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Notify the uploader with: {{subst:add-author-I|1=Monochrome landscape painting (black-gray-white).Comité des Étudiants Américains de l'École des Beaux-Arts, un-numbered post card, by an artist not yet identified.WWI postcard art.Wittig collection.item 37.reverse.scan.jpg}}
Harry Whittier Frees (1879–1953) was an American photographer who created novelty postcards, magazine spreads, and children's books based on his photographs of posed animals. [ 1 ] Early life
Openclipart, also called Open Clip Art Library, is an online media repository of free-content vector clip art.The project hosts over 160,000 free graphics and has billed itself as "the largest community of artists making the best free original clipart for you to use for absolutely any reason".
Postcards that are folded, so that they have at least 4 pages. Most folded cards need to be mailed inside an envelope, but there are some that can be mailed directly. Ōura Church, hand-tinted postcard Hand-tinted Black-and-white images were tinted by hand using watercolors and stencils. Hold-to-Light
A typical 1940s–early 1950s black-and-white real photo postcard. A real photo postcard (RPPC) is a continuous-tone photographic image printed on postcard stock. The term recognizes a distinction between the real photo process and the lithographic or offset printing processes employed in the manufacture of most postcard images.
File:The Book of Adventure Games.jpg; File:The Curious Sofa.jpg; File:The dinner party book cover.jpg; File:The Elements of Typographic Style.jpg; File:The Emperor's New Clods.jpg; File:The Invention of Art A Cultural History front cover.jpg; File:The Madams are Restless cover.jpg; File:The Object-Lesson.jpg; File:The Secret Art of Dr. Seuss ...
Coon cards were produced by white manufacturers for white customers [4] and depicted an array of African Americans stereotypes common to the popular media of the day. The caricature was part of the popular appeal of the postcards as "image content was clearly driven by free market forces, rather than the intention to present an accurate ...
A true black-and-white image on a cabinet card is likely to have been produced in the 1890s or after 1900. The last cabinet cards were produced in the 1920s, even as late as 1924. Owing to the larger image size, the cabinet card steadily increased in popularity during the second half of the 1860s and into the 1870s, replacing the carte de ...