A detail of a CDV, two buddies sharing a flask, the one on the left with the Windsor tie and the knowing smile!
Tag Archives: drinking
1890s Swedish worker pals having a beer

Swedish workers. CDV. Private Collection.
Three Swedish working class young men holding a dark beer in their hand. The boy on the right looks a little stiff. They didn’t change for the photo, wearing their day to day clothes, shirts still dirty with well used shoes.

Photographer: Swante Hoeger. Stromstad. Sweden.
‘Drink this, it’ll put hair on your chest, son.’

Father and son in top hats with a stiff drink. Private Collection.
Teaching the boy the grown-up ways! This father is posing with his little man with the adult sized top hat on his head, and he’s acting like he’s going to share a stiff drink with him. He found it humorous to pose with his son this way, and I do too! His son is holding on to the hat and looking at the bottle with keen interest!
After the picture I see the dad giving a sip to his eager boy and laughing at his reaction, and the little one saying “Eww…how can you drink this, dad?!”.
This tintype is quite endearing, and -bonus!- it has top hats. The father has that cheeky Harrison Ford smile too, doesn’t he?
It’s easy to imagine the son holding on to this photograph throughout his life, and with a fond memory of that day.

Digital restoration work titled “Drink This, It’ll Put Hair On Your Chest Son” by Caroline C. Ryan is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
1890s Bohemia

1890’s 1/6th plate tintype. Private Collection.
The photographer caught them a bit blurry, but there’s enough here to imagine what these two were like.
They’re posing exactly the same with their beer bottle in one hand and cigar in the other. The young man on the left is wearing a striped black shirt with the white collar and a loud plaid tie he looks to have creatively tied like a small bowtie by the neck! And he’s not wearing the typical waistcoat either, choosing to let his tie do the talking.
And his friend with the black and white striped turtleneck under the coat. They both look unconventional; artists perhaps, or just on the fringe…Maybe a couple. For example, from what I read of Victorian and Edwardian New York, working class men who advertised their homosexuality accessorized with unconventionally loud patterns or colors -checkerboard waistcoats, red ties,etc… I wish I could see these two in color because what looks like black on a tintype could have been any loud color like red or purple.
They both parted their hair in the middle too instead of the typical side part. Whoever they were, what a pair!
This is how you celebrate!

Tintype. Circa 1900
Well, I missed out on this one. But look at these four with their drinks and bills attached to the front of their hats or coat lapels.

