Завантаження...

China, Manchu Ladies Of The Palace Being Warned To Stop Smoking (c1910-1925) Frank & Frances Carpenter (RESTORED) (4073803008)
 

 

This is a premium free photo

 

This photo was viewed times and was downloaded in full size 0 times.

This photo was liked 0 times


Source page:

http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:China,_Manchu_Ladies_Of_The_Palace_Being_Warned_To_Stop_Smoking_(c1910-1925)_Frank_%26_Frances_Carpenter_(RESTORED)_(4073803008).jpg

Description

Entitled: "China, Manchu ladies of the palace being warned to stop smoking, Peking China [c1910-1925]."

  • The image is so profoundly rich in the detail of Manchu fashion that I sat literally for an hour going over every inch of the picture. How it came to bear such a ridiculous title is probably lost to the generations. However, it remains a stunning record of the beautiful style of Qipao dress available to the affluent during early 20th-century Imperial China.
  • An interesting observational note is the abundant use of face powder seen here, rivaling that of Elizabethan fashion. The women's necks all reflect their normal skin tone, but their faces were artificially rendered white. Note too that, except for the two women on the right, their lipstick only traces the middle portion to their lower lips.
  • There is a man in the background, seen though an open window to the right. His identity, purpose, or role can only be guessed at.
  • Frank Carpenter and his daughter Frances were not only extraordinary world travelers ahead of their time, but so too were their desire to record everything that they saw on their journeys. On repository with the US Library of Congress, their staggering Frank and Frances Carpenter Collection of over 15,000 images lives on for future generations. Above is an image that was made whilst they traveled through China, sometime in the beginning of the 1900's.
  • Library of Congress Notes: F Carpenter [RESTORED] LC-USZ62-113720 (originals on repository with the Library of Congress can always be found by using its LC number in their number search engine). The photograph was cropped, spotted, and had several areas tonally adjusted to bring out hidden or obscure detail not easily seen with the original. One large scratch on the left was digitally retouched out, as were a few emulsion wrinkles and processing marks.
Date
Source China, Manchu Ladies Of The Palace Being Warned To Stop Smoking [c1910-1925] Frank & Frances Carpenter [RESTORED]
Author ralph repo

Licensingedit

w:en:Creative Commons
attribution
This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic license.
You are free:
  • to share – to copy, distribute and transmit the work
  • to remix – to adapt the work
Under the following conditions:
  • attribution – You must attribute the work in the manner specified by the author or licensor (but not in any way that suggests that they endorse you or your use of the work).

Checked copyright icon.svg This image was originally posted to Flickr by ralphrepo at https://flickr.com/photos/34607376@N08/4073803008. It was reviewed on by FlickreviewR and was confirmed to be licensed under the terms of the cc-by-2.0.

Photo's description:
Entitled: "China, Manchu ladies of the palace being warned to stop smoking, Peking China [c1910-1925]." From the Frank and Frances Carpenter Collection black and white photographs of China. The image is so profoundly rich in the detail of Manchu fashion that I sat literally for an hour going over every inch of the picture. How it came to bear such a ridiculous title is probably lost to the generations. However, it remains a stunning record of the beautiful style of Qipao dress available to the affluent during early 20th-century Imperial China. An interesting observational note is the abundant use of face powder seen here, rivaling that of Elizabethan fashion. The women's necks all reflect their normal skin tone, but their faces were artificially rendered white. Note too that, except for the two women on the right, their lipstick only traces the middle portion to their lower lips. There is a man in the background, seen though an open window to the right. His identity, purpose, or role can only be guessed at. Frank Carpenter and his daughter Frances were not only extraordinary world travelers ahead of their time, but so too were their desire to record everything that they saw on their journeys. On repository with the US Library of Congress, their staggering Frank and Frances Carpenter Collection of over 15,000 images lives on for future generations. Above is an image that was made whilst they traveled through China, sometime in the beginning of the 1900's. Library of Congress Notes: F Carpenter [RESTORED] LC-USZ62-113720 (originals on repository with the Library of Congress can always be found by using its LC number in their number search engine). The photograph was cropped, spotted, and had several areas tonally adjusted to bring out hidden or obscure detail not easily seen with the original. One large scratch on the left was digitally retouched out, as were a few emulsion wrinkles and processing marks.


Only registered users can post comments. Please login.


EXIF data:
File name china__manchu_ladies_of_the_palace_being_warned_to_stop_smoking__c1910_1925__frank___frances_carpenter__restored___4073803008_.jpg
Size, Mbytes 1.7476240234375
Mime type image/jpeg




The images at Free-Photos.biz come mainly from Wikimedia Commons or from our own production. The photos are either in the public domain, or licensed under free linceses: Free-Photos.biz license, GPL, Creative Commons or Free-Art license. Some very few other photos where uploaded to Free-Photos.biz by our users and released into the public domain or into free usage under another free license (like GPL etc.)

While the copyright and licensing information supplied for each photo is believed to be accurate, Free-Photos.biz does not provide any warranty regarding the copyright status or correctness of licensing terms. If you decide to reuse the images from Free-Photos.biz, you should verify the copyright status of each image just as you would when obtaining images from other sources.


The use of depictions of living or deceased persons may be restricted in some jurisdictions by laws regarding personality rights. Such images are exhibited at Free-Photos.biz as works of art that serve higher artistic interests.

PRIVACY POLICY


By registering your account and/or by subscribing to new and newly rated photographs you agree we may send you the links to photos and we may occasionally share other information with you.

We do NOT disclose your personal data.





christianity portal