Picture of the Day: Skyline Silhouette of Chicago
Jul 2nd, 2013 by Aldouspi

 

SKYLINE SILHOUETTE OF CHICAGO

 

Chicago From the Treetops

Photograph by Tom Gill

 

In this beautiful capture by Tom Gill, we see a silhouette of the Chicago skyline as seen from the top of a tall dune at the Indiana Dunes National Lakeshore.

The national lakeshore runs for nearly 25 miles (40 km) along the southern shore of Lake Michigan, from Griffith, Indiana, on the west to Michigan City, Indiana on the east. The park contains approximately 15,000 acres (6,100 ha).

Chicago, a city in the U.S. state of Illinois, is the third most populous city in the United States.

 

 

picture of the day button Picture of the Day: Skyline Silhouette of Chicago

 

 


TwistedSifterTwistedSifter

Sentimental Advertisements Start A New Kind Of Pin-Up Craze
Mar 24th, 2010 by Aldouspi

Product Description
This Item is an original three page Magazine article, taken from a vintage magazine of the year indicated. The article is complete and opens the door to the time during which it was written and the social beliefs of that era. The scan of this item was taken through plastic film, however it is an accurate representation of the item. The nominal size is 10.5 inches by 14 inches…. More >>

SPEAKING OF PICTURES … Sentimental Advertisements Start A New Kind Of Pin-Up Craze. The new pin-up fad of the U.S. is the series of advertisements shown on these pages, which are put out by Oneida, Ltd. in Oneida, New York, manufacturers of Community silver. Titled “Back Home For Keeps,” they depict the breathless meeting of a young wife and her returned serviceman-husband at the moment of his homecoming. With them goes wishful advertising copy that manages to remind the reader that Community is not making silver now, but will when he gets home. Oneida, Ltd. expected that its illustrations would become popular among impatient wives, was ready with 50,000 reprints. But it was totally unprepared for the amazing response. “Back Home For Keeps” has been plastered on the walls of girls’ colleges , in high schools, even the barracks of those servicemen who have wearied of the anatomical pin-up. The artist is Jon Whitcomb, who drew the first of series, went into the Navy and was replaced by artist who signs his work Michael. Whitcomb is now back home for keeps. ….. 1945 LIFE Magazine Article, A5363A. 19450514

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