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Luminous-Lint
  Newsletter for Collectors - Vol 15.2June 14, 2021 

Home • Photographers • Online Exhibitions 
Contents • Alphabetical • Styles and movements • Articles 
Visual Indexes • Galleries & Dealers • Timelines • Techniques 
Library • Contact us

Welcome

Welcome to another Luminous-Lint Newsletter. 
  

Thanks for your support

 
To all Luminous-Lint subscribers and contributors I'd like to say thanks for your continuing support.  
  

PWW - Photohistory Without Walls

 
We are all accustomed to seeing photographs hung on walls in galleries and museums. In the days of COVID-19 with limited travel, closures and restrictions on entry our access to seeing photographs has been greatly reduced and there is no real substitute for seeing original works. For most of the world's population seeing original photographs has never been possible. Books and journals were always a substitute for originals and still are but we all crave the shared experience of an exhibition.
 

Alfred Stieglitz, Kasebier Exhibition at 291, 1905 (ca), Photogravure, 5.5 x 6.5 ins, Archive Farms, LL/44806

With the arrival of the Internet museums started tentatively to put examples from their collections online. At first these museum websites were crude but they've progressed over the last thirty years into highly sophisticated cultural resources and marketing tools.
 
The CD-ROM "The Virtual Museum" released by Apple in 1992 created a somewhat primitive virtual environment that mimicked a museum where the viewer could wander seeing digital representations of objects. The "Guggenheim Virtual Museum" of 1999 combined multiple geographically separated Guggenhem museums into a single digital entity breaking down spatial barriers between objects. The immense increases of processor power, storage and bandwidth have allowed networked electronic games and animation to progress at an astounding rate.
 
Google Arts & Culture is well-worth exploring in depth. It is based on collections of high-resolution scans of art from around the world and supplemented with augmented reality walks through museums and online image libraries. Sophisticated search algorithms allow the user to enter a labyrinth of navigational possibilities. The website suggests connections to visually similar works that it would be next-to-impossible for even the most knowledgeable curator. It is the power of collective data, information, knowledge and wisdom pulled together by AI and machine learning that are altering the ways we explore myriad interconnections between cultural objects.
 

Underwood & Underwood, Pyramids of Gizeh, [Egypt Through the Stereoscope: A Journey through the Land of the Pharaohs], 1900, Map, Private collection of Noja Asner, LL/80302 [This map shows where stereographs were taken from and their coverage.]

 
So why is this important for Luminous-Lint and the ways we explore, research and enjoy photohistory?
 
Luminous-Lint uses 111,346 examples from 3,743 collections around the world to create frameworks for navigating through and researching photohistory. Recently when I was working on incorporating stereographs into photohistory I realized that I'd added around 150 million additional links into Luminous-Lint to do this. Within Luminous-Lint there is unrivalled connectivity for exploring photohistory.
 
With this we have an opportunity to envisage "Photohistory Without Walls" (PWW).
 
I'm proposing we use the data on Luminous-Lint to create a well-organized cultural website of limitless interconnected virtual rooms that allow the user to explore. It will be a way of seeing historical trends, photographic techniques, temporal patterns and themes within coherent and ever-improving frameworks.
 
I have the frameworks and data but who has the vision and skills to support this? 
  

The Stereographs Project - An update

 

Fred Boissonnas, Self-portrait in mirror, 1900, Photograph, Creative Commons - Wikipedia, LL/94609

 
As I mentioned in the last Luminous-Lint Newsletter (Vol. 15.1, March 8, 2021) the early release of the Stererographs Project includes:.
  1. 12,433 stereo photographers, of which 9,205 operated in the USA.
     
  2. Stereo photographer indexes now include 39,593 alternative names.
     
  3. The disambiguation of photographers with similar names is underway.
     
  4. Geographical indexes of stereo photographers by countries and states have been created and standardized.
     
  5. Visual indexes to backlists are now accessible.
Since March 2021 the Stereographs Project has been updated...
  1. Almost 10,000 stereographs have been added to Luminous-Lint. These include, fronts, backmarks and backlists.
     
