Pretty Lovely
link
extranuance:

c.1910s, postcard

extranuance:

c.1910s, postcard

link
I think I’d go back to writing poetry again if I had one of these.

AntiqueTypewriters.com has a great section on the Crandall New Model, “one of the most beautiful typewriters ever made.”

It has a wonderful curved and ornate Victorian design and is lavishly  decorated with hand painted roses, accented with inlaid mother-of-pearl!
Lucien S. Crandall was born in Broome County New York in 1844. He would  become one of the great early typewriter pioneers during the 1860s and  1870s. He patented perhaps ten typewriters with six or so being  manufactured. All of his designs are very intriguing and brilliantly  imagined machines. The Crandall - New Model was his third typewriter to  be manufactured but the first to have some success in sales.
The Crandall was the first typewriter to print from a single element or  “type-sleeve”, well before IBM’s ‘Golf ball’ of 1961. The Crandall’s  type-sleeve is a cylinder, about the size of your finger (see photo  below), which rotates and rises up one or two positions before striking  the roller, achieving 84 characters with only 28 keys. The type-sleeve  is easy to remove, allowing for change of font style and character size.

Crandall, New Model (Thanks, Antique typewriter Collector!)

(Image via BoingBoing)

I think I’d go back to writing poetry again if I had one of these.

AntiqueTypewriters.com has a great section on the Crandall New Model, “one of the most beautiful typewriters ever made.”

It has a wonderful curved and ornate Victorian design and is lavishly decorated with hand painted roses, accented with inlaid mother-of-pearl!

Lucien S. Crandall was born in Broome County New York in 1844. He would become one of the great early typewriter pioneers during the 1860s and 1870s. He patented perhaps ten typewriters with six or so being manufactured. All of his designs are very intriguing and brilliantly imagined machines. The Crandall - New Model was his third typewriter to be manufactured but the first to have some success in sales.

The Crandall was the first typewriter to print from a single element or “type-sleeve”, well before IBM’s ‘Golf ball’ of 1961. The Crandall’s type-sleeve is a cylinder, about the size of your finger (see photo below), which rotates and rises up one or two positions before striking the roller, achieving 84 characters with only 28 keys. The type-sleeve is easy to remove, allowing for change of font style and character size.

Crandall, New Model (Thanks, Antique typewriter Collector!)

(Image via BoingBoing)

link

historicalfashion:

Blue silk corset, V&A, c. 1864

This corset is perfection.

link
From BoingBoing:

This undated photo from an unattributed newspaper shows the facade of a  Danish clothier that advertised its overstock coats by covering the  building from top to bottom with over a thousand coats. The display was  so successful the police had to come and clear the crowd, but the  merchant still cleared out his overstock.

(Image via BoingBoing)

From BoingBoing:

This undated photo from an unattributed newspaper shows the facade of a Danish clothier that advertised its overstock coats by covering the building from top to bottom with over a thousand coats. The display was so successful the police had to come and clear the crowd, but the merchant still cleared out his overstock.

(Image via BoingBoing)

link
Love.
(Image via How to Be A Retronaut)

Love.

(Image via How to Be A Retronaut)

link
theshipthatflew:

bildwerk:The Clark Sisters by Frances Benjamin Johnston 1850


My kind of crowd.

theshipthatflew:

bildwerk:The Clark Sisters by Frances Benjamin Johnston 1850

My kind of crowd.

link
Just in time for Halloween… an incredibly detailed abandoned Lego Victorian house by Mike Doyle.
(Image via How to Be a Retronaut)

Just in time for Halloween… an incredibly detailed abandoned Lego Victorian house by Mike Doyle.

(Image via How to Be a Retronaut)

link
Serious knockers. Love it!
(Image via How to be A Retronaut)

Serious knockers. Love it!

(Image via How to be A Retronaut)

link
I loved The Fingersmith!

I loved The Fingersmith!

link
stellar-raven:

Man Inside Glass Bottle (c. 1888) - John C. Higgins, photographer

stellar-raven:

Man Inside Glass Bottle (c. 1888) - John C. Higgins, photographer