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January 25, 2008

Card 33: Removing the Victims

The card above looks like Tim Burton's Mars Attacks!, but it's from the popular science fiction trading card series Mars Attacks. The bubble-gum cards were released by Topps in 1962, created by Brown and Woody Gelman and were the base of inspiration to Burton's film. The cards were painted by the famous pulp-comic artist, Norm Saunders. Check the other 65 cards on the Mars Attacks Archives Gallery. (via Pez)

Related posts:
Scientist Cards
The Trade Card Place
A Nation of Shopkeepers
Famous Person Caricatures
Coca-Cola Trading Cards and Ads
The Nineteenth-Century American Trade Card

Chéri Hérouard - La Vie Parisienne - 1917 April #15

Chéri Hérouard was a French illustrator who was most famously known for his forty-five year work for French society magazine, La Vie Parisienne, which was (is?) a French humoristic and erotic weekly magazine, published in Paris since 1863.

'La Vie Parisienne' was one of the more famous and well-known of specifically Parisienne magazines. Originally intended as a guide to the privileged social and artistic life in the French capital, it soon evolved into a mildly risqué publication in which illustrations of scantily clad damsels abounded. It was all done in very good taste though it had more than its fair share of detractors. General Pershing for one is said to have personally warned American servicemen against purchasing the magazine - for little good that would have done. 'La Vie Parisienne' was also banned in certain countries such as neighboring Belgium for instance, though in war-time it appeared that such silly regulations were not always adhered to.

The marvellous art work of Chéri Herouard is very well presented by this photoset with 197 images, many of them covers of La Vie Parisienne. The set was created by asoftblackstar and contains some NSFW illustrations. For more images and covers visit this, this,this and this page. (via Hugo Strikes Back)

Continue reading "La Vie Parisienne" »

January 24, 2008

Dragon Treasury cover by Uth Roeun

The Cambodian blogger Jinja , from Webbed Feet, Web Log, made some interesting discovers in the pulp books universe. Then, as a nice guy does, he blogged the "Pulp Cambodia Novel Covers" through three posts: Uth Roeun, Hul Sophon and Em Satya. I think all the covers are from 1970's, with styles going from action with romance to historical novels and revolutionary themes. (via PCL)

Den mystiske Kvinde (The Mysterious Lady)

The Danish artist Sven Brasch (1886-1970) created some of the best posters of the period 1910-1940 The site presents few examples, 17 only, of his art works for Hollywood movie posters, posters for events, magazine and book covers, ads from 1920's and 1930's and a self-portrait.

It was created by Peter Holst Eriksen, a collector of Sven Brasch's works as an attempt at introducing Brasch's unique and sophisticated universe and also to promote his book "Plakatens mester - tegneren Sven Brasch, which is probably very good. Few more and small images of Brasch's works here.

January 23, 2008

Aimez-vous l'amour? Oui, quand je suis en chaleur

The pretty humorous cards above are part of the deck of the French card game "La Grivoise" (The Spicy). That page contains all 32 cards and the box of the game released by Grimaud in the 1960's. According to the box, it's a funny game, for laugh and amuse yourself, with 16 blue cards for women, with answers, and 16 red cards for men, with questions. (via PCL)

January 22, 2008

Czechoslovak fairy tales

Fairy tale is a fictional story that usually features folkloric characters (such as fairies, goblins, elves, trolls, witches, giants, and talking animals) and enchantments, often involving a far-fetched sequence of events. The Internet Archive highlighted seven fairy tale books with beautiful illustrations on its blog.

Inspired on those suggestion and on the good memories of a collection of old fairy tale books full of images, I made a search to discover more of those treasures. They have a huge collection with more than four hundred digitalized fairy tales books in English and few other languages, and some of them have more than one version on-line.

Based on that search, I made a list with around 140 fairy tales books and their respective writers, or adaptors, to inspire not only the kids to take a look on them.The best part: you can take a look or even read them in my favourite format for old books, digital, free from allergies. If they aren't enough, try the Manybooks collection of Fairy Tales from Around the World with more formats available to download or read on-line.

The Fire Bird

Continue reading "Fairy Tales books on Archive" »

Dime Mystery Magazine v38 #4

A nice gallery with covers of all the numbers of Dime Mystery Magazine.

Dime Mystery (Book) Magazine started off as a fairly staid pulp under the name Dime Mystery Book Magazine featuring a full-length "two-dollar novel" and a few short stories. However this was not a successful formula and after only ten issues the publisher, Popular Publications, changed the title to Dime Mystery Magazine, featuring several novelettes and short stories. Even more significantly the emphasis was changed to "weird menace", which was much more popular and allowed the magazine to continue for a further 144 issues.

n 1950 the name was changed again to 15 Mystery Stories, but it lasted for only five issues under this title before folding in late 1950.