  2. The 10,000 stereographs have been indexed with locations allowing easy access. Public access to this will be made available in the coming weeks.
     
  3. Stereograph examples are now incorporated into each theme on Luminous-lint.
Improvements to the examples and indexes will take place in the coming months. These improvements ensure that stereographs are fully integrated into the many histories of photography.
 
Thanks to all of you who have graciously provided images, biographies and support. 
  
Here are some links for you to get a sense of the Stereographs Project - have fun and let me know about any errors or clarifications. 
  
Introduction
Photographers
Locations
Themes
Backlists (A bit slow this one.) 
  
This is part of an encyclopedic project and I look forward to collaborating with organisations and collectors who wish to explore the best ways of sharing information on stereographs and their photographers to ensure they are embedded within photohistory. 
  

Photohistory Quests - Progress to date (14 June 2021)

 
  

Fritz Henle, The Art Critic, Washington Square, New York City, 1947, Gelatin silver print, Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center at the University of Texas at Austin, © Fritz Henle Estate, Image courtesy of Harry Ransom Center., LL/31619
 
  
The Photohistory Quests being carried out on Facebook are both enjoyable and informative. Many examples from private collections around the world have filled in gaps and rounded out our knowledge of obscure subjects. To date over 400 Photohistory Quests have been completed and thousands of photographs have arrived in. Thanks to everybody who is participating. 
  
PHOTOHISTORY QUESTS: 
  
