We’ll take a cup of kindness yet

This carte-de-visite photo has no information on it about who took it or where. I found it in Massachusetts, but assume it must have originated in Europe.  In the 1860s and 1870s, European photographers began employing young people from their communities to dress in national costumes and pose against studio backdrops designed to represent local... Continue Reading →

Who are these men?

This post is a work in progress.  At the time that I published it, I hadn't managed to identify any of the men in the photo.  A resourceful reader in the UK, Michael, quickly identified two of them.  The man seated in the middle of the second row is Frederic Thesiger, Viscount Chelmsford, who was... Continue Reading →

Charles and Susan Crippen

The portrait above is an ambrotype, or photograph on glass, by an unknown photographer.  Ambrotypes were introduced in the United States in the early 1850s and remained popular for about a decade.  They were simpler and less costly to produce than daguerreotypes.  Eventually they were replaced by tintypes and albumen paper prints (such as the... Continue Reading →

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