Showing posts with label archive.org. Show all posts
Showing posts with label archive.org. Show all posts

Monday, October 12, 2015

Central European costume, 19th C




No caption. Shepherd on stilts.

From Central European costume part 2 (Miscellaneous engraved plates of Central European costume and fashion, collected and pasted into scrapbooks)

(Source: archive.org)
Shepherd on stilts.
From Central European costume (Miscellaneous engraved plates of Central European costume and fashion, collected and pasted into scrapbooks)
Permalink
Fish sellers.

From Central European costume part 2 (Miscellaneous engraved plates of Central European costume and fashion, collected and pasted into scrapbooks)

(Source: archive.org)
Fish sellers.
Permalink
Woman from Tatenberg.

From Central European costume part 2 (Miscellaneous engraved plates of Central European costume and fashion, collected and pasted into scrapbooks)

(Source: archive.org)
Woman from Tatenberg.
Permalink
People from Störort.

From Central European costume part 2 (Miscellaneous engraved plates of Central European costume and fashion, collected and pasted into scrapbooks)

(Source: archive.org)
People from Störort.
Permalink
Cook.

From Central European costume part 2 (Miscellaneous engraved plates of Central European costume and fashion, collected and pasted into scrapbooks)

(Source: archive.org)
Cook.
Permalink
From the Nuremberg area.

From Central European costume part 2 (Miscellaneous engraved plates of Central European costume and fashion, collected and pasted into scrapbooks)

(Source: archive.org)
From the Nuremberg area.



Found this jewel at archive.org this weekend, original digitalization was done by Glasgow School of Art. Not too much information, the web only provides very basic info like the number of pages (70) and… the camera used for this job (canon 5D) ¿? Well… investigation this time has not provided more data (not even the Author’s name).

Only text provided by the web is “Miscellaneous full-colour engraved plates of Central European costume and fashion, collected and pasted into scrapbooks”.