View allAll Photos Tagged MatchingOutfits
Portraits of two young Japanese boys wearing matching fashion with berets, jackets, shorts, and shoes with striped socks. This photo is from a found wooden box of vintage Japanese portraits that appear to have been taken by a portrait photographer, possibly between the 1930s to 1950s in Japan.
vancouver, british columbia, canada
1971
policeman with dog and children
queen elizabeth park
part of an archival project, featuring the photographs of nick dewolf
© the Nick DeWolf Foundation
Image-use requests are welcome via flickrmail or nickdewolfphotoarchive [at] gmail [dot] com
port of spain, trinidad
february 1975
carnival
queen's park savannah
part of an archival project, featuring the photographs of nick dewolf
© the Nick DeWolf Foundation
Image-use requests are welcome via flickrmail or nickdewolfphotoarchive [at] gmail [dot] com
08-16-07 New York, NY
Pregnant celeb Nicole Richie and her boyfriend Joel Madden wear matching red and black outfits to go apartment hunting on New York's west side...
Non-Exclusive Pix by Flynet ©2007
818-307-4813 Nicolas
323-833-7042 Nicolas
323-974-6007 Jay
310-466-8617 Scott
This lady was possibly the nicest stewardess I have ever encountered. She was laughing at us as we boarded the plane - all the boys were posing for photos in the INSANE air conditioning (looks like smoke in this shot). She appears elsewhere in my flickr stream, but in this shot she actually 'posed' for me. I think this was our hop from Medan back to KL.
Air Asia - no frills, great air conditioning, like Southwest Airlines on crack...
Conquest For Death
Australasian Odyssey
October/November 2008
"Hey mama, what's that there?
And what's that doing there?
Hey mama, hey Mama, hey look at that over there!
And what's that doing there?
And where're they going there?
And mommy can I have that big elephant over there?
Time will march
Days will go
And little baby's going to grow
I gotta tell her what she needs to know
I'll help her along
And she'll be strong
And she'll know right from wrong
As life's parade goes marching by
She's gonna need to know some reasons why
I don't have all the answers
But I'll try the best as I can
We'll make a plan, that's right"
Rickie Lee Jones ~ ♫♬ Dat Dere ♫♬
::
This group of pre-school kids were the stars of the Public Market last Thursday.
Squeals and giggles; everywhere they went, their expressions were filled with wide-eyed wonder and fascination which brought big smiles to the faces of everyone they encountered.
And how about that follow-the-leader thingy? I wish we had those when I was a kid!
Random fact: Today is my Birthday. Is it too late to ask for one of those "follow-the-leader-thingy" things?
(so Kathy and Billy don't lose me ;~)
It would seem my mom had a thing for dolling up my sisters in matching outfits. Or maybe they chose these ensembles. Anne looks way too excited, but it would have been her very first day of school ever, so that's understandable. Jen already had two years under her belt. The excitement was gone once you hit first grade.
port of spain, trinidad
february 1975
carnival
queen's park savannah
part of an archival project, featuring the photographs of nick dewolf
© the Nick DeWolf Foundation
Image-use requests are welcome via flickrmail or nickdewolfphotoarchive [at] gmail [dot] com
Yes, I know it's no longer Christmas, but the reason I've been posting childhood photos is that we came across some that we hadn't seen in years.
I remember these matching outfits, and was very fond of them... three-quarter length cuffed sleeves with a white pin-tucked pinafore and the purple part was a velveteen waistband with shoulder straps and knickers that came to just below the knee. We wore white tights with them.
This was about the last time that Kathy and I would dress alike. I think I was lucky, my Mother had to dress the same her little sisters till she was 13. But there is a cute photo of them in the mid 50s that I have in mind to post next.
I was about 9 here, and at 10 got my hair cut, later regretting that choice somewhat, and missing my braids.
Gotta love a Santa whose beard and hair look like big wads of cotton.
I can't figure this one out. it looks to be from the 1900s, but the ladies seems to be wearing loose fitting pants. One guess I have, probably quite wrong, is that they are dressed for fruit picking (there's trees and something like a ladder behind them.) Why the outfits must match, though- I don't know. Interesting photos!
