade Invitation! October 23, 1920
-- Greetings for Halloween—Invitation for Revelry on Mystic Halloween, 1923
Yourself and friend are cordially invited to attend
A Hallowe'en Party
to be given at the home of
Alice Graybill and sisters
On Thursday evening, October the thirty-first
nineteen hundred and twelve
No. 718 North Plum Street, Lancaster, Pa.
R.S.V.P.
Halloween—A Witch Out for Mischief
28 Oct 2018 |
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Bats, an owl, and a black cat accompany a witch as she rides her broomstick over a snow-covered landscape in this illustration from a postcard dated 1910.
For a similar postcard, see Halloween—Witch and Black Cat on a Broomstick .
A Witch with a Veggie Chauffeur in a Halloween Mel…
24 Oct 2017 |
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A witch holds her broomstick tightly as she rides in the back seat of a watermelon car driven by a wide-eyed veggie creature. A black cat sits next to her, and a bat flies above.
A date of "Oct. 31st, 1908" is written on the other side of this postcard, which was published by the British firm of Raphael Tuck & Sons and issued as part of its popular Halloween series 150 .
A Jolly Halloween with Witchy Woman, Scarecrow Man…
12 Oct 2017 |
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A quirky Halloween postcard addressed to R. D. Bell, Bellwood, Penna., and postmarked Philadelphia, Pa., Oct. 2, 1910.
Meeting of Ye Halloween Spirits
31 Oct 2016 |
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"Meeting of Ye Hallowe'en Spirits. This way! OWL."
In this unusual Art Deco postcard from the 1920s, pointy-eared Smurf-like creatures ride a turtle through the woods on their way to a meeting of Halloween spirits.
The Joys of Halloween Be Yours
30 Oct 2015 |
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An owl and a bat flap their wings through the nighttime sky as Cupid stands on a cloud and contemplates whether to shoot an arrow at the full moon, where a witch has replaced the Man in the Moon.
I can't help but wonder whether L. R. Conwell, the publisher of this 1909 postcard, recycled a Valentine's Day card to compose this perplexing scene, but a search for other Cupid cards didn't uncover any similar postcards.
Conwell also featured Cupid in at least one other Halloween postcard. See Wishing You a Lucky Halloween :
Joe DiMaggio's Restaurant, Fishermen's Wharf, San…
27 Jul 2015 |
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"Joe DiMaggio's Restaurant, Fishermen's Wharf, San Francisco, California. Famous thruout the world. Vincent DiMaggio. Dominic DiMaggio. Telephone: Ordway 2266 - 205-11 Jefferson St. Cocktails."
Printed on the back of this linen postcard: "Joe DiMaggio's Restaurant. Your visit to San Francisco would not be complete without dining and dancing at Joe DiMaggio's restaurant, overlooking the world-famous Fishermen's Wharf, with its picturesque Italian fishermen and their gaily painted fishing craft in full view."
Handwritten note on the back: "1940."
Watch for Ghosts When Halloween Comes
15 Oct 2015 |
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"Come out and join the fun and watch for ghosts when Hallowe'en comes on."
A Halloween Party at the Set of Sun
15 Oct 2015 |
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"A Hallowe'en party! Oh, that's the fun / We'll join it at the set of sun."
Peter S. Backus, the Clothing Row Hatter, Newark,…
25 Aug 2015 |
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"Backus, the Clothing Row hatter and gent's furnishing goods, 799 Broad St., Newark, N.J."
Altered Victorian Cabinet Card Portrait with Paint…
30 Sep 2014 |
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A defaced or altered photo for the Vintage Photos Theme Park.
I was surprised when I spotted this painted-over cabinet card photo at an antique mall last year. I had never seen anything quite like it, and I thought that it ruined the photo. On the other hand, I was intrigued by the way some unknown artist had re-imagined what was probably an otherwise unremarkable portrait, painting a modern lucha libre skull mask (and a small bat) onto a nineteenth-century photo and thereby transforming it into a work of Halloween art.
I didn't necessarily want to encourage anyone to deface old photos, and I debated whether to even purchase it. The cabinet card was the only painted photo in the antique dealer's booth, however, and the eyes looked so haunting and pleading that I ended up buying it.
Since then, I've come across Now and Then: The Cabinet Card Paintings of Alex Gross (Berkeley, Calif.: Gingko Press, 2012), a book described by its publisher as "the complete compendium of acclaimed artist Alex Gross's mixed media paintings layered on top of antique 19th century cabinet card photographs from portrait studios all around the country" (for before-and-after examples of the cabinet photos and finished paintings in the book, see the February 8, 2013, posting on Larry Fire's Fire Wire Pop Culture Blog ).
This cabinet card painting isn't as elaborate as those by Alex Gross, and I still have mixed feelings about these kinds of mixed media, but it's still fascinating to see how the somewhat contradictory juxtaposition of modern artwork and vintage media can create something new and surprising.
Note to administrators of photo groups: If you feel that the altered aspect of this photo isn't suitable for your group, I won't be offended at all if you remove it. Otherwise, I hope it sparks some discussion regarding the appropriateness of using old photographs in this manner.
Baseball Club, Boswell, Pa.
29 Jun 2020 |
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A photo of folded arms and/or crossed legs for the Vintage Photos Theme Park.
"...Base-ball Club, Boswel....weg. [or neg.?] by Wm. Hicks."
This is a damaged real photo postcard of a baseball club from Boswell , Somerset County, Pennsylvania, dating to the 1900s or 1910s. Although part of the handwritten caption is missing due to the torn-off corner, the baseball club name appears to have been the Regulars, judging by the shirt worn by the man standing on the left with his hands on his hips. Other players are standing with their arms folded, and some are sitting cross-legged on the ground.
William Hicks was a 24-year-old resident of Boswell when he listed his occupation as photographer on a marriage license application dated November 25, 1907 (as viewed on the Ancestry web site). His wife-to-be was Catharine E. Henry, who was 18 years old and also lived in Boswell.
I haven't been able to locate any additional information about William Hicks and his photographic work, but I'm guessing that he may have been the photographer for two other real photo postcards from the same town: Nicollette at Boswell, Pa. , and Atlantic Coal Company's Mine, Boswell, Pa.
Beware Your Fate Is in Your Own Hands! Halloween G…
Boil and Bubble, Toil and Trouble
Am on a Flying Trip
Come Take a Stir at the Witches' Brew
29 Oct 2013 |
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"Come take a stir at the witches brew / And see what fate holds through the year for you."
"At the stroke of 8. On Fri., Oct. 25th. Place 548 S. 19th St. Edna Gerber. 'MASK.'"
A beckoning witch invites potential partygoers to come stir the witches' brew.
For the complete invitation, see Halloween Party Invitation with Bat and Witch .
This Bat Comes from the Witches' Den to Summon You…
29 Oct 2013 |
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"This bat comes from the witches' den to summon you!"
A wide-eyed bat that reveals a Halloween party invitation when unfolded.
For the complete invitation, see Halloween Party Invitation with Bat and Witch .
Halloween Party Invitation with Bat and Witch
29 Oct 2013 |
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A unique invitation for a Halloween party that probably took place in Reading, Pennsylvania, on Friday, October 25, 1929.
The bat at left unfolds to reveal the witch at right opening her arms to invite potential partygoers to "see what fate holds through the year for you."
For separate views of the bat and witch, see This Bat Comes from the Witches' Den to Summon You! and Come Take a Stir at the Witches' Brew .
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