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#1911 painting
mote-historie · 1 year
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1911 Edmund Charles Tarbell, Lady with a Corsage.   
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vintage-russia · 24 days
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"The angel sitting on the coffin" (1908/1911)
Mikhail Nesterov (1862-1942)
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slut! // say don't go
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marietheran · 9 months
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Add what country you're from in the tags.
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courtingwonder · 6 months
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Frank W. Benson - Summer Day (1911)
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luminous-void · 2 years
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Herbert Crowley, Magical Holy Mountain within a Lotus-filled Sea, 1911–24
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venustapolis · 10 months
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'Siegfried! Siegfried! - Our warning is true. - Flee, oh, flee from the curse!' (Arthur Rackham, 1911)
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vizuart · 1 year
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lonestarbattleship · 11 months
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RMS Olympic departs New York harbour on her first eastbound Transatlantic crossing on June 28, 1911.
"The pioneering aviator Sir Thomas Sopwith, attempts to drop a package onto the deck of the ship from his Howard-Wright biplane. The parcel contained glasses for a passenger. Pictured here turning for his second attempt, the first one aborted due to windy conditions, the parcel was released, only to miss and fall into the sea."
Painted by Barry Spicer
Posted by George Duncan to "The Ocean Liner Enthusiasts" Facebook page: link
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arinewman7 · 1 year
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Sleep
Illustration by Frances Macdonald MacNair
watercolour and pencil on vellum, ca. 1908 - 1911
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mote-historie · 7 months
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Georges Lepape, Woman Smelling Flower, Design for a white dress in the 'Hellenic style', Les choses de Paul Poiret, Fashion plate, 1911.
Illustration from Les choses de Paul Poiret vues par Georges Lepape (limited edition number 261).
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onenakedfarmer · 4 months
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Daily Painting
Pascal Dagnan-Bouveret MARGUERITE AU SABBAT (FAUST) (1911)
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gameraboy2 · 1 year
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Kongens Nytorv, with Musse Going to the Market by Paul Gustav Fischer, 1911
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ivan-fyodorovich-k · 5 months
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A lot of my collecting of WWII stuff was inspired by Medal of Honor: Frontline. I was playing it one day the summer I had my first job and I wondered while playing how hard it would be to find a helmet from WWII.
After acquiring said helmet, I set about putting together the uniform of this little knockoff G.I. Joe I had bought when I was a freshman in High School, dubbed "pocket Jimmy Patterson"
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Pocket Jimmy Patterson there is a Sergeant in the 101st and was sold as a D-Day soldier but he's actually dressed for Market Garden.
I landed on paratroopers in part because of pocket Jimmy Patterson, and in part because I like airplanes. From there, I went with the 101st over the 82nd because I already thought they had the best patch, I liked the playing card insignia painted on the side of the helmet, the number 101 is aesthetically pleasing, and I didn't know about any other airborne units.
I mean,
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Come on.
(the 101st is the one on the left, and the 82nd on the right, if you didn't already know)
I say all that because if you know anything about WWII collecting and especially re-enacting you know that elite units are dramatically over-represented and for the U.S. nobody more than the 101st, and this can be blamed almost exclusively on Band of Brothers, a show I had not even seen when I landed on the 101st.
How bad is it?
Well, by way of illustration, as a stress response to the final stages of my dissertation I've been retreating into buying WWII paratrooper stuff again, and I was questioning whether I hadn't better go with another unit this time. I had a great great uncle killed in the Philippines in WWII who was in the 11th Airborne so that's an obvious candidate, but of course if you want to stick to Europe and fighting Nazis your options are the 82nd, 101st, or 17th. Of those, the 17th only really got into the war in 1945 and if you want to do Normandy, as some 90% of re-enactments do, then you're between the 82nd and the 101st.
The 82nd has a much longer history than the 101st and, objectively, and I mean this with all implied asterisks and am speaking as though I were a twelve year old who does not know better, the 82nd is cooler, the inferior number/patch notwithstanding.
So I was on a website that is well-regarded for selling WWII militaria and they have a section for patches and I was doing some comparison of original WWII-era divisional patches. The cheapest 101st Airborne patch from WWII this guy has for sale is $175, most of them hovering closer to $300, and some in the $600 range.
11th, 17th, and 82nd patches are in the $50 range.
When I still did re-enacting as the 101st, I remember talking to some of the guys who were disappointed with the rather low "authenticity" standards of our unit (always something of a joke when a considerable number of G.I. re-enactors are in their 40s-60s and dramatically overweight), especially considering that the 101st Airborne are one of the most cartoonishly over-documented units in WWII, for whom reproductions of everything are widely available, and so there's really no excuse not to have your uniform and equipment more or less 100% correct.
Sure enough, trying to do a little research into the 82nd to see what that pool would be like, the resources are shockingly slim. The 101st had two combat jumps in WWII, Normandy and Holland. The 82nd jumped into Sicily, Salerno, Normandy, southern France, and Holland. They have a much longer combat record and are, comparatively speaking, almost totally neglected by idiots like me who are into WWII.
Even as I say all this
I am having a hard time severing the internal connection to 101
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mjhartwork · 11 months
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Dalv's Observatory
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Oil Painting, 1911-1912, British.
By Sir William Samuel Henry Llewelyn.
Portraying Queen Mary in her Coronation Robes.
Royal Collection Trust.
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