FIRST SERIES: 1-100 
  
1. Arms & Armour (29 March 2020)
2. Fruits (30 March 2020)
3. Vegetables (31 March 2020)
4. Birds (1 April 2020)
5. Clouds (2 April 2020)
6. Lightning and the damage it creates (3 April 2020)
7. Poppies (4 April 2020)
8. Butterflies and moths (5 April 2020)
9. Beds and bedrooms (6 April 2020)
10. Buddhism (7 April 2020)
11. Glaciers (8 April 2020)
12: Balloon and kite photography (9 April 2020)
13. Architectural models and drawings (10 April 2020)
14: Scotland: Rosslyn Chapel / Roslin Chapel (11 April 2020)
15. Events (12 April 2020)
16. Alcohol (13 April 2020)
17. Extinct animals (14 April 2020)
18. Ferns (15 April 2020)
19. Text and calligraphy (16 April 2020)
20. The Temple of Vesta, Rome (17 April 2020)
21. Umbrellas and parasols (18 April 2020)
22. Skulls (19 April 2020)
23. Archaeological finds (20 April 2020)
24. Insects - not butterflies or moths (21 April 2020)
25. Photomicroscopy (22 April 2020)
26. Judaism and Judaica (23 April 2020)
27. Non-architectural models (24 April 2020)
28. Domestic lighting, candlesticks, oil lamps and chandeliers (25 April 2020)
29. Stamps, wet, blind and embossed (26 April 2020)
30. Glass and crystal (27 April 2020)
31. Pottery, china, porcelain and ceramics (28 April 2020)
32. Collage and photomontage (29 April 2020)
33. Fountains (30 April 2020)
34. Iran (1 May 2020)
35. Charity (2 May 2020)
36. Italian Street Musicians - Pifferari (3 May 2020)
37. Vacant chairs (4 May 2020)
38. Landscape reflections in water (5 May 2020)
39. Paintings showing photographs and albums (6 May 2020)
40. Shop and business exteriors (7 May 2020)
41. Miners and mining (8 May 2020)
42. Construction of bridges, viaducts and aqueducts (9 May 2020)
43. Occupational portraits of women (10 May 2020)
44. Mosques (11 May 2020)
45. Roses (12 May 2020)
46. Egypt: Wall art, bas-relief, hieroglyphics and graffiti (13 May 2020)
47. Packaging photographs (14 May 2020)
48. St. Peter's Cathedral, Rome (15 May 2020)
49. Bas-relief sculpture (16 May 2020)
50. Hunters, their weapons and dogs (17 May 2020)
51. Fans (18 May 2020)
52. Central or Middle Asia (19 May 2020)
53. Counter-stamped coins, tokens and premiums for photographic studios (20 May 2020)
54. Jesus Christ (21 May 2020)
55. Water carriers (22 May 2020)
56. Anthropometry (23 May 2020)
57. Commercial catalogues for photographers (24 May 2020)
58. Singapore and the Malay Peninsula (25 May 2020)
59. Elephants (26 May 2020)
60. Lions (27 May 2020)
61. The Georgian Military Road (28 May 2020)
62. Playing cards (29 May 2020)
63. Sumo wrestling (30 May 2020)
64. The Cedars of Lebanon (31 May 2020)
65. Bread, flour based products, bakers and bakeries (1 June 2020)
66. Illustrations (not photos) showing women photographers (2 June 2020)
67. Cutlery - Knives, forks and spoons (3 June 2020)
68. Manufacturers and painters of studio backgrounds (4 June 2020)
69. The Balkans - excluding Greece (5 June 2020)
70. Patent illustrations related to photography (6 June 2020)
71. Maps and photography (7 June 2020)
72. Surveyors and cartographers (8 June 2020)
73. Peoples of the Arctic (9 June 2020)
74. Megalethoscopes and Alethoscopes (10 June 2020)
75. Work benches and darkrooms in photography studios (11 June 2020)
76. Burma (12 June 2020)
77. Cambodia (13 June 2020)
78. Vietnam (14 June 2020)
79. Armenia (15 June 2020)
80. Tableaux vivants (16 June 2020)
81. Magnesium light (17 June 2020)
82. Non-English language books and magazines with tipped-in photographs (18 June 2020)
83. Volcanoes and volcanic eruptions (19 June 2020)
84. Hand-painted landscapes and cityscapes devoid of people (20 June 2020)
85. Advertising albums (21 June 2020)
86. Tea (22 June 2020)
87. X-rays of animals (23 June 2020)
88. Bathrooms (24 June 2020)
89. Rubber trees, the collection of rubber, processing and products (25 June 2020)
90. Oil industry outside the USA (26 June 2020)
91. Eggs (27 June 2020)
92. Floods (28 June 2020)
93. Horses posing in front of painted backgrounds and painted walls (29 June 2020)
94. Airbrushing photographs (30 June 2020)
95. The internal geometry of bridges (1 July 2020)
96. Decorative ironwork (2 July 2020)
97. Cyanotypes of factories, workshops and industrial products (3 July 2020)
98. The constrained - handcuffs, leg irons, stocks and cangues (4 July 2020)
99. Cyanotypes of objects (5 July 2020)
100. Catacombs (6 July 2020) 
  
