Alan Mays' photos with the keyword: quilts
A Man Posing with a Chair, Quilt, and Blanket
12 Jun 2014 |
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A blankets and quilts photo for the Vintage Photos Theme Park. For another interesting quilt photo, see Baby on a Crazy Quilt .
An undated real photo postcard of a man dressed in a suit, vest, and tie. The photographer has posed him next to a chair, with a quilt hanging behind him as a backdrop and a blanket (I think that's what it is) covering the ground underneath his feet.
May I C U Home?
10 Jun 2013 |
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Or to put it more straightforwardly, this acquaintance card asks, "May I see you home?"
The Encyclopedia of Ephemera (New York: Routledge, 2000), p 4, provides additional information: "A novelty variant of the American calling card of the 1870s and 1880s, the acquaintance card was used by the less formal male in approaches to the less formal female. Given also as an 'escort card' or 'invitation card,' the device commonly carried a brief message and a simple illustration.... Flirtatious and fun, the acquaintance card brought levity to what otherwise might have seemed a more formal proposal. A common means of introduction, it was never taken too seriously."
Thanksgiving Nightmare
10 Nov 2016 |
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"May your Thanksgiving never end in dreams like these!"
Postcard postmarked Milwaukee, Wis., Nov. 22, 1910.
The foods of Thanksgiving haunt a boy's sleep in this nightmarish scene by illustrator H. B. Griggs (HBG).
For two other Thanksgiving postcards by Griggs, see 'Rah, 'Rah, 'Rah, Thanksgiving!!! and Were It Not for Friday's Pain (below).
Tents at Raise 'ell Camp, Cooks Mill, Pennsylvania
28 Sep 2015 |
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Handwritten message on the back of this real photo postcard: "To yous all. This is a view of our tents. Rhoads and two of the clerks came down one night. Hunter."
The seven Raise 'ell campers are sitting in front of their tents. What appears to be a quilt or coverlet is visible in the first open tent, and the man seated in front of that tent is still holding the shotgun he posed with in the first photo .
Charles R. Rhoads was a pharmacist in the nearby town of Hyndman , Pa., in the 1900s and 1910s. Could he have been the Rhoads who--along with two of the clerks in his pharmacy--visited the camp?
And how ironic is it--considering the guns that are visible in the photos and the hunting that presumably took place during the camping trip--that the writer's name is "Hunter"!
Baby on a Crazy Quilt
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