Showing posts with label Pictures. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pictures. Show all posts

Thursday, August 7, 2014

Wonderful Old Pictures



By Terry Orr
(Sharing a nice email – Thanks Nancy)



Teenagers and their first car 1950's


Muhammad Ali looking dapper


Audrey Hepburn at a premiere on September 14, 1953


The Beatles before they were famous


Clint Eastwood with actresses Olive Sturgess and Dani Crayne in San Francisco 1954


Queen Elizabeth and Prince Phillip at the horse races 1968 


Ellen O'Neal, the greatest woman freestyle skateboarder in the 1970's


The Original way to 'text' in class 1944


Wednesday, August 6, 2014

National Root Beer Float Day

National Fresh Breath Day












Tuesday, May 7, 2013

National Photography Month



By Terry Orr

Famous Photographers

Morris Pawtucket wrote an article selecting the Top 10 Most Famous Photographer of All Time – I agree with his assessment.


1. Ansel Adams is probably the most easily recognized name of any photographer. His landscapes are stunning, and he achieves an unparalleled level of contrast using creative darkroom work. You can improve your own photos by reading Adams’ own thoughts as he grew older, when he wished that he had kept himself strong enough physically to continue his work.


2. Yousuf Karsh has taken photographs that tell a story, and that are more easily understood than many others. Each of his portraits tells you all about the subject. He felt as though there was a secret hidden behind each woman and man. Whether he captures a gleaming eye or a gesture done totally unconsciously, these are times when humans temporarily lose their masks. Karsh’s portraits communicate with people.

3. Robert Capa has taken many famous war-time photographs. He has covered five wars, even though the name “Robert Capa” was only the name placed to the photos that Endre Friedman took and that were marketed under the “Robert Capa” name. Friedman felt that if you were not close enough to the subject, then you wouldn’t get a good photograph. He was often in the trenches with soldiers when he took photographs, while most other war photographers took photographs from a safe distance.

4. Henri Cartier-Bresson has a style that makes him a natural on any top ten-photographer list. His style has undoubtedly influenced photography as much as anyone else’s. He was among the first to use 35mm film, and he usually shot in black and white. We are not graced by more of his work since he gave up the craft about 30 years before he passed away. It’s sad that there are fewer photographs by Cartier-Bresson to enjoy.

5. Dorothea Lange took photographs during the Great Depression. She took one photo of a migrant mother that is also titled by that name, and is said to be one of the best-known photographs in history. In the 1940s, she also photographed the Japanese internment camps, and these photographs show sad moments in American history.

6. Jerry Uelsman created unique images with composite photographs. Being very talented in the darkroom, he used this skill in his composites. He never used digital cameras, since he felt that his creative process was more suited to the darkroom.


7. Annie Liebovitz does fine photographic portraits and is most well known for her work with Vanity Fair and Rolling Stone magazine. Her photographs are intimate, and describe the subject. She was unafraid of falling in love with the people she photographed.

8. Brassai is the pseudonym for Gyula Halasz, and he was well known for his photographs of ordinary people. He was proof that you don’t have to travel far to find interesting subjects. He used ordinary people for his subjects, and his photos are still captivating.

9. Brian Duffy was a British photographer who shot fashion in the 60s and 70s. He lost his photographic interest at one time, and burned many negatives, but then began taking photos again a year before he died.

10. Jay Maisel is a famous modern photographer. His photos are simple, and he doesn’t use complex lighting or fancy cameras. He often only takes one lens on photo outings, and he enjoys taking photos of shapes and lights that he finds interesting.




National Geographic has a very long history of providing readers some of the best photographs ever taken.

Over the past couple of years, I have mention The Pioneer Woman Rae Drummond who continues to amaze in her own photography work and providing an outlet for other inspiring photographers with her frequent photo contests.

Two friends of mine have opened their own photography business in the greater Washington, DC metro area – Elena Nguyen and April Rose.  Links to their sites are provided below. Please take a moment to check them out – thanks.  And go take some photographs - have fun - and share them with us and others.


References and Links:

Saturday, February 2, 2013

What a fantastic collection of pictures from long, long ago!!

The only known photograph of an African American Union soldier with his family. c1863-65

Last four couples standing in a Chicago dance marathon. ca. 1930

Jewish refugees, approaching allied soldiers, become aware that
they have just been liberated, April, 1945

A Japanese family returning home (Seattle, Washington) from a relocation
center camp in Hunt, Idaho on May 10, 1945

Russian peasants getting electricity for the first time in 1920

9 kings featured in one photo (Windsor Castle, 20 May 1910)

New York man reads a newspaper; headline reads "Nazi Army Now 75 Miles from Paris." May 18, 1940

Johnny Cash performing for prisoners at Folsom Prison Jan. 13th 1968

Gay pride, 1970.  USA

Cow shoes used by Moonshiners in the Prohibition days to
disguise their footprints, 1922

Louis Armstrong plays for his wife in front of the Sphinx
by the pyramids in Giza, 1961

Tereska, a child in a residence for disturbed children, grew up in a concentration camp. She drew a picture of "home" on the blackboard, Poland, 1948

The Long Walk" British Army EOD Tech approaches a suspect device Date Unknown

Three archers, Japan, ca.1860-1900

The headquarters of Benito Mussolini and the Italian
Fascist party in Italy, 1934

The earliest known photograph of men drinking beer. Edinburgh Ale, 1844

The Kennedy trio in the mid-30s as teenagers; John, Bobby and Teddy

Alerted by the smell of a broken bottle of liquor, Federal Agents
inspect a "lumber truck". Los Angeles, 1926

A Native American looks down at a newly-completed section of the
 transcontinental railroad.  Nevada, about 1868

Three Princeton students pose after the Freshman, Sophomore
snowball fight. 1893. Princeton, NJ

"Get the hell out of my race and give me those numbers." After realizing a woman was running Boston marathon organizer Jock Semple went after Kathrine Switzer. Other runners blocked him and she went on to finish the race. 1967.

Martin Luther King Jr removing a burned cross from his front yard
with his son at his side.  Atlanta GA 1960

The first official riders in New York City’s first subway, 1904


Microsoft staff photo from December 7, 1978

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