Showing posts with label boat. Show all posts
Showing posts with label boat. Show all posts

Thursday, October 27, 2016

Back Page - Girl in a boat


Here is a common pose:
A girl in a boat.
Why is this popular?
Is it because the camera was handy while loading the boat?
Or is it because the sweetheart
just looked so trusting and lovely
the photographer couldn't resist?

Woman in rowboat
Girl in a boat
Girl in a boat
Sitting with the outboard
New Additions


Four in a rowboat
Sitting in a rowboat

Girl in boat 1927
Girl in a row boat woman in rowboat
In the boat

Three women
I guess three girls in a boat would be okay. Okay?
By the sea - woman with cap in boat
The best girl
Girl in a boat

Thelma in white bathing suit in a rowboat 563
Two women
Okay if we can have three in a boat we can have two too. ...also.
Girl in a row boat

The girls go fishing
Okay then, FIVE
Five women in boat


Now Six.
Three women in a boat

Girl in a canoe
Woman in a canoe
One at a time...
End of the canoe story

Can't get enough?
Here she is.

The wife or the girlfriend, the mother or the secretary, the sister or the neighbor. We love taking pictures of women. And, much of the time, women love being the subject of a photo-session.

We have visited this subject before in various ways. Check these pages too.
Back Page - Personal Pinup - Page One
Back Page - Personal Pinup - Page Two
Album Page - Go-Go Girls
At the Beach - The Girlfriend - Page One
At the beach - The Girlfriend - Page Two
Back Page - The Best Girl and The Car

It's just The Girls

Girl in a Rowboat
Three men in a Rowboat
I know, I know. These aren't even girls. Well...

Bassingbourn 1944 384th Bomber Group, B17 landing
Long lost negatives taken during the winter of 1944-45 at Bassingbourn AAF base in England.

Area 51 and a Half Area 51 and a Half You are probably not authorized to see these.

Don't take my picture! Oh! You DID didn't you! completely unaware of the photographer This is a collection of photographs that disappear on the way home from the photo processing shop.


And don't miss
Cabinet Card Gallery
Square America
Tattered and Lost
Vernacular Photography
The best
FOUND PHOTOGRAPH
sites on the web.

And for postcards try
POSTCARDY
And see what's going on over at
Sepia Saturday!

All images are the property of Lost Gallery and the author. Permission must be granted for their use. All rights reserved.

THE KIDS Lesson one.
It is always a mystery how a photograph of any of these precious children could end up lost or abandoned. Here are a few. You will probably say "Ooh..." at least once.

Dee and the Business School Dee and the Business School
The beautiful Dee. A curious story; What do you see?

WHAT'S GOING ON HERE?
Neiffel and Helvetica Typehigh

"What are they doing?"

Saturday, August 27, 2016

Sepia Saturday - Boats, Docks and Lighthouses


The Sepia Saturday suggestion for this week seems to be about Boats and Harbors and Docks and Lighthouses.

The view from The George.

Of course the first thing I thought of was my own photograph that I titled "The View From The George."

I shot this with my old trusty Nikon 950 while sipping a glass of red wine and resting my tootsies from a miles long walk on the beach, collecting sea-glass for a mosaic I never made. (I still have the glass. Ah, someday...)

The George was one of our favorite stops during frequent journeys to the beach and shops. It was a very pleasant year I spent in Brid; one of the gems of my life.

If you take GoogleEarth to Harbor Road in Bridlington, just outside the Harbour Rock Shop, you can look up at the second floor window of the George where I got this shot.

The George

Ain't technology grand?

But on to the task at hand.

I did a search for Boats, Harbors, Docks and Lighthouses and rounded up some rather interesting rescued photographs for this week.

NEW ADDITIONS

At the Dock

Ship and shore
A guy on a wharf with a ship in the background.
He's wearing Saddle Shoes.
Are you sure it's on this one?
The Waban sails at midnight.

(You got ketchup on that shirt. It'll never come out. And look at those pants.)

From a Very Informative Web Site:
The pertinent paragraphs say:

"Built under United States Shipping Board contracts (WW I) by G. M. Standifer Construction Corp., Vancouver, Wash., completed as Waban (USSB) in 1919. Design 1015; 9400 tdw, 402 ft x 53 ft. Owned by Lykes Bros-Ripley SS Co. in 1933. Purchased from USA by British Ministry of Shipping in 1940, renamed Empire Sambar. On March 6-1941 she had an explosion in engine room while at sea; towed in, repaired, and renamed Empire Beaver (M.O.W.T.) in 1942. (Info from Mitchell & Sawyer's "Empire Ships", received from Barbara Mumford).