The covers are fantastic: there are monsters, crazy scientists, women with knifes, strong men trying to run away, lots of women tied up, masked men, macabre sects, deformed men, scenes of torture, macabre experiments, skulls and mummies. All the elements you need in a thriller story. By they covers, my impression is their covers were made to also attract BDSM fetishists. (via coisas do arco da velha)

January 21, 2008

Meera (1979)

Almost a year ago I blogged about two galleries of posters at The hot spot: Hand Painted Horror Movie Posters of India & Pakistan and Bollywood Vintage Posters - Pre 1960's. Now it's time to explore the other galleries of Bollywood Vintage Posters: three galleries with posters from The 1960's, eleven from The 1970's, six with posters from the The 1980's and one more from The 90's and up.

Related posts:
Daler Mehndi
World Movie Art
Create your own Bollywood subtitles
Bollywood album cover gallery

January 20, 2008

Fact'ry 'ands by Edward Dyson

Australian fiction was an exhibition of material from the Australian Monash University Library Rare Books Collection.

A selection of novels and books of short stories by over one hundred writers, the exhibition covers our national output of fiction from 1845 to 2000. Included are such rarities as Ned Kelly, the ironclad Australian bushranger, published in 1881, less than a year after his execution; Henry Lawson's first book, Short stories in prose and verse (1894); Melbourne and Mars (1889), an early example of Australian science fiction; as well as Patrick White's first novel, The Happy Valley, (1939) which he would not allow to be reprinted.

It's a small, but nice collection of book covers, with some curious titles, such as Melbourne and Mars : my mysterious life on two planets : extracts from the diary of a Melbourne merchant, The joyful condemned and Winning a wife in Australia : a story drawn from actual experiences and illustrative of life in the present day in the Antipodes. And I hope this last just is just a fiction book, because I'm not sure about the methods used to get a wife by its cover. (via Martin Klasch)

January 17, 2008

Photo by Howard Hollem (1942)

Flickr Blog announced The Commons: a pilot project created in partnership with The Library of Congress.The Library team contributed choosing around 1500 photos from their most popular collections to share on Flickr. The result is presented in two incredible photosets: 1930s-40s in Color and News in the 1910s.

These beautiful, historic pictures from the Library represent materials for which the Library is not the intellectual property owner. Flickr is working with the Library of Congress to provide an appropriate statement for these materials. It's called "no known copyright restrictions." Hopefully, this pilot can be used as a model that other cultural institutions would pick up, to share and redistribute the myriad collections held by cultural heritage institutions all over the world.

You can help the project describing the photographs, adding tags and comments in the The Library of Congress's collection on Flickr. All you need is being a Flickr member, and you can do it for free.

Related posts:
Bound for Glory
America's Library
The great Houdini
Creative Americans
Panoramic Photographs
Sergei Mikhailovich Prokudin-Gorskii
Ansel Adams's Photographs of Japanese-American

Circus by Valery Alffevsky

This Russian Livejournal page has a serious of beautiful illustrations from the book "Circus", published in 1966 and illustrated by the soviet painter Valery Alffevsky. Alffevsky studied in Vkhutemas, a famous school of Russian Avant-garde. I don't know much about painting styles, but I liked the fluid style, using only ink and watercolour, like sketches.

October 01, 2007

Batman: the movie (1966)

The list of Batman films I watched doesn't include the 1966 Batman. The film directed by Leslie H. Martinson was filmed at the end of the first season of 1960's Batman TV series. The LiveJournal page film_stills: Batman: The Movie has several high resolution images from the film, that apparently had the same "quality" of the TV series. Even if you was a fan you have to agree with me that the costumes aren't the high point of the series. Julie Newmar was, but she wasn't in the film. (via Bedazzled)

Related posts:
Detective Comics
Comic Book Bondage Cover
The History of the Batmobile

Nancy Sit - You Can't Do That

60's & 70's Asian Pop Record Covers Photo Gallery with tons of covers uploaded by David Greenfield. This gallery contains scans of my ever-growing collection of rare 60's and 70's Asian pop singles. I mainly collect Singaporean titles, but I also have records from Indonesia, Hong Kong, Japan, and Thailand. Even with the cultural differences, many of those covers remind me French Yé-yé albums from 1960's.