SECOND SERIES: 101-200 
  
101. Egypt: The Sphinx (7 July 2020)
102. The Great Wall of China (8 July 2020)
103. Magazines and journals with tipped-in photographs (9 July 2020)
104. Stonehenge (10 July 2020)
105. Plowing / Ploughing (11 July 2020)
106. Pigs (12 July 2020)
107. Oceanographic research (13 July 2020)
108. Hypnotism (14 July 2020)
109. Jerusalem: Valley of Jehoshaphat - Kidron Valley (15 July 2020)
110. Printing frames (16 July 2020)
111. Resellers of photographs and distribution chains (17 July 2020)
112. Mecca and the Haj (18 July 2020)
113. Footwear (19 July 2020)
114. Photographs with grids for copying and transfer (20 July 2020)
115. Medical specimens (21 July 2020)
116. The Anglo-Egyptian War (1882), the naval bombardment of Alexandria, the Battle of Tel el-Kebir, the key figures and the veterans (22 July 2020)
117. Samoa (23 July 2020)
118. Chile (24 July 2020)
119. Business stationary related to photography (25 July 2020)
120. Earthquakes (26 July 2020)
121. Poland (27 July 2020)
122. Orchids (28 July 2020)
123. Mashrabiya, projecting oriel windows enclosed with carved wood latticework, of Cairo and the Arab World (29 July 2020)
124. Viewpoints - looking up and looking down (30 July 2020)
125. Caribbean and surrounding islands (31 July 2020)
126. Utah: Devil's Slide (1 August 2020)
127. London, Trafalgar Square (2 August 2020)
128. Thomas Houseworth - Houseworth's Celebrities (3 August 2020)
129. Postage stamps and photography (4 August 2020)
130. Beirut (5 August 2020)
131. Telescopes (6 August 2020)
132. Cheese (7 August 2020)
133. Barbers and hairdressers (8 August 2020)
134. Second Schleswig War / Prussian-Danish War (1864) (10 August 2020)
135. Hung game (11 August 2020)
136. Algiers (12 August 2020)
137. Libya (13 August 2020)
138. Wales (14 August 2020)
139. Commercial, and amateur, cartes de visite portraits taken outside but next to the house (15 August 2020)
140. Stereoviews of archaeological sites (16 August 2020)
141. Advertising and promoting photographic products by linking them to scientific expeditions (17 August 2020)
142. Memory and photomontage (18 August 2020)
143. Grapes and grapevines (19 August 2020)
144. Antarctica (20 August 2020)
145. Blacksmiths (21 August 2020)
146. Posters for photographic exhibitions (22 August 2020)
147. Fotoscultura (Mexican folk art) (23 August 2020)
148. Iceland (24 August 2020)
149. Cangues (25 August 2020)
150. Arcade photo booths (26 August 2020)
151. The manufacture of photography-related items (27 August 2020)
152. Space Age studio props (28 August 2020)
153. Kamakura: Daibutsu - The Great Buddha / Amida Buddha, Kotoku-in (29 August 2020)
154. Studio marks and signatures in the negative (30 August 2020)
155. The use of electric light in photographic studios (31 August 2020)
156. The Camera Lucida (1 September 2020)
157. Graves of notable photographers (2 September 2020)
158. Spirit Photography and paranormal manifestations (3 September 2020)
159. Yemen (4 September 2020)
160. Nasir al-Din Shah (5 September 2020)
161. Seaweed (6 September 2020)
162. Sarony and celebrities (7 September 2020)
163. Luxembourg (8 September 2020)
164. Interiors of Railroad Photographic Studios (9 September 2020)
165. Mormons (10 September 2020)
166. Dark tents and dark boxes (11 September 2020)
167. Camera stands and tripods (12 September 2020)
168. Solar Enlargers (13 September 2020)
169. Jerusalem: Church of the Holy Sepulchre (14 September 2020)
170. Cultural appropriation (15 September 2020)
171. Designs for backgrounds without people (16 September 2020)
172. Fakes, forgeries, tricks and deceptions (17 September 2020)
173. Refugees and migrants (18 September 2020)
174. Graphoscopes (19 September 2020)
175. Orotones (20 September 2020)
176. Tents used by prographers to ply their trade (21 September 2020)
177. Packaging for daguerreotypes (22 September 2020)
178. Proof copies (23 September 2020)
179. Afghanistan (24 September 2020)
180. Taxidermy (25 September 2020)
181. François Willème: Photosculpture (26 September 2020)
182. The Paris Commune and the Communards (27 September 2020)
183. Cartes de visite and cabinet cards of politicians and political events (28 September 2020)
184. Postmen and letter carriers (29 September 2020)
185. Shop window displays (30 September 2020)
186. Golf (1 October 2020)
187. Nomads of Central Asia (2 October 2020)
188. Trucks, semis, lorries, eighteen-wheeler, etc. (3 October 2020)
189. Architectural plans for photographic studios (4 October 2020)
190. More recent and non-US examples of the "helping hand", "hidden mother" and "hidden father" portraits (5 October 2020)
191. Tsar Bell, Tsarsky Kolokol, Tsar Kolokol III, or Royal Bell, Kremlin, Moscow (6 October 2020)
192. François Aubert: The execution of Emperor Maximilian - 1875 (7 October 2020)
193. Desert landscapes with no people (8 October 2020)
194. Models and toys related to photography (9 October 2020)
195. Cliffs (10 October 2020)
196. Obelisk of Theodosius, Istanbul (11 October 2020)
197. Photobooths in use (12 October 2020)
198. Camera clubs, photographic societies and cooperatives (13 October 2020)
199. Malta (14 October 2020)
200. Violins and fiddles (15 October 2020) 
  
