Showing posts with label typography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label typography. Show all posts

Saturday, 10 August 2013

Vintage portraits

And now for something completely different: vintage photography. I love vintage shops and thrift stores. Today I went to an adorable vintage shop called  'Het Grote Avontuur' (The Big Adventure) here in Amsterdam. It's a super cool shop with lots of stuff from earlier times. The basement walls were adorned with old pictures, postcards and geographical maps.


I bought three small portraits, they're about 6.5 x 10.3 cm (2.5 x 4.1 inches) of three different ladies. None of them are smiling, but that might have to do with the long exposure times.


The darkest picture might be the oldest one, but since the cards are not dated I'm not quite sure. The lady has dark eyes, doesn't look very tall in comparison with the cabinet on the left. She's wearing a 19th century dress with a dark front piece and cuffs. The pleats at the front of her skirt look a bit bizarre to me, as such embellishments of the time were usually at the back. She doesn't look straight into the camera and she's wearing a ring on her left hand. Was this a portrait for her husband or fiancee who was away from home a lot? I can't decipher the origins of the photograph, but the language looks German.


The second portrait is of a woman who looks younger than the first and she doesn't wear a ring on either hand. She's wearing what looks like dark velvet dress with a double row of buttons at the front. She looks friendly and has a hint of a smile on her lips. What I notice about her hair is that she has bangs, maybe the latest thing at that time?
This portrait is oval shaped and it looks like the photograph is later glued on a different card, because the shape of it doesn't quite fit. The words below the portrait are illegible.


The back however has fantastic typography. The lady is probably English, since Whitehaven is located in the county of Cumbria, England.


And the third lady is photographed by Johann Gebhardt in Thurnau, Bavaria in Germany. The edges of her portrait are faded out and she's wearing something that looks a bit Oriental to me. Her bun is not low in the neck as the first lady has, but higher up at the back of her head. Her head is turned away about 45 degrees from the photographer and she looks slightly up. That seems to be a strange pose, maybe she didn't feel comfortable when her photo was taken.
The paper is the whitest of the three and is also glued onto a card.

Saturday, 18 May 2013

'The Photobook' by Dick Boer


And now for something completely different.
I like thrifting, and most of all I like going to the thrift store in the small town where my friend H. lives. Every time we go in there, we come out with the loveliest things. And they still have good quality vintage for a low price.


This book for example. It's a Dutch book on photography by Dick Boer. This particular copy is from a 9th print and published in 1955. It is a classical book on photography and it explains everything from basic technique to cameras and composition.

The art of leaving out

I haven't read the book yet from cover to cover and I probably won't, but it's lovely to leaf through. I love the typography and the language of those days.

Chaos or order?

Most of the pictures are shown in black & white.

The art of leaving out is very important in Miksang photography. After you experienced a flash, you look longer and longer to see what it is that you actually saw. Then you determine what is supposed to be in the image and what not. It's a process I often take too quickly.

Friday, 17 May 2013

University of Amsterdam

 I started on a project at the University of Amsterdam for two days a week. This university is situated in the middle of city centre. This week was my first week and I am so excited! During my first lunch bread I walked around and all the pictures below are taken within a few blocks of where I work. The area is full of little shops and cafés. I love it! 

Logo of the University of Amsterdam

Popular café Van Zuylen.

Menu of Van Zuylen

Villa Zeezicht has the best apple pie in town, so they say. I will soon try it out myself.

A modern clothing shop.

Café 't Sluisje.
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