More collections of album covers: Album Cover Art Collection of Links.

September 28, 2007

Gato - Israel Chavira

Here are my collection of links with cats, specially saved to blog today. And before you run away complaining "Oh no, cat pictures!", take a look on the images and their descriptions. They have cats, of course, but they aren't all just about cats.

The toy above, called Gato, was designed by Israel Chavira. This cat loves honey, probably cause his bee body type. A silly curiosity: the Spanish word "Gato" means cat, chat, Katze, katt, gàtto, and it has the same writing for Portuguese, gato.

thing_learned_cats.jpg

Among the hundreds of cool scanned images of Modern Mechanix, the vintage articles with cats always get my attention. And, of course, I saved them to share: Cats Are Fun to Photograph, From Cats to Cataclysms, Cat Pictures Used to Scare Away Birds, Blows Glass Globe Around Cats (no cats were harmed!) and Things I Learned from Ten Thousand Cats. The last article is from 1934, but some things about what we know about cats didn't change.

By A. J. Adamson

ONLY by dealing patiently and kindly with a cat, particularly during its early life, may you develop the sort of animal everyone wants as a companion and pet. Unlike dogs, cats will respond only to kindness. Punish them and they grow surly and spiteful. I speak from rich experience, having bred fully 10,000 cats during the last quarter of a century.

The old idea was that every animal should be punished when caught in a wrongful act, but cats do not understand the meaning of a whipping. They are weak-willed and easily tempted and must, therefore, be guided in paths of righteousness.

Laugh-Out-Loud Cats #317

Before all those stupid mania of LOLcats (I'm tired of them), there was The Laugh-Out-Loud Cats, a comic strip created and illustrated by the cartoonist Aloysius "Gorilla" Koford, according to Adam Koford his grandson. From 1912-1913 he produced a comic strip which was featured in 17 newspapers, including the Philadephia Star-Democrat, the Tampa Telegraph, and the Santa Fe Good-Newser. It featured the exploits of one Meowlin Q. Kitteh (a sort of cat hobo-raconteur) and his young hapless kitten friend, Pip. Adam is sharing those "treasures" (the comics are brilliant), and until now there are 340 images on the Flickr set. BTW, there is something on those comics that reminds me Krazy Kat. (via Will You Look At That)

iCat

The iCat is a project developed by Philips Research Technologies in 2005. I think iCat is a bit scary.

iCat is a research platform for studying human-robot interaction topics. The robot is 38 cm tall and is equipped with 13 servos that control different parts of the face, such as the eyebrows, eyes, eyelids, mouth and head position. With this setup iCat can generate many different facial expressions - happy, surprise, angry, sad - that are needed to create social human-robot interaction dialogues.

A camera installed in iCat's head can be used for different computer vision capabilities, such as recognizing objects and faces.

Eek on the Plant Cup

The giant Plant Cup designed by Gitta Gschwendtner, was available at YouSayTomayto for $338.00. You can't buy it for now, however, you can take a look on set of pictures Plant Cup, with more demonstrations of its uses by Eek, the grey cat, and Miss Moneypenny. Grey cats rock.

September 25, 2007

Pantomimes lumineuses by Jules Chéret

One more stunning collection from The New York Public Library: Les maîtres de l'affiche. Les Maîtres de L'affiche (The posters) was a French "monthly publication with reproductions of the most beautiful illustrated posters of the great artists, French and foreign, published by L'Imprimerie Chaix", according with French text. It was published from 1896 to 1900, which means this collection, with 260 images, contains the best of Art Nouveau images. The posters are really marvellous. For me they are crème de la crème. (via IWR Art)

Folies-Bergère - Le Miroir by Jules Chéret

Related posts:
Aubrey Beardsley
Vintage Postcards
Vintage Bicycle Posters
From Lebanon to Japan in Posters
Nancy Steinbock Vintage Posters
Galleries and more galleries with posters

September 20, 2007

There's something about a Jantzen

There are some crazy users on Flickr, and crazy means crazy in the best possible way, who like to share vintage images. Miss Magnolia Thunderpussy likes to share "some" stuff: almost six thousand of images divided in 90 sets and counting. It's a paradise of 1940s and 1950s pictures, navy images from around the world, WWII images, pulp book covers, posters and more memorabilia. Among all those cool stuff, here are a list of suggestions (according to the posts of this blog). (via PCL LinkDump)

- British Posters from the Second World War: A selection of posters issued by various Government and non-Government bodies during the Second World War.