THIRD SERIES: 201-300 
  
201. Autochromes: Trees, flowers, vegetables and fruits (16 October 2020)
202. The construction of underground railways, subways and stations (17 October 2020)
203. Porters from around the world (18 October 2020)
204. The hidden face (19 October 2020)
205. Bhutan (20 October 2020)
206. The architecture of Colonialism (21 October 2020)
207. Shells (22 October 2020)
208. Prisoners of war (23 October 2020)
209. Surveillance (24 October 2020)
210. Ears (25 October 2020)
211. Landscape: Rural pathways, tracks, trails and lanes (26 October 2020)
212. Landscape: Forests - a sense of being enclosed or trapped within the trees (27 October 2020)
213. Landscape: Non-US Waterrfalls (28 October 2020)
214. Geysers (29 October 2020)
215. Dams and their construction (30 October 2020)
216. Landscapes of Asia (31 October 2020) 217. People sleeping on the street or in public (1 November 2020)
218. Spain: Granada: Alhambra (2 November 2020)
219. The indigenous peoples of South America (3 November 2020)
220. Guidelines for sitters (4 November 2020)
221. Housing conditions (5 November 2020)
222. French Polynesia, Tahiti and the island groups (6 November 2020)
223. Traditional costumes of Switzerland (7 November 2020)
224. Chemigrams (8 November 2020)
225. Italian Risorgimento (1849-1871) (9 November 2020)
226. Film posters, lobby cards and publicity images for films about photographers (10 November 2020)
227. Examination of an Civil War era albumen print photomontage (11 November 2020)
228. Studio flooring, carpets and rugs as an aid to photographer identification (12 November 2020)
229. Pictorialism and men with hats (13 November 2020)
230. Markets (14 November 2020)
231. Amsterdam (15 November 2020)
232. The weirdest real photo postcards (16 November 2020)
233. Fotonovelas and stories illustrated with photographs (17 November 2020)
234. Man Ray: Rayograms (18 November 2020)
235. László Moholy-Nagy (19 November 2020)
236. Modernism in Canada (20 November 2020)
237. Chariots (21 November 2020)
238. Studio props as symbols of status and modernity (22 November 2020)
239. Eating disorders (23 November 2020)
240. Cabinet cards with cartes de visite backmarks (24 November 2020)
241. Volkswagen (25 November 2020)
242. Infrared photography (26 November 2020)
243. The Palestine Exploration Fund (27 November 2020)
244. Stereoviews of the Indian subcontinent (28 November 2020)
245. Occupationals - Policemen and policewomen (29 November 2020)
246. Backlists on stereoviews (30 November 2020)
247. Vienna (Wien), Weltausstellung - Photographs taken or exhibited (1 December 2020)
248. Great Zimbabwe (2 December 2020)
249. How photographers have been depicted in Japanese art (3 December 2020)
250. The Canadian North (4 December 2020)
251. The use of multiple languages on card mounted photographs (5 December 2020)
252. The Trevi Fountain, Rome (6 December 2020)
253. The Spanish American War, 1898 (7 December 2020)
254. Photogrammetry, photo-theodolites and camera transits (8 December 2020)
255. Explosions (9 December 2020)
256. Alabama (10 December 2020)
257. Solarization (11 December 2020)
258. Snapshots, amateur photography and humor (12 December 2020)
259. Televisions (13 December 2020)
260. Alaska (14 December 2020)
261. Backmarks from the Middle East (15 December 2020)
262. Inappropriate studio props (16 December 2020)
263. Greetings cards from photographers (17 December 2020)
264. Winter activities (18 December 2020)
265. Arizona (19 December 2020)
266. Roger Fenton at the British Museum (20 December 2020)
267. Ireland: Nationalism, the Easter Rising (1916) and its aftermath (21 December 2020)
268. Arab states of the Persian Gulf (22 December 2020)
269. Rural Churches (23 December 2020)
270. Backmarks for women photographers (24 December 2020)
271. Packaging materials (25 December 2020)
272. Boxing (26 December 2020)
273. X-rays of the hand (27 December 2020)
274. Portraits of stereo photographers and publishers of stereographs (28 December 2020)
275. Nineteenth century books illustrated with stereo photographs (29 December 2020)
276. The Flatiron Building, New York (30 December 2020)
277. Military veterans (31 December 2020)
278. Food (1 January 2021)
279. Hand-painted photographs from India (2 January 2021)
280. Obscure American stereoview photographers (3 January 2021)
281. Norwegian landscapes (4 January 2021)
282. Stamped preservers (5 January 2021)
283. Photographic connections with opticians and optometry (6 January 2021)
284. The Boer War, 1899-1902 (7 January 2021)
285. Wicker chairs and tables in photographic studios (8 January 2021)
286. Swimming and diving (9 January 2021)
287. Political badges, pins, election ribbons, campaign medals (10 January 2021)
288. Stereographs of Mexico and Central America (11 January 2021)
289. Polaroid abstractions (14 January 2021)
290. Installation views of photographic exhibitions (15 January 2021)
291. Handbags and purses (16 January 2021)
292. Mascher cases and stereoscopes (18 January 2021)
293. Annam and the fingernails of the Annamites (19 January 2021)
294. Veils (20 January 2021)
295. Backmarks, labels and ephemera for itinerant photographers and traveling artists (25 January 2021)
296. Links between stereographs and advertising (26 January 2021)
297. Bird cages (27 January 2021)
298. Stereoviews of landscapes (28 January 2021)
299. Warsaw (29 January 2021)
300. Illustrations of landscapes based on photographs (30 January 2021)
 
