View allAll Photos Tagged FAMILYGROUP

Alaska dolls, handcrafted by many Alaska Native women, reflect unique styles. Dolls may portray daily activities of the artist's people. Doll clothes and bodies may be made from a variety of materials including calf skin (a caribou/reindeer hide replacement non-native to the area), mink, badger, sea otter, arctic rabbit, seal, or beaver. Sun bleached, dried marine mammal intestine, which is white or slightly yellowed and looks like wax paper, is sometimes used for clothing. Fur from musk ox, wolverine, and wolf are sometimes used for traditional doll clothing. Some doll makers use baleen or ivory inlay for the eyes.

 

The driver of 67014 gets a friendly wave from a family group as he speeds through Tyseley station with the 10.15 Marylebone to Birmingham Moor Street train. Waving at train drivers has been a feature of train watching for over a century, indeed the key scene in "The Railway Children" involves doing it. I think it is good to encourage children to see railways as a good and friendly place to be. I have noticed that granddads don't look like granddads any more, this was clearly grandparents and children, maybe I'm just getting old....

Copyright Geoff Dowling; all rights reserved

Ma was understandably a little on edge.

 

For more about the photographer see this page in LOST GALLERY

A cross section of the typical community you can find all across the suburbs on the western side of Mauritius.

From a Kodachrome slide processed in May 1960. Photographer unknown.

Photo taken by Anderson & Co., Leighton Buzzard.

 

(Ref. Anderson-Co_Photo001)

Have you noticed the boy riding the ostrich?

Swift Fox Mom and Kits, Pawnee National Grasslands, Colorado

 

Cute Foxeys

A mother duck and her young tour a corner of Lago d'Orta in the Piedmont region of Italy on a splended April morning

Familiengruppe des Ptahmai

(Family group of Ptahmai)

 

Neues Reich, 19. Dynastie, 1250-1200 v. Chr.

Saqqara

Kalkstein

 

(New Museum, Berlin, Germany)

Outside the Royal Exhibition Building where the 2nd Melbourne International Trade Fair was being held. From a Kodachrome slide processed in June 1963. Photographer unknown.

Alaska dolls, handcrafted by many Alaska Native women, reflect unique styles. Dolls may portray daily activities of the artist's people. Doll clothes and bodies may be made from a variety of materials including calf skin (a caribou/reindeer hide replacement non-native to the area), mink, badger, sea otter, arctic rabbit, seal, or beaver. Sun bleached, dried marine mammal intestine, which is white or slightly yellowed and looks like wax paper, is sometimes used for clothing. Fur from musk ox, wolverine, and wolf are sometimes used for traditional doll clothing. Some doll makers use baleen or ivory inlay for the eyes.

 

AR 126a

Manhattan. NY 1977

 

© Manel Armengol

Contact: armengol.manel@gmail.com

A Family Reunion! When I posted this photo on Flickr I did not know who Ira Kibby and Laura Kibby were, or their relationship to Eunice E. Kibby Smith and the rest of the family. But I have since learned that Ira was a grandson of Eunice, a son of her first-born Hugh (Paddock) Kibby. The Smith and Root families would have gathered to welcome cousin Ira (who had grown up in California) and his new bride Laura.. Eunice looks serene and satisfied here, surrounded here by 3 of her 5 children and 8 of her grandchildren. Oddly, her daughter Nellie and family are missing from this gathering. However, Nellie lived in Allegan--a fair distance by car from the Root homestead where I assume this photo was taken. It would have been around this time that Eunice moved into this house to live out her last 10 years, cared for by her daughter Jennie.

Source: Digital image.

Album: WIL04.

Date: c1910.

Photographer: William Hooper.

HOOPER COLLECTION COPYRIGHT P.A. Williams.

Repository: From the collection of Mr P. Williams.

 

Local Studies at Swindon Central Library.

www.swindon.gov.uk/localstudies

Wildlife is usually what I do. But what can be more wild than 4 kids? Right?

This is my first attempt at taking family group portraits. These guys were super patient and creative and made it fun.

Magnificent red female (mother) at top, her mate just below her, and the youngster a little apart.

This IS the same magnificent red eagle I had four encounters with in September and her mate ... and this is the offspring ... yay! I am sooo stoked! The youngster is going to be very red like its mum.

Hey listen, I made an AV about Wedgie road safety ... and I recon it should go into this group.

 

Here is the link: youtu.be/P7s1Tar5GkE

 

I made the AV as a result of seeing five dead Wedgies beside the road in one 250k trip down the Stuart Highway.

 

This photo is of the magnificent red female in the AV and suitor 2, and this their offspring!!!! ... and this photo was taken less than 300m from three of the four September encounters.

Over the last couple of weeks before Christmas I noticed some construction going on for what assumed was going to be a park-bench or something. Came back after Christmas to find this new sculpture. After some searching on the internet, I found out that it The Family Group (1960) by Russell Clark.

 

It was originally commissioned for the Hays Department Store, which was demolished in 1993 to make way for the Church Corner Countdown supermarket. An interesting (though probably inaccessible to most) source of information on Russell Clark is the Masters of Art in Art History thesis by Margaret Duncan of the University of Canterbury.

 

For more information see here.

 

It reminds me of the statue at the National War Memorial, Mother and Children.

A wonderful book issued by the then well-known printing house of W S Cowell based in Ipswich, Suffolk, and who were part of the mid-twentieth century 'revival' of printing that was seen in some parts of the UK printing industry. Cowell's in some ways bridged the gap between the 'fine' and craft print houses and fully commercial bulk printers - this post-war publication was designed to show the depth and breadth of their offer - showing typefaces as well as processes available. To illustrate these they reproduced sections, examples and pages from various publications using some of the finest commercial artists and illustrators.

 

This page, set in Caslon, shows two of Henry Moore's sketches (of a family group for the People's College at Impington, Cambridge) utilised as illustrations to set to text from Genesis.

Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media .com without my explicit permission. All rights reserved.

 

© rogerperriss@aol.com

20191225_3411_7D2-24 Family here for Christmas Day breakfast

 

Back row:

Me (John), Rhys (Samantha's husband), Holly (Jaime's sister), Jaime (daughter-in-law), Alastair (son)

 

Front row:

Shamina, Samantha (niece), Kaylee (Al's daughter), Ethan (Al's son), Riley (Jaime's son)

 

#11374

 

I was attracted to this scene by the lovely bright colours being worn by this lady and her family. They were a welcome contrast from the more muted colours surrounding them.

Sun 9 May 2010. - Pilgrims Hospices Fundraising Thanet Cycle Challenge. 15 mile circular route to Reculver and back. Starting at Pav's Garden Cafe, St Mildred's Way, Westgate (Near Margate). Open Start at 10.00, ending at 18.00 - Family Group at Minnis Bay on way back to the Finish.

The scene dates from around 1870 and depicts an affluent Russian family. The husband holds a palette and brushes but is not the artist Fyodor Slavyansky himself. He was born a serf in 1817 but displayed an early talent for painting. He was able to secure his freedom by becoming a pupil of Alexey Venetsianov, later being accepted as a member of the Russian Academy of Arts.

Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission.

© rogerperriss@aol.com All rights reserved.

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