Vintage Snapshots

the wondrous world of vernacular photography

5-Cent Diner

Vintage photo of a city street with diner, dated 1937

Five-Cent Diner with Car, 1937

This photo is dated August 1937 on the stamp on the rear – the year the Great Depression deepened after actually having eased somewhat in the previous few years. By the following year unemployment would hit 19%. I don’t know if five cents was a great deal back then for what they were offering, but I would imagine it must have been a pretty good price or they would not have featured it so prominently. In any case I like the directness of the sign: what else, really, did you need to know?

Apart from that, though, the photo is just pretty stunning for a snapshot, I think: the lines, the angle, the light, the lone automobile, the hulking building looming over the hamburger stand, and where the 5-cent sign ended up being placed compositionally. But was the photographer perhaps actually making a photo of the large building, and the corner of the diner just ended up getting in the way?

Animal Menagerie

Eerie doll presides over animal menagerie pose

Doll + animal friends, circa 1920s

Just one of my favorite, oddball shots. Must have had to snap that one pretty quick, I’d guess.

Christmas is a Time of Peace

Vintage 1970s color photo of 2 kids at Christmastime

Peace, circa 1970s

I wonder if she tired of that guy after a while.

One Guy Who Isn’t Afraid to Ask for Directions

Vintage photograph of dog in 1930s automobile

Conversation outside Acme Machinery Co., circa 1930s

Fly Me

Vintage photograph of a woman in curious circumstances

Wing woman, circa 1920s

I have a strange fascination with photos that feature people against background elements that seem as if they could be coming out of their heads. With this one I first thought of some sort of aerial or antenna, but also a biplane (if you ignore that third level around her collarbone area). Call me crazy. As something of a photographer, though, I can attest to how hard it is to always be aware of every last detail when clicking the shutter – probably especially with a camera that may have required a little more attention in terms of setting the exposure, etc. than the more automatic models a person would tend to use today. But still…

Schlitz & Furnished Rooms

Vintage photograph of 1930s city scene with Schlitz sign

Car + signs, circa 1930s

I always like a good city scene, and this shot qualifies as one, I think. A lot of it comes down to those signs, of course…nicely framed against the sky.

The Leaning Family

Vintage photo of a family at home at Christmas

Left-leaning family, 1950s

A family posing at Christmastime. There are a million of these, but this one just has that certain something in my view.

Old-Fashioned Names: Fern

 

Vintage photograph of a woman named "Fern."

Fern Steinbock, 1920s

Old photos often have the name of the subject(s) jotted down on the back or, sometimes – as here – the front, and those names can be just great. I have one somewhere (I’d have to find it or I would have posted it along with this shot) of four people posing, all identified on the rear and all bearing absolutely classic old-fashioned names. Not a single “David” or “Susan” or “Michael” or anything remotely like that among the lot.

“Fern” is definitely one of those names that has a classic ring to it. One site ranking the popularity of baby names says that its last year in the top 1000 names was 1961, but that it peaked in 1916, when it was number 152. I did come across a current Fern, however, and her account was kind of worth passing on, I thought. I like her spirit.

“Hey, my name is Fern, and at 16 years of age, I’ve only met one other Fern in my lifetime, and she was an 80 year old friend of my grandmothers. I’ve actually grown to like the name, but personally, if I was a mother, I’d go with something a little more conventional. Fern automatically singled me out from other kids, and there were some less-than-sweet children who made their opinions of my name known in elementary and middle school. I’ve actually found it easier to go by my middle name…

As you get older though, the teasing seems to die down.
Ugh, Charlotte’s Web comments were among the most resented! I can’t say how many clever boys and girls asked me ‘Hey, Fern, where’s Wilbur?’
But, in all the name has become almost a positive thing.”

Light Leaks

Vintage photo of men with a guitar, with light leak.

Men with guitar, likely 1920s

You can now find tutorials on creating light leaks with Photoshop. Now how can that be anything like a real, honest-to-goodness one that arrived unbidden? This one, I think, adds a certain poetry to the image.

Hungry Bears

Vintage photograph of black bears begging for  food from automobile

Black bear w/ cub in search of a handout – or trying to steal a car

Vintage photos of bears begging for food from cars in parks like Yellowstone are fairly common. The practice seems to have started surprisingly early on, according to a site dealing with the history of such things at Yellowstone: “In 1910, the first accounts of black bears begging for human food handouts along park roads were reported. By the 1920s roadside ‘panhandling’ by black bears for human food handouts was common… As park visitation and the number of bear-human conflicts began to increase, park managers became more concerned with the situation. Between 1931 and 1959, an average of 48 park visitors were injured by bears and an average of 138 cases of bear-caused property damage were reported each year.”

This shot shows what may have been a sort of training session, with the mother observing as the little one is unable to even reach the window. The photographer seems to have been not that fearful, as he/she was a little over half a car-length from the action…perhaps unaware that about 48 people would be mauled that year. (Wildlife photographer Harry Morse, who visited Yellowstone during that era, remarks that “As a child I thought it was great that bears begged for food along the roads of Yellowstone. Park officials kept a lid on the annual number of people getting mauled and when it happened you didn’t hear about it.”) The practice is, of course, now banned – along with just about everything else in today’s world. Here is a nice color shot from National Geographic showing a couple of bears being photographed by onlookers.

 

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