Girl in Halloween Costume, Pennsylvania, 1916
Keith Richards' Mother
A Cat in a Knot in a Tree
Packard Car Cats (Full Version)
Packard Car Cats
Woman Holding a Cat
Scolding the Cat? (Detail)
Scolding the Cat?
Looking Through the News
Breaking the News, Lititz Express, July 4, 1907
Meouw! A Happy Birthday to You!
Muttie the Acrobatic Cat
Aunt Sue and Uncle John at Cozy Nook Farm (Cropped…
Aunt Sue and Uncle John at Cozy Nook Farm
Best Wishes for the Coming Year, 1948
Mein erster Schultag / Ostern 1966 (My First Day o…
The Rabbits Aren't Really That Big
Merry Christmas from the Hughes, 1963
The Grumpus Family
Fresh Lake Farm's Mascots (Full Version)
Fresh Lake Farm's Mascots
Milking the Euclid Beach Cow
Eleanor Henderson and Her Dog in Eva, Oklahoma, Oc…
Here's Hoping Santa Won't Forget You
Merry Halloween from Brunswick, Maine, 1943
Merry Halloween from Brunswick, Maine, 1943 (Cropp…
I Am Honored to Be Your First Cat—Socks
Posing among the Posies
Girl with Bicycle, Dog, and Puppies
Better Than Haying
Better Than Haying (Full Version)
Girl, Dog, and Man in Front of a House
Girl, Dog, and Man in Front of a House (Cropped)
Spinning a Tale of Dogs in Glasses
Bucolic Reflections
Bucolic Reflections (Cropped)
Bucolic Reflections (Cropped and Rotated)
Playing Indian and Fishing with a Dog in a Rowboat
Playing Indian and Fishing with a Dog in a Rowboat…
Fritz and His Easter Bonnet
Fritz and His Easter Bonnet (Cropped)
Fritz and His Easter Bonnet (Detail)
A Man and His Dog, 1914
How to Keep Your Dog Off of the Bed
A Big Dog and a Little Kid
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" Cartes postales et photos historiques de partout dans le monde / Historische Postkarten und Photos aus aller Welt "
" Cartes postales et photos historiques de partout dans le monde / Historische Postkarten und Photos aus aller Welt "
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All My Christmas Dreams Came True
"All my dreams came true."
Info on the back of this postcard: "Genuine Frees Animal Series. Photographs of real live pets. No. 765. Christmas Comics. 6 designs....Publ'd by the Nyce Manufacturing Co., Vernfield, Pa."
This printed postcard reproduces a photo by Harry Whittier Frees (1879-1953), who posed cats, dogs, and other animals in amusing scenes like this for magazines, books, and other publications. Mary L. Weigley's fascinating article, "Introducing Harry Whittier Frees, World-Famous Animal Photographer," which originally appeared in Pennsylvania Heritage, Spring 2014, describes how Frees captured these images:
"Frees's photographs were uncommon because he used live animals and no tricks were involved... He attired them in dresses, work uniforms, smocks, shawls, robes, and aprons made by his mother or his housekeeper Annie Edelman. The clothes were held in place by pins so the animals could be quickly dressed and undressed. They were then posed in human situations--ironing clothes, cooking on an old-fashioned cast-iron stove, hanging laundry, playing a piano, pumping water, even casting votes in a wooden ballot box! The work was challenging, time-consuming, and nerve-wracking. It caused Frees so much anxiety that he photographed his furry subjects for only three months a year."
Weigley's article goes on to tell about the popularity of Frees's photos and his success in publishing books (such as Animal Mother Goose, with Characters Photographed from Life, which came out in 1921) and providing illustrations for magazines, advertisements, and picture postcards.
Sadly, though, Frees died alone and ended up in an unmarked grave (check out the article for the full story). His imaginative photos, however, continue to delight us today.
Here's another postcard from the "Christmas Comics" series:
Info on the back of this postcard: "Genuine Frees Animal Series. Photographs of real live pets. No. 765. Christmas Comics. 6 designs....Publ'd by the Nyce Manufacturing Co., Vernfield, Pa."
This printed postcard reproduces a photo by Harry Whittier Frees (1879-1953), who posed cats, dogs, and other animals in amusing scenes like this for magazines, books, and other publications. Mary L. Weigley's fascinating article, "Introducing Harry Whittier Frees, World-Famous Animal Photographer," which originally appeared in Pennsylvania Heritage, Spring 2014, describes how Frees captured these images:
"Frees's photographs were uncommon because he used live animals and no tricks were involved... He attired them in dresses, work uniforms, smocks, shawls, robes, and aprons made by his mother or his housekeeper Annie Edelman. The clothes were held in place by pins so the animals could be quickly dressed and undressed. They were then posed in human situations--ironing clothes, cooking on an old-fashioned cast-iron stove, hanging laundry, playing a piano, pumping water, even casting votes in a wooden ballot box! The work was challenging, time-consuming, and nerve-wracking. It caused Frees so much anxiety that he photographed his furry subjects for only three months a year."
Weigley's article goes on to tell about the popularity of Frees's photos and his success in publishing books (such as Animal Mother Goose, with Characters Photographed from Life, which came out in 1921) and providing illustrations for magazines, advertisements, and picture postcards.
Sadly, though, Frees died alone and ended up in an unmarked grave (check out the article for the full story). His imaginative photos, however, continue to delight us today.
Here's another postcard from the "Christmas Comics" series:
Smiley Derleth, have particularly liked this photo
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Fans of Frees will, of course, want to take a look at the dressed-up cats in your 'Do keep well' postcard, too.
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