Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Keasbury-Gordon Photograph Archive, a commercial enterprise which specialises in early British photography, has a small collection of Graystone Bird photographs, and has produced a number of YouTube video documentaries about Bird and his work.
New York Daily News (1880–2007), online photo archive DailyNewsPix, with photographs dating back to 1880 New York Public Library: ≈ 30% Public domain: 922,400+ (May 2024) [3] No No Yes English Pexels: Pexels license: Yes No Yes Pixabay: Pixabay license: 950,000+ (May 2017) Yes No Yes English (Default) + 25 other languages Pond5: Royalty-free
The Frick Photoarchive is a founding member of PHAROS, the International Consortium of Photo Archives, which is committed to creating a digital research platform for comprehensive consolidated access to photo archive images and their associated scholarly documentation from its fourteen European and North American member institutions. [3]
He was born James Gordon Dawson Stannus in Wicklow, Ireland on 23 December 1902. Anthony started working in photography in 1926, making images of the students at his sister's ballet school in London. [ 1 ]
Cherry Kearton contributed photographs to seventeen of Richard Kearton's books, and wrote and illustrated a further seventeen titles of his own. He made the first phonograph recording of birds (a nightingale and a song thrush) singing in the wild in 1900; took the first film of London from the air in 1908, and the first footage of hostilities ...
William Keasberry (1726 – 15 November 1797), sometimes spelt Keasbury, was an English actor and theatre manager of the 18th century whose career was chiefly in Bath, Somerset. The son of another William Keasberry, by his marriage to Catherine Liddell, he was born in London.
Mark Wahlberg’s teenage daughter introduced the newest member of the famous family over the weekend.. Grace Wahlberg took to Instagram on Saturday, Feb. 1, to welcome an attention-grabbing ...
It posts digitally enhanced photographs acquired from a variety of sources, including the Library of Congress and National Archives. Most of the photographs presented on the website date to the early twentieth century. [1] Former newspaper editors Dave Hall and Ken Booth run the site. [2] [3]