Looking more like "Sweeney Todd" than your average barber, owner Jeff T. Hill poses for his RPPC advertising his trade! I'm guessing late 40's, early 50's. The only RPPC I've run across with the photographer in the picture...do you see him in the mirror?
A sometimes rambling blog about my postcard collection, Mostly vintage, some new, a bunch of linens with a touch of chrome.
Sunday, January 20, 2013
The Hollywood Bowl
The Bowl officially opened on July 11, 1922 on the site of a natural amphitheater formerly known as the Daisy Dell. The "bowl" refers to the shape of the concave hillside the amphitheater is carved into.
In the early 20's an architect was contracted to regrade the Bowl, providing permanent
seating. These improvements did
provide increased capacity (the all-time record for attendance was set in 1936,
when 26,410 people crowded into the Bowl), but were otherwise disappointing, as
the regrading noticeably degraded the natural acoustics
For the 1927 season, Lloyd
Wright (son of Frank) built a pyramidal shell, with a vaguely Southwestern
look, out of left-over lumber from a production of Robin Hood. This was
generally regarded as the best shell the Bowl ever had from an acoustic
standpoint; unfortunately, its appearance was deemed too avant-garde, and it
was demolished at the end of the season.
For the 1929 season, the
Allied Architects built the shell that stood until 2003, using a transite skin over a metal frame. Its
acoustics, though not nearly as good as those of the Lloyd Wright shells, were
deemed satisfactory at first, and its clean lines and white, almost-semicircular
arches were copied for music shells elsewhere

While I don’t have an
up-to-date postcard of the Bowl,
I “borrowed” this photo to show what it looks
like today.
Wednesday, January 2, 2013
Happy New Year!
The cat made me think it looks more like a Halloween...
but it's the only card HNY's card I could find!
Monday, December 24, 2012
Merry Christmas!
A couple of different Christmas themed postcards. The "Hollywood Christmas Snow" is an advertising card from the 50's while the Macy's Santa card (40's photo?) is a Fotofolio postcard published the 80's.
Monday, December 3, 2012
The Denver Zephyrs
The Denver Zephyrs of 1936 boasted a 12-car length
and were pulled by a twin-unit shovel-nose power car. They featured mahogany
paneling in the lounge, hall, and dining areas, and technical innovations
included a blue "night light" setting for sleeping car reading lamps
and 110 volt outlets for electric shavers in the dressing-rooms. I love these trains!
Sunday, November 25, 2012
This Is The Place for Me
Postmarked 1913, the card has a trademark TB in a circle. Could be an early Tichnor Brothers who began publishing in 1912. Seven years later, the 18th Amendment was ratified, no doubt because of folks like this!
Thursday, November 15, 2012
"We Bathe The World"
"A Part of what goes on within the Famous Hot Springs Bath Houses"...I'm not really sure what IS going on here, but I think this is one strange postcard. Makes me think more of an asylum that a spa. The backs has the saying, "We Bathe The World"
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