This was one of 19 ships transferred to Nortraship in 1942, see my page "Ship Statistics & Misc." under Empire Ships for names of the other 18. Taken over at Mersey on April 5-1942 and given the name Norhauk."

So this photograph had to have been taken before 1941.


Ship
Two LT
US Army LT 787 and LT 22.
Ship in shipyard

Trip
Here's four ships away from the dock.
Four ships

Ship
Possible troop ship


Two ships passing one day
A ship passing a stage coach ... well maybe a bus or another ship.
Ferry
Ferry Boat
Aboard ship w showgirls
A shot of an entertainment crew aboard a troop ship probably. Looks like maybe the '40's.

Algernon Trousers
Algernon Trousers

This really is a found photo. It was found on the sidewalk in front of an old house that was now for rent and empty. Some one had obviously dropped it while moving out. After scanning it, I left it in an envelope at the house next door to the rental for safe keeping in case someone ever returned for it.

Next door just happened to be the studio of Christopher Griffin the world famous artist. Chris and I had become acquainted a few months earlier.

There is a reason for everything.


Now these three photographs come from one of those books of over 300 35mm negatives that I found in a basement of an "antique" mall in Wichita Falls, Texas. They were no doubt destined for a dumpster. What a loss it would have been.

From their content, the date of many of the photographs have been established to the winter of 1944-1945, mostly at Bassingbourn Air Base in the UK.

The photographer was stationed at the base but did have a chance to tour a bit as some of the negatives show. Here are three such photographs. Fortunately he made brief notations in the negative file about many of the photographs.

0900 St Johns harbor 01
St. John's Harbor
1005 St .John's harbor
St. John's Harbor

Ship in harbor
Ship in the harbor.

Departing

I am sure it was all accidental but this snapshot is a work of art to me. The color, the balance, the action, the emotion and the message. It is a very fine photograph. It's just a tourist snap.

I printed a copy of this one slightly larger that the original and framed it with a wide mat.


E. Pascagoula Light


On the reverse is says merely:
"E. Pascagoula Light"

This is a found photograph of a lighthouse near where the Mississippi meets the Gulf. How it migrated to a junk shop in Oklahoma is anyone's guess.

The East Pascagoula Lighthouse was established in 1886 and destroyed in the hurricane of 1906. See this listing.

Back a couple years ago when I researched the photograph I found only one other photograph and two or three paintings of it.

I liked the photograph so much that I did some adjusting and work on it in Photoshop. Then it was enlarged to 16" X 16" and transferred by a secret method to canvas. Finally, there was some adjusting directly to the canvas.

E. Pascagoula Lighthouse


River boat
Carrier

Excursion boat
Asea
An exciting shot. Too bad it was so badly damaged before it was rescued.


Dolly waves from ship

So as the sun sets slowly in the East, we bid farewell to our visit to the docks.

In the immortal words of Bob and Ray, "Write if you get work and hang by your thumbs."


Now all aboard and bon voyage on your trip back to The Sepia Saturday home page to find another excursion to delight the senses and make you hungry.

The most popular photographs most popular, Family Group, An album of the most requested photographs in the Lost Gallery.

Area 51 and a Half Area 51 and a Half You are probably not authorized to see these.

Don't take my picture! Oh! You DID didn't you! completely unaware of the photographer This is a collection of photographs that disappear on the way home from the photo processing shop.

And don't miss
Cabinet Card Gallery
One Man's Treasure
Penny Tales
Square America
Tattered and Lost
Vernacular Photography
The best
FOUND PHOTOGRAPH
sites on the web.
And for postcards try
THE DAILY POSTCARD.

All images are the property of Lost Gallery and the author. Permission must be granted for their use.
All rights reserved.

THE KIDS Lesson one. It is always a mystery how a photograph of any of these precious children could end up lost or abandoned. Here are a few. You will probably say "Ooh..." at least once.

Dee and the Business School Dee and the Business School
The beautiful Dee. A curious story; What do you see?

WHAT'S GOING ON HERE?
Neiffel and Helvetica Typehigh

"What are they doing?"

Stuff

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