Category Archives: Types of Photographs

The Brooklynite dandy

Enhanced RPPC. Private collection.

1900s-1910s RPPC. Private collection.

This sophisticated New Yorker posed all smile in a slim fitting coat with a black cane in hand, the other hand in the coat pocket. The striped shirt adds a bit of pattern to the overall crisp look. A very classy and artistic portrait. No busy backdrop. Just him and it works.

Photographer: Strauss Studio. Brooklyn. New York.

RPPC: AZO 1904-1918

Creative Commons License
Digital restoration work titled The Brooklynite Dandy by Caroline C. Ryan is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.


A tall German student with book. Card with sleeve and envelope

Detail of student by Albert Eisele. Cabinet photo/CDV. Private Collection.

Detail of student by Albert Eisele. Cabinet photo/CDV. Private Collection.

I am thrilled to add this card to my collection. It feels like a CDV but the dimensions are narrower and longer (2″ x 5″), and best of all, it came with the original sleeve and envelope, something which is quite rare to find. And it doesn’t hurt that this is a looker!

Photographer: Albert Eisele. NEUWIED a. Rh. Germany.

John D. Rockefeller’s ancestors are from Neuwied. I learn something new every day.

Creative Commons License
Digital restoration work titled A Tall German Student With Book by Caroline C. Ryan is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.


The flapper and her lover -series of 5 risqué Biederer postcards

Risque couple RPPC. Private Collection

Kissing her bare back. Postcard. Private Collection

These Jacques Biederer real photo postcards are blank on the back and slightly vary in size from one to the other. There are traces of album scrapbook on the backs. These were highly collectible back in the days, as they are today.

In the following 4 postcards I found online she’s wearing the same thigh high stockings and shoes, and he the same suit and tie:

Apparently these two were a favorite of the photographer. I found them in several series.

Something that took me aback and kind of bothers me…a lot. These postcards go for a mint, however I’m amazed there isn’t a regular Wikipedia entry for this talented photographer (and his brother). It’s a sad fact and should be fixed!


Wearpledge Insured Clothes for Boys

They don’t make’em like they used to rings very true for this boys’ clothing manufacturer based in New York. The clothes were ‘insured’ and would be replaced if they did not withstand the active lifestyle of their young wearers within ‘reasonable wear’. Try to get this deal today!

Wearpledge was a line of clothing to fit toddlers up to 18. The company behind it was The Bauman Clothing Corporation based in New York, and then Springfield, Massachusetts.

This series of advertising postcards was found in the closet of the seller’s great aunt, and were sold to me at a bargain. These are rare as they were advertising postcards and most people after reading them threw them away. But there were some who found them cute and kept them tucked away…you know, that person who *keeps everything*. I’m glad I’ve got this little piece of fashion history.

I believe this series of 6 is complete. They have notes on the back (typed here under each card) like a hand written message from one boy to another, followed by a postscriptum announcing Wearpledge suits were in town, and to check them out:

The two following pages were found in 1919 either in The New Yorker or The Ladies Home Journal, the leading ladies magazine in America. The art was done by Hans Flato:

The Bauman Clothing Corp. was an all-around quality company producing fine garments and taking care of their employees. They didn’t cut corners and realized good wages meant good returns. The workers were compensated well above industry standards and never joined a union. On the plant was a grocery store which provided items at ‘jobbers’ prices’, and even a dance hall!

Source: Clothing Trade Journal. Vol. 16.


The 1910s Canadian worker smiling in cap and overalls

Handsome smiling Canadian worker. RPPC. Private Collection.

A smiling Canadian worker. RPPC. Private Collection.

Hm…give me a hammer. I need to make some holes in the wall for this guy to come by. Then I can lounge with a piña colada and watch him work. Ha ha! Seriously, what a cutie smiling in his white work overalls with the turtle neck, cap and rubber boots. A painter perhaps, or a plaster worker?

RPPC: AZO 1904-1918. The RPPC is ‘Made in Canada’ and the dealer is from Nova Scotia. I assume this gent was from the area.