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Classic Jeep advertisement celebrating the CJ-5 Laredo. It's no wonder the Jeep brand has stayed on track for over seven decades - the capability theme has never changed. Read the copy from 1980 with it's strong style and resale value story and it could be substituted for a JK of today.
Copy:
The legendary Jeep vehicles have been protecting forests, transporting troops, delivering mail, plowing snow, winning races and weathering storms for more than a quarter of a century. Longer than a lot of vehicles have even existed.
They've given American drivers more outward mobility, rugged performance and pure fun than any single car in history. And they've held onto their value like they've held onto their legendary design, transcending passing styles season after season, year after year.
But today's Jeep CJ is more than its famous four wheels driving into the sunset. It's the option of contoured buckets, room for four, carpeting, air conditioning, stereo ... hardtop. soft top, no top at all. And something you'll appreciate every time you drive: more miles per gallon than any 4-wheeler made in America. No other vehicle can meet your demands and desires in quite the same way.
Jeep CJ wasn't born a legend. It had to earn the respect of the world's toughest drivers, and keeps on earning it every day. On wilderness trails and unplowed streets. On the job and out on the town. That's why the legend lives on.
The Coca Cola advertisement was on the wall of the Lights of Liberty Movie Theater in Liberty, Kentucky. The white circle at the lower right of the advertisement indicate that Kirby Custom Signs painted the advertisement in 2013.
The image on the wall resembles Willa Brown who was born in 1906 at Glasgow, Kentucky. Brown was inspired by Bessie Coleman, a black pilot who learned to fly in Europe, because no one would train her in the United States. In 1921, Coleman became the first woman of African-American descent to earn an aviation pilot license. Brown followed Coleman's lead by earning her pilot license in 1937. In 1939, Brown received a commercial pilot license. She earned an aircraft mechanic license in 1943, becoming the first woman in the United States to have both a mechanic license and a commercial pilot license. She was instrumental in forming Coffey School of Aeronautics- she married the founder Cornelius Coffey. Brown trained black students at Coffey School of Aeronautics to be pilots and support personnel. Many of the students Brown trained entered the military to trained at Tuskegee Army Air Field. Those students became known as the“Tuskegee Airmen.” In 1955, Brown married Rev. J.H. Chappell. Willa Brown Chappell was inducted into the Kentucky Aviation Hall of Fame in 2003. (Some information presented was adapted from information obtained from Kentucky Educational Television (KET) website, Aviation Museum of Kentucky.)
NOTE: I do not know if the advertisement painter, or those who commissioned the painter, intended to depict Willa Brown Chappell on the wall. However, the striking resemblance between the women on the wall and Chappell led me to relay her story. Take another look at the woman on the wall and then view a photograph of Brown at:
Amsterdam has a batch of new advertisement trams since last weekend. Today, October 19th, a total of three new Combino’s were put into service with their new outfit, while this weekend three other Combino’s got a new advertising as well. At this moment there are 11 Combino’s with advertising (2085, 2087-2093, 2095, 2097, 2099).
This yellow Combino (2095) is advertising for JD Sports, which is also a sportswear shop. The photo is taken at the Flevopark terminus, where tram line 7 and 14 have their terminus.
GVB - Siemens Combino (13G-C1), 2095 (JD Spots), tram 14
Insulindeweg, Amsterdam
October 19, 2015
Generic bicycle messenger business has been in decline in Helsinki for some years. However, there are new companies offering bicycle delivery of restaurant meals within the city. This is an advertisement of one of them, (though, legally, I believe it is a parked bicycle :-))
From Vienna in 1961 contemporary advertisements including Mercedes Benz and the programme for Carmen on 10th Dec 1961.
6.2mm Fisheye Nikkor f/5.6
55mm Micro Auto-Nikkor f/3.5
45mm GN Auto-Nikkor f/2.8
200mm Medical Auto-Nikkor f/5.6
500mm Reflex-Nikkor f/8
50-300mm Auto-Nikkor Zoom f/4.5
35mm PC Nikkor f/2.8
1970/February “Popular Photography” magazine.
Super Sea-Monkeys: Vintage Comic Book Advertisement (1978)
*Appeared In: The New Krofft Supershow, Comic Book Issue No. 1 April 1978 (Whitman)
#9-advertisement 100 pictures group
I was asking my husbands opinion the other night about what kind of shot I could do for the word advertisement-he says I bet you have something in your camera already, let me go see. He comes back with the camera and says, See, you have one right here! This is something I probably would have eventually just deleted, not sure why i was taking macro photos of my shoes anyway, but I guess it does work. I think it would be interesting for converse to take a look at all of the photos posted on flickr of their shoes-I wonder if they could use them in some way? That would be fun! (Some wonky processing-because I felt like it! The blue ones in front are mine-the pink high tops in the background are my daughters.)
This processing and the shoe-of course-kind of reminds me of my flickr friends ...sherry...'s photos of her sneakers! (Sorry, sherry, it would not let me do a link, I will add you in the person's in the photos part!