Category Archives: Types of Subjects

The smiling Victorian bride with her handsome groom

Wedding photo cabinet card. Private Collection.

1890s-1900s wedding photo cabinet card. Private Collection.

This beautiful bride is smiling in her long wedding dress with the puffy sleeves at the elbows. Can I say I love the groom’s shoes? I love his shoes! They look made for each other these two.

Photographer: Mangold. Blair. Nebraska


‘One of those happy moments’

'One of those happy moments' postcard. Private Collection.

‘One of those happy moments’ postcard. Private Collection.

Ooh the dripping sarcasm of this one! This is a funny twist on the romantic kissing couples found on the cards of the period.  When three’s a crowd is exactly it! The standing man doesn’t look too happy. The other gent stole the woman of his heart, and he is kissing her right in front of him.

He’s standing so close to them too. He looks like he’s going to say “EXCUSE ME SIR!” any second now.

This one was posted on October 20, 1918. Most postcards were posted within a year of being published, so this one was made in 1917 at the earliest.


1860s ‘Uncle John Randolph’

John Randolph. CDV circa 1870. Private Collection.

1860s ‘uncle’ John Randolph. CDV. Private Collection.

This handsome fellow with the small smile came on a CDV with the beautiful design around the vignette portrait. His name is written in pencil on the back. Was he of the famed Randolph family of Virginia?

I wonder if his bowtie was a patriotic red and white.

John Randolph CDV with the intricate chandelier-like frame design.

John Randolph CDV with the intricate chandelier-like frame design.


Two gentlemen on a grinning Paper Moon

Paper moon duo. RPPC. Private Collection.

Paper moon duo. RPPC. Private Collection.

I’ve been wanting to add a ‘paper moon’ to my collection. The moon is so small these two buddies are almost on top of each other.  And what a toothy grin!

Close up

Close up

Two more examples of gents with paper moons here and here.

I need to find out where this paper moon craze came from. They were found in amusement parks and people loved them.  This Pinterest page is worth checking out.

RPPC: AZO 1904-1918


C. Stan, the WWI era British army cadet

Photograph in tintype frame. Private Collection.

Circa 1910 British army cadet. RPPC in tintype case. Private Collection.

This circa 1910 British cadet who can’t be more than 12-13, is proudly posing in his green wool uniform with peaked cap and sword by the side.

I find this photograph quite beautiful yet sad and haunting. This boy went on to fight in the First World War at a very young age, of this there’s no doubt.

I also find interesting that his paper picture was framed in a tintype case.

So I asked myself, “is there a name or note hidden to the back of the picture?” I opened it.

Well, it wasn’t all for nothing (I think I would have kicked myself if I found nothing but something told me). It did reveal a note, the partial name of the boy and that this is a RPPC with the divided back, which dates the picture to around 1907-1914; it fits the era of the uniform.

I think his surname was either Stan or Stanley, and his given name most likely Carl or Charles.

boy-cadet-back-note

From C. Stan to Dick.

Of course I put the case back together and wrote the name in pencil on the outside.

Those cases are fragile but this one had already been meddled with by someone who removed a tintype and replaced it with this RPPC, so I took a chance. I can imagine a family member lovingly doing this or the boy himself to give as a keepsake.

One million British soldiers and allies died during World War I. I set to research some for a match and got sidetracked reading the many individual stories of those who fell. I won’t lie, as an army wife it was particularly emotionally exhaustive, and a partial name isn’t enough to come to a definite conclusion, but I tried. I did find two soldiers by the shared name of Charles Stanley who died in 1917 and 1918 at the same age (19). No one by the name Stan Carl or Charles died during the war is all I can say for sure.

(On Netflix in the U.S you can catch Our World War, a three part BBC docu-series of particularly powerful individual stories of British soldiers who experienced those truly horrible years. If you can get past the choice of music for the soundtrack I highly recommend it. The husband says it is to relate to younger audiences.)