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Item 1, folder "Pike Place Market PDA: Commissions / Committees / Organizations -- Friends of the Market," Pike Place Market Records (Record Series 1628-01), Seattle Municipal Archives.
(1984) Courtesy of Scott F. Davis. Iconic metal bands from the '80s proudly adorning a Pee Chee folder. Mint, unused condition. See www.flickr.com/photos/20696703@N07/6458972777/ for the equally impressive back cover.
Arte elaborada para apresentação do Fresh Cup, novo produto da empresa de café gourmet, Café Cristina.
Felipe Pinheiro Rocha ( colaboração Ericsson Barbosa)
Thomas Engen gives us the rare but priceless opportunity to see the gruesome transformation of his own Pee Chee folder. www.pee-chee-art.blogspot.com/ Because of the position of the right player's hand (and its proximity to the other's chest), the rendering of a knife, spike or any other kind of piercing object "stabbing" the player was very commonly seen, and Engen provides a great example in this illustration.
From the collection of Mark Alan Saguindel. I don't think the manufacturers of Pee Chee folders would have ever imagined that their folders would be so iconic of '70s and '80s youth culture and rebellion, simply because the balance of negative space and the sporty illustration lent itself as the perfect blank canvas for bored, cynical and mischievous school kids.
I keep track of my projects and assignments for school using clear folders. I stick color-coded 3x5 cards in the front of the folders to label them, so they're all reusable.
It might look like overkill, but its actually pretty compact when its all put together. And it keeps me from carting around old papers I don't need anymore, as well as from having to constantly reprint things I've lost.
...para 15 fotos ou mais, com pocket para guardar tickets de viagem, emboss nas letras pretas e a máquina mágica Tag Maker...Ideal para pequenas viagens...
A ferramenta não é lá muito importante, mas já que tenho, bora usar!!
If there were *any* two words that defined the attitude of '70s and '80s kids, it was just that: "School Sucks." Now THIS is what I remember Pee Chee folders looking like. Totally thrashed and drawn all over. Courtesy of Scott F. Davis.
Moskva-2 camera, built at the KMZ factory in Russia in 1955. It is a 6x9 medium format camera with a coupled rangefinder and a 110/4.5 Tessar-formula lens.
It is fully funcional and being put to good use.
When I was two my mom created a simple newspaper-based reading curriculum for me. She would carefully cut a word out of the newspaper (usually a logo), paste it to a sheet of paper, print the name underneath, and place the page in my reading folder. Then during shopping trips she would point to signs and ask me to read them. By age three I had enough training to impress some people, mostly notably my Uncle Ralph, who showed off his little reading nephew at every opportunity.
This logo-based method of learning no doubt contributed to my lifelong fascination with branding and iconography.
This is one of many curious items collected in JD's House of Miscellany.
A small selection of negative holders from my collection.
The folders are reproduced in their relative size to each other.
Please go here to see more interesting cameras and photographic items from my personal collection -
www.flickr.com/photos/69559277@N04/sets/72157648539313227...