Monday 2 May 2016

Vintage Kodak Moments

Vintage Kodak Moments
 
 
Doug McCool rode his bike to school.  You took whatever path was best for you.  This lad looks like
he is carrying a string of Christmas lights, but it doesn’t look like winter.  Wonder what’s going on!
 
Camping out in 1918.
 
This was the 30’s, and this sharecropper’s son was working behind the plow, barefoot and all.  You can bet there was a mule on the front of that plow.
 
This couple pose in an early version of American Gothic, with a groundhog killed on their Manchester farm. It's dinner!
Note: Photo taken circa 1914, from a family photo album.
 
Standing over one of her many trophy mule deer, subsistence-and-sport huntress “Gusty” Wallihan appears every inch the frontier matron with her dressy bonnet, 
prairie-pattern cartridge belt, floral-embroidered gauntlets, hunting knife, and Remington-Hepburn rifle.  1895
 
At least this one won’t be quite as dangerous as the old single wheeled models.  Look in the trailer over the
back wheel.  They have their baby in there!
 
This was the approved way to change the street lamps in 1910.  Cool!
 
A single Paddy Wagon.  Never knew they had such a vehicle!  This is way cool.
 
Here is an early motorhome, built in 1926.  I think this is so very cool looking!  I’m surprised the light chassis would handle it.
 
We’ve all been aware of the traditional tent wagon.  This is a tent vehicle built in 1910. 
 
These are vintage treadmills in the 1920’s.
 
This is a 1920’s refrigerator.  Only the elite could afford such a thing, and most still had the old ice boxes.
 
A hair dryer in the 1920 Salon.  What a contraption!
 
Chester E. Macduffee next to his newly patented, 250 kilo diving suit, 1911
 
A postcard from the 1800’s advertising a knife throwing act with the traveling circus.
How would you like that job?
 
A Strongwoman balances a piano and the pianist on her chest.  1920
That’s some chest that can do that!
 
London, in the 1920’s, this was a telephone engineer.  What a job!
 
Two young girls in a West Germans street chat with their grandparents in the window of their home in the Eastern sector, separated only by a barbed wire barricade. 
It was a common occurrence for families, who had once only lived on the opposite side of the street from one another, to become separated by the ever growing Berlin Wall.
 
A Gibson Girl in her corset in the early 1900’s.  Those poor women.  This was one fad
that really hurt a lot of women for life.
 
Lillian Russell. A plus size beauty in the late 1800s. She was around 200 lb at the peak of her career.
She was considered "The American Beauty."  Weighwatchers would want to enroll her today!

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