Dr. Mark Kirby and Wayne Anderson with their baby Digby. Photographs of Michael Musto's book launch party for Fork on the Left, Knife in the Back at the Copacabana in New York.
Me: They're wearing matching outfits, too!
Mom: You know, there wasn't too much choice in clothes. You went in a store, and if you saw something you liked, you went and bought something for every size for all your children.
Me: You don't remember who these kids are, I take it?
Mom: I do! The one in yellow was Alison Peters. And the little one was Laurie Peters. And they lived next door.
Mom: Oh, you did such a good job with this photo. That picture's been with me all over.
Me: Nah, it doesn't look too different. It's pretty faded so there's not much I can do with it. Anyway, I want to ask a few questions about Polaroids. The last family Polaroids we saw were taken when Tommy was a little baby, in the summer of 1967. Then the next ones are three years later, in 1970. Did you guys buy a Polaroid camera, then stuff it in the closet for three years?
Mom: Well, we might've gotten a new Polaroid camera later on. Because they weren't so good in those days.
Me: So, you're telling me that you guys used your first Polaroid maybe only once?
Mom: Maybe it was somebody else's camera?
Me: Like Cookie's? She's in the first set of our Polaroids, and they all seem to take place in one day, so they might've been taken when she visited.
Mom: Well, I don't think of Cookie having a Polaroid camera. Did Grandpa ever have one?
Me: Well, at least one of the photos you'll see coming up was probably taken by Grandpa. But if he owned a camera, I don't remember it, and see no evidence of it.
Mom: Maybe we took a bunch of pictures with the camera we got in 1967, but they faded and we threw them out?
Me: I don't think they would've faded that badly, that fast.
Mom: Did they make disposable Polaroid cameras?
Me: No, they were pretty expensive. Did you like using the camera?
Mom: No.
Me: Yeah, you know, I remember playing with the old Polaroid camera only once—I mean, the ones were you have rip off a strip or a tab or something, and then peel back the photo and affix it to a cardboard back. Something like that.
Mom: Yeah, it was a whole long thing.
Me: And I remember fucking it up completely! Just completely ruining the photo in some way. But based on the photos we have, I have to assume I would've been very young when this happened. Like five or six.
Mom: Why would I be letting you use a Polaroid camera?
Me: I have no idea. But whatever happened, I'm sure you regretted it.
Mom: [laughs] Yeah.
Me: I mean, even with our Polaroids, the ones taken by adults, the backs aren't centered very well, and the images have weird color flares. Like here.
Mom: Yeah. It was hard to do.
Me: But you guys seemed to use it.
Mom: I think Daddy used it more than me. I didn't really like it. I mean, if you wanted to take a picture, you'd have to go through this whole process, and by the time you were ready for the next one, the moment was gone.
Me: Do you remember what Tommy and Bobby were doing in this photo?
Mom: Oh, they were probably playing in the backyard. And then I told them, OK, it's time for Tommy to kiss Bobby.
Mom: I love that lamp. I mean the chandelier.
Me: You'll notice you changed the wallpaper.
Mom: Yes. Every time I got frustrated, the wallpaper got changed.
Me: What were you frustrated about this time?
Mom: Well, it's hard to say, you know, I loved raising children, but sometimes it stifled your creativity. So I guess when I felt stifled, I would wallpaper and change my environment.
port of spain, trinidad
february 1975
carnival
queen's park savannah
part of an archival project, featuring the photographs of nick dewolf
© the Nick DeWolf Foundation
Image-use requests are welcome via flickrmail or nickdewolfphotoarchive [at] gmail [dot] com
northern vietnam
1995
twins
part of an archival project, featuring the photographs of nick dewolf
© the Nick DeWolf Foundation
Image-use requests are welcome via flickrmail or nickdewolfphotoarchive [at] gmail [dot] com
boston, massachusetts
december 1969
ivan, vanessa, and thalia with irma pierre
watching tv
dewolf home, beacon hill
part of an archival project, featuring the photographs of nick dewolf
© the Nick DeWolf Foundation
Image-use requests are welcome via flickrmail or nickdewolfphotoarchive [at] gmail [dot] com
This simple to sew sleeveless dress or blouse has a round neckline and back button and loop closing. The dress in view 1 has patch pockets and rick-rack trim. The blouse in view 3 and shorts in views 2 & 3 have elastic waistline casing. Matching doll clothes are also included!
