View allAll Photos Tagged pc88
Jeannette Rankin dressed in outerwear and holding a small handbag, ca. 1916-1917.
Photographer: Clinedinst Studio, Washington, District of Columbia, United States
Questions? Ask a Schlesinger Librarian
2011
Pigment transfer on triangular wooden panel
16 x 8 inches
SOLD
Made for the Alchemy show at Beep Beep Gallery.
©Ashley Anderson
An incredibly rare piece of Popful Mail history! This is a pop-up counter display from Japan to promote the PC-88 version of the game. First one that I've ever seen and I'm glad to add it to my Popful collection. #popfulmail #workingdesigns #sega #genesis #segacd #megadrive #megacd #16bit #retrogames #retrogaming #japan #snes #retrocollective #retrocollectiveus #retrojapan #japanesegaming #japanretrogaming #pcengine #pc88 #pc98
Keith Sterling on Keyboards with The Wailers at Langerado Music Festival on March 7, 2008 at Big Cypress Indian Reservation in Florida - © 2008 David Oppenheimer - Performance Impressions concert photography archives - performanceimpressions.com
Keith Sterling on Keyboards with The Wailers at Langerado Music Festival on March 7, 2008 at Big Cypress Indian Reservation in Florida - © 2008 David Oppenheimer - Performance Impressions concert photography archives - performanceimpressions.com
The NS "Training First Responders" train ducks beneath the signal cantilever at milepost PC88 on the NS Fort Wayne Line west of Alliance, Ohio. This special train would spend the next few days in Canton, Ohio, some 10-12 miles ahead.
This model is based off the PC88 version of Popful Mail as visible on the box. My copy is new and unused because I am horrible at making models and I'm always afraid I'll mess them up, especially one as rare as this.
This is the only one I have ever seen for sale in the last 5 years or so, and I snatched it up as quickly as I could. It also looks like this version was the one given away for a promotion that is advertised in one of the Japanese Popful Mail player guides.
A trio of BNSF widecabs lead oil train 66Z eastbound through the small town of Maximo, Ohio. In the background are the PC88 intermediate signals. With little time to prepare, I thought this shot came out fairly decent.
I called in Rod Bauer to overdub piano onto an early demo of Should I Wear the Beautiful, and the part he created was so captivating that I decided to do the song as a piano and voice piece. Lori Watterson later rearranged Rod's ideas, reworking Rod's baroque with her own trademark jazz inflections, but the original impetus came from Rod's excellent playing.
P.S. Can you spot anything you recognize in my library? :)
An NEC PC-8801 personal computer (running one of Nintendo's officially licensed games for the system, Punch Ball Mario Bros.) with a Magnavox CRT plugged into it.