  
FOURTH SERIES: 301-400 
  
301. Tunisia (1 February 2021)
302. Photographs with paint or instructions to assist in publication (2 February 2021)
303. Canoes and kayaks (3 February 2021)
304. Jamaica (4 February 2021)
305. Bottles and glassware for photographic chemicals (5 February 2021)
306. Timber, lumber, log rolling and the forestry industry (7 February 2021)
307. Your favorite painted stereoview (8 February 2021)
308. Stereoview libraries (9 February 2021)
309. Flood - "The Johnstown Calamity" (10 February 2021)
310. Stereoviews of China (11 February 2021)
311. Cartes de visite series on towns and cities (12 February 2021)
312. The Philippines (13 February 2021)
313. Washington, D.C. (16 February 2021)
314. People in peril (17 February 2021)
315. Stereoview disambiguation (18 February 2021)
316. Stereoviews of the Arctic or connected to it (28 February 2021)
317. Stereoviews of Russia (1 March 2021)
318. Stereoviews of Alabama (2 March 2021)
319. Motorcycles and scooters (3 March 2021)
320. Military veterans (4 March 2021)
321. Photographic medals and awards (5 March 2021)
322. X-rays of the natural world (7 March 2021)
323. Expedition camps for scientists and explorers (9 March 2021)
324. Stereoviews of the Franco-Prussian War, the Paris Commune and the Siege of Paris (11 March 2021)
325. Fantasy (12 March 2021)
326. Little Red Riding Hood (13 March 2021)
327. Stereographs and humor (14 March 2021)
328. Costume balls (15 March 2021)
329. Sculpture galleries (16 March 2021)
330. Salt print stereographs (17 March 2021)
331. Photographic stereotypes (18 March 2021)
332. Tattoos (19 March 2021)
333. Paris: Arc de Triomphe (20 March 2021)
334. Encounters on the decks of ships (22 March 2021)
335. Press passes for photographers (23 March 2021)
336. The marketing of stereographs (24 March 2021)
337. Advertising food and drink (26 March 2021)
338. Photo-insert postcards (27 March 2021)
339. Mediterranean islands (28 March 2021)
340. Archaeological sites of SE Asia (29 March 2021)
341. Your favorite amateur photographer (30 March 2021)
342. Fresson prints (31 March 2021)
343. Aristotypes (2 April 2021)
344. Twins, triplets and other sibling groups (3 April 2021)
345. Dentistry (5 April 2021)
346. Stereoviews of Africa (6 April 2021)
347. Socializing in bars and clubs (7 April 2021)
348. Peking - Bejing (8 April 2021)
349. People with, or using, stereo cameras (9 April 2021)
350. Vegetables and the occasional tomato (11 April 2021)
351. Stereoviews related medicine, x-rays, and health issues (12 April 2021)
352. Gardeners (13 April 2021)
353. Hand-coloured lantern slides of landscapes (14 April 2021)