Maker: Simplicity
Pattern # 5941
Copyright Date: 1963
Cost of Original Pattern: $.50
Size of Pattern: 10
Breast: 26
Waist: 24
Hip: 30
Pattern Envelope: discolored due to age, some creases, pattern stamp on the front of the envelope
Pattern Instructions: included
Pattern Pieces: cut and complete including doll patterns
Mom: We were coming from Brooklyn, then moving out to Long Island, so at that part of our life, these were spectacular views...These were very in outfits at the time. They were skirts that looked like shorts. I can't remember who made them. And then they had the matching tops. I had them in every color. I loved them, they were very comfortable.
Mom: Oh, that's cute. I always liked white curtains. Bobby looks like he just got a haircut.
Me: You'll see here that the kitchen extends all the way to the washing room.
Mom: Yes, it wasn't closed off.
Me: Yeah, that happened later. It was blocked off by the fridge, as I recall. So you could walk through the kitchen, the hall, the den, and the laundry in a circle.
Mom: Yes.
Me: Which I assume made it hard for you to...
Mom: ...to catch Bobby.
I love dressing my girls in matching outfits. :)
We're just about to head out to meet some Melbourne blythe moms for coffee, and the girls decided they'd squeeze their frizz into the cute hats I had bought a while back.
This simple to sew sleeveless dress or blouse has a round neckline and back button and loop closing. The dress in view 1 has patch pockets and rick-rack trim. The blouse in view 3 and shorts in views 2 & 3 have elastic waistline casing. Matching doll clothes are also included!
Maker: Simplicity
Pattern # 5941
Copyright Date: 1963
Cost of Original Pattern: $.50
Size of Pattern: 8
Breast: 26
Waist: 23
Hip: 28
Pattern Envelope: discolored due to age, some creases, pattern stamp on the front of the envelope
Pattern Instructions: included
Pattern Pieces: cut and complete including doll patterns
Mom: See that wallpaper? I did all the wallpapering. And sometimes I think I was out of mind, because it's very difficult to work with striped wallpaper: you have to use a level to keep it straight. Now the wallpaper in the kitchen, that was even harder because it was a cane pattern, and with a cane pattern you had to work to make sure it was level horizontally AND vertically. And since the wall was not totally flat, especially at the corners, the papers didn't meet up perfectly.
Me: It's funny you should mention the kitchen paper, because I noticed in a few photos I haven't posted yet that you later replaced the kitchen wallpaper with something almost identical, just lime green instead of yellow, a really weird color for you.
Mom: [laughs] Yes, I got my frustrations out in wallpaper. I was changing, I was shy, so the wallpapers I chose reflected that. Then when I came out of my shell, the wallpaper reflected that, too. I mean, I can't believe what I put on my bedroom wall. That ugly blue and green and white paper.
Mom: The next is a cute happy picture of Tommy and Bobby in their Eton suits.
Me: This is Easter, by the way. The last photo has a shot of the hallway credenza, and there are Easter cards on top.
The Second Annual Historic Golf ÒPlus FoursÓ Tournament was held at Jekyll IslandÕs Great Dunes golf course on November 11, 2006.
Sole passed today's experiment with flying colours.
Sole can be feisty ... no question about it ... but he's also keen to try new things like taking a bath. Today he surprised me when, after a little fuss and a little reassurance, he took to his harness like a pro. I had to draw in each of the two adjustable places to their maximum and and then the harness fit Sole quite well. He wore it for less than 5 minutes and, hopefully, remembers the experience in a positive way.
I think Tessa is beyond her introduction-to-harness-and-leash window of opportunity.
I bet Sole could also learn to poop in the toilet but it's not so easy with Tessa still using her old fashion kitty elimination station.
Little Sole's harness looks good on black.
copyright © 2009 sean dreilinger
view old man and toddler, both actively enjoying the sunny weather - _MG_4028 on a black background.