View allAll Photos Tagged mohawk
This is a photo of the two Mohawk hats that I knit this week for my friends Marley and Josh's kids, Ethan and the Unborn one.
Hope they like and enjoy them.
posted in my blog Two Needles and a Black Sheep
The Mohawk hairstyle gives reference to the Mohawk nation, an Indigenous people from the East Coast of North America and Canada who plucked out their hair except for a square piece of long hair on their head. The modern Mohawk in all its varieties is commonly linked with the punk scene, and emerged during the mid-1970s. Bands like The Sex Pistols took a punk attitude to the world, giving the finger to the hippy era and concurrently the conservatism of Thatcher-England. The early punk music scene in Australia screamed out for a more progressive country, challenging the decade long leadership of orthodox Christian State Premier Sir Joh Bjelke Peterson in Brisbane, where the scene thrived. The fashion aesthetic spilled over into the 1980s combining fetish leather wear and studs with working class simplicity like boots, jeans and a white t-shirt. Hairstyles were dramatically non-conformist, like this student Mohawk. The Melbourne punk culture of the 1980s also introduced a DIY-ness to the City’s creativity that many believe thrives today.
Image citation: Education Department, Education History Unit (1985-1992), Richard playing guitar for summer mag. 1988, Public Record Office Victoria
VPRS 14518 P1 Unit 1
This photo is featured as part of the Victorian Archives Centre exhibition 'From Mos to Mullets' on show from October 2016 to January 2017.
"Dude where do I look?"
"I don't know... just anywhere"
This is my friend Dustin and I. Yesterday I finished helping him move into his new place. So we posed for a picture on his fresh blank wall. As you may be able to see, we both have mohawks now. Dustin's girlfriend, Becca shaved those into our heads last week.
The Miles M12 Mohawk was a 1930s two-seat, tandem cabin monoplane built by Phillip & Powis Aircraft (later to become Miles Aircraft) to the order of Charles Lindbergh in 1936. After being used by Lindbergh in Europe it was impressed into service with Royal Air Force as a communications aircraft in 1941.
Postcard in my father's war time aircraft photograph album. My father started the album about 1939 when he was aged 14, and this card probably dates from around then.
Valentine & Sons, of Dundee and London, Post Card reference 38A-32.
The Niagara Mohawk Building, in downtown Syracuse, is probably one of the finest examples of Art Deco architecture in the country.
Weller Library - Now a little bit of history: This brick and wood structure was the home of Frederick Weller (1819-1911) who was a prominent businessman. He acquired a fortune through various enterprises and retired at the age of 38 due to ill health. He purchased the house in 1859 and later purchased six acres south of his home, which is now Weller Park. After the death of his wife Helen in 1912 the house was deeded to the village for use as a library. The library was dedicated in 1913. Though modernized where necessary for library purposes, the building has retained much of its original decor and charm. A second floor museum contains memorabilia of Mohawk's past. Located at 41 West Main Street in Mohawk, NY. (LF 149)
OV-1B Mohawk, marked as one of the two aircraft evaluated by the West German army in1962. Kit: 1/72 scale Hasegawa,
I was fascinated by this little kid sporting a mohawk and tattoos (rub-on's) on his neck and all over his arm. He was sitting on his dad's shoulders. His dad, if you're wondering looked pretty much the same!