354. The Statue of Liberty (15 April 2021)
355. Poets (16 April 2021)
356. Your examples of obscure stereoviews where you want to know more (18 April 2021)
357. Divers and diving (19 April 2021)
358. The destruction of forests during wars (21 April 2021)
359. Soccer (22 April 2021)
360. Stereoviews and Judaism (23 April 2021)
361. The finest examples of hand-coloured stereoviws (26 April 2021)
362. Surrealism and fashion (27 April 2021)
363. Road accidents (28 April 2021)
364, Carriages, buggies, phaetons, hansom cabs and other horse drawn vehivles (29 April 2021)
365. Unusual graphics and backmarks on stereoviews (30 April 2021)
366. Stereoviews of New Zealand and Oceania (2 May 2021)
367. Quirky photomontages showing the inside of photographic studios (3 May 2021)
368. Stereo daguerreotype portraits (4 May 2021)
369. Enlistment and mobilisation for the First World War (5 May 2021)
370. Stereoviews of New Hampshire (6 May 2021)
371. The Garden of the Gods, Colorado (7 May 2021)
372. Taking a shower (9 May 2021)
373. Stereoviews of Australia (10 May 2021)
374. The best and the worst hand-coloured snapshots (11 May 2021)
375. Rockets, missiles and projectiles (12 May 2021)
376. Stereographs taken at night (13 May 2021)
377. Returning to Albania (14 May 2021)
378. Electricity (15 May 2021)
379. The United States Sanitary Commission and the American Civil War (16 May 2021)
380. Magic backgrounds on daguerreotypes (17 May 2021)
381. The use of iconic photographs on packaging (18 May 2021)
382. The Brooklyn Bridge, NYC (19 May 2021)
383. Artworks with photography as the subject (20 May 2021)
384. Photographs in Surrealist publications (21 May 2021)
385. Stereo photography and industrial progress (22 May 2021)
386. Lost luggage (23 May 2021)
387. Russo-Japanese War, 1904-1905 (24 May 2021)
388. New York - Eighth Avenue (ca 1964-65) (25 May 2021)
389. Doubles - Multiple portraits of the same person in a single photograph (28 May 2021)
390. Archaeological sites (30 May 2021)
391. Accident at the Gare de l'Ouest (Gare Montparnasse), 22 October 1895 (31 May 2021)
392. Fraternal organisations (1 June 2021)
393. Stereographs of celebrities (2 June 2021)
394. The City Gates of Jerusalem (4 June 2021)
395. The cotton plantations of the American South before and during ("Antebellum") the American Civil War (6 June 2021)
396. People and animals wearing 3D specs (8 June 2021)
397. The Portage Railway Bridge, Portage, NY (9 June 2021)
398. Lighthouses and beacons (10 June 2021)
399. Place Vendome and the Vendome Column, Paris (11 June 2021)
400. 19th century street scenes in what is now Poland (12 June 2021) 
  