- Der Landser: with four hundred pictures taking during the WWII. Der Landser" was the name given to the ordinary German soldier in the Wehrmacht, and was used during both World Wars. The term is no longer used for German soldiers.

- Fruit & Vegetable Crate Labels: more than three hundred Examples of classic designs from the USA, Canada, Spain and Australia. I love this ad.

- Now read on . . . : Book jacket art. A hilarious collection with several pulp book covers.

- Posters from Occupied Netherlands - World War II. A selection mainly of Nazi and pro-German posters.

Irish Beauty

- Robert Doisneau: 65 pictures of this master of photography. He dismiss presentations, but just in case Robert Doisneau was a French photographer noted for his frank and often humorous depictions of Parisian street life.

- The Accordion and its role in world peace: 51 pictures of accordion players. Probably just for enthusiasts.

- The Saturday Evening Post: 18 beautiful covers of that classic American magazine.

- Transport & Travel Posters: 259 images of ads, pamphlets and posters.

- US Navy posters: mainly recruiting posters from World Wars I and II.

- Variety, Vaudeville & Circus Acts: Vintage photographs of performers and acts - from variety shows, vaudeville and burlesque shows, and circuses.

- Vintage Advertisements: 149 images of vintage magazine ads, from costumes to food.

- Vintage Advertising Posters: with 72 very pretty images, many of them are also on the "Transport and Travel Posters" set. The collection contains one of those vintage disturbing ads.

- Waves & Navy Nurse Corps Recruiting Posters - World War II, with fourteen posters.

hot_pants_homo.jpg

Related posts:
Ad*Access
War Posters
The Art of War
Spanish Civil War
Robert Doisneau
Museum of Russian Poster
Antique Produce Crate Labels
Posters of the Russian Civil War
Canadian War Poster Collection
Military Posters of 20th century
From Lebanon to Japan in Posters
The Saturday Evening Post Covers Collection

September 19, 2007

Hungarian matchbook

A very coloured collection of Vintage Matchbook Labels from the 1950s and 1960s, from East Europe: Czech, Hungary and Estonia. The Flickr set was created by Linzie Hunter, who had a hard work, "painstakingly boring" work as she said, of uploading 93 images. (via Papel Continuo)

Related posts:
American Matchcover Collecting Club
Vintage Vegas
Matchbook Museum
Matchbox collection
Dotpattern

September 17, 2007

Les Utopies de la Navigation Aérienne au Siècle Dernier

The image set Early flight at Wikipedia contains two beautiful series of French collecting cards with pictures of events in ballooning and parachuting history. The series contain images of events from 1783 to 1846. Printed between 1890 and 1900 by Romanet & cie, the cards are available on high resolution.

The collecting cards with curious illustrations of flying machines and important events of its history are part of the Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division. The set 1re série, was part of the exhibition The Dream of Flight, which contains even more images, documents and pictures of aviation history. Check also the List of early flying machines at Wikipedia.

September 14, 2007

Lock&chase

I'm old enough to remember the glorious days of arcade games like Frogger. But I noticed I did't have experience enough with "Fliperamas", the Portuguese word for arcade games, informally called "fliper". The only arcade game I remember playing was the classic Pinball. I'm saying this because the images displayed on The Control Panel Overlay Museum are totally unknown to me.

At least I know some of the games listed on the page by name, based on my brief experience playing video games: Asteroids, Elevator Action, Frogger, Ms. Pac Man, Pac Man, Space Invaders and Donkey Kong. Well, it's too late to complain now. (Thanks Bertrand!)

Donkey Kong

More arcade nostalgia: The Video Game Revolution and 1980 games.

Weird Fantasy #7

I never had a science fiction pulp book on my own hands, but in the last years I became an admirer of them, through several sites who kindly shared collections of those vintage books. EC Science Fiction Comics is one of those amusing sites. They have a nice collection of science fiction comic books released by EC Comics.

Entertaining Comics, more commonly known as EC Comics, was an American publisher of comic books specializing in crime fiction, horror fiction, satire, military fiction and science fiction from the 1940s through the 1950s, until censorship pressures prompted it to concentrate on the seminal humor magazine Mad.

The collection is composed of four galleries: Explore the galleries of cover of Weird Fantasy, Weird Science, Incredible Science Fiction and Weird Science-Fantasy. (via SciFi Scanner)

More posts with sci-fi comic book covers: Life on Mars, The Science Fiction Art of H. W. McCauley,L'univers des Bédés Elvifrance, The Visual Index of Science Fiction Cover art, Comics, pulp and sci-fi books, Scans of Eerie Publications and Star Trek Comics.

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