The quests at first appear to be random but they are not. Each quest is to fill a specific requirement on Luminous-Lint. Quests are open to all so if you have a research question send it through. 
  
FACEBOOK group: PHOTOHISTORY QUESTS 
  
Here the photographs are not limited to a technique or date as I'm delving into the outer reaches of what is available in photography. My deepest appreciation to all of you who have participated in the QUESTS to date and you can see everybody who has provided images to Luminous-Lint here: 
  
Luminous-Lint: Acknowledgements 
  
Thanks again for all your help over the years. 
  

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During COVID-19 I made Luminous-Lint was free to all from 22nd March until 31th May 2020 to allow students access to resources. A FREE TRIAL for the website is still available so send an email to alan@luminous-lint.com with your name and reasons for wanting to take a look and I'll set up a password for you. 
  
   
  

Educational subscriptions

 
During the COVID-19 pandemic there has been an increasing need for distance learning and this looks set to continue. Students and staff require access to visual resources on photohistory at a time when libraries are closed and books can not include the range of images necessary to understand a topic with any level of depth. Luminous-Lint continues to provide structured resources on photohistory to all. It costs $300 a year for all your staff and students to have access to the best resource there is. 
  
It is time to ensure that your subscription to Luminous-Lint has been confirmed. Please check with whoever manages subscriptions to digital resources to ensure all is well. If you are a professor, researcher or student requiring access to Luminous-Lint please contact your Head of Department or Librarian. 
  
  
  
If you need any assistance with curriculum planning or resources to supplement your courses send me an email. 
  

Recently updated Themes

 
The following Themes were updated on 12 June 2021. 
  
Advertising 
Aerial photography 
Africa 
Amateur photography 
American Civil War (1861-1865) 
Animals 
Anthropology and ethnology 
Archaeology 
Architecture 
Astronomy 
Awards and medals 
California 
Canada 
Card photographs 
Characters and occupational types 
Charity 
Cityscapes - Urban 
Civil engineering 
Cliffs 
Colonialism 
Documentary 
Domesticated animals 
Egypt 
Events 
Exhibitions and competitions 
Expeditions and exploration 
Family life 
Fires 
Flora 
Florida 
Gardens 
Geology 
Germany 
Group portraits 
History of photography 
Humour 
Illinois 
Iran (Islamic Republic of) 
Islamic architecture 
Islam 
Israel and Palestine 
Japan 
Jerusalem 
Landscape 
London 
Maps 
Medical 
Mexico 
Military 
Missouri 
Native Americans 
New York 
North American Indian Wars (1860-1900) 
Occupational 
Occupations and roles 
Panama 
Paris 
Peoples of the world 
Pets 
Photographers 
Photographic studios 
Photography assimilated into popular culture 
Postcards 
Process and product 
Railways 
Religious architecture 
Rome 
Rooms and their contents 
Scientific 
Sequences and series 
Snapshots 
Stamps 
Steamboats and paddle steamers 
Stereoviews, stereographs and stereocards 
Still life 
Street photographers 
Trees 
USA 
Urban life 
Vatican City - Holy See 
War 
Water and waterfalls 
Water transportation 
World's Fairs and International Exhibitions 
Zoos 
If you have suggestions for examples and subjects that should be added please let me know.
Luminous-Lint

 
  
 
  
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