Vintage Photos - Lot 6 (017-020)

Several years ago I bought a flatbed scanner with a slide adapter to scan some old film slides that my grandparents had. After I finished scanning those, I picked up several batches of slides from Goodwill and on eBay out of curiosity. I am not sure why these commonly wind up at such places but I know that at least some of them have ultimately come from estate sales. Maybe family members just don't know what to do with them. I've seen them advertised as being for arts and crafts but I was more interested in the actual contents. Each slide is literally a snapshot in history. These pictures span from as early as the late 1940s to as late as the early 1990s. There are thousands of these slides. I will be scanning some from time to time and posting them here as an interesting way to look back at the past.

When I say "batch" I mean a group of slides I bought in a single purchase. Usually they are from the same ultimate origin. Typically, a batch will have 100s or even 1000s of slides.

When I say "set" I mean a subset of a batch that I scan together. There are normally four slides in one set because that's how many slides my scanner can scan at once. Likewise, a post will typically have one set of four slides. It's just easier to keep track of that way.

This set starts a brand new batch and is much larger than the last.

This set contains photos spanning from as far back as at least 1959 to as recent as at least 1980. Other than these slides coming from eBay, I have no idea of their ultimate origin other than the clues provided in the photos themselves.

These were all scanned with an Epson Perfection V600 Photo scanner.

The first photo has the date June 1972 stamped on it. Google images says this photo features the Petroglyph Wall Trail at Red Rock Canyon National Conservation Area near Las Vegas, Nevada.

The second photo has the date September 1970 stamped on it. Google images identified this one as the Grand Hotel on Mackinac Island, Michigan.

The last two photos are not dated or labeled but are probably from the late 1960s or early 1970s. The third shows three older ladies sitting outside (with the lady on the right wearing what looks like a pig pendant which seems a little odd) and the last photo shows some people on a boat in a lake.









See the previous post in this series here.

The entire batch that has been scanned and uploaded so far can also be found here. This also includes higher resolution versions and versions with postprocessing.


Check out some of my other recent posts:

Compute!'s Gazette (November 1985)
https://ecency.com/retrocomputing/@darth-azrael/compute-s-gazette-november-1985

Vintage Photos - Lot 6 (013-016)
https://ecency.com/photography/@darth-azrael/vintage-photos-lot-6-013

Super R-Type (Super Nintendo)
https://ecency.com/hive-140217/@darth-azrael/super-r-type-super-nintendo

Vintage Photos - Lot 6 (009-012)
https://ecency.com/photography/@darth-azrael/vintage-photos-lot-6-009

PC World (November 2004)
https://ecency.com/retrocomputing/@darth-azrael/pc-world-november-2004

Vintage Photos - Lot 6 (005-008)
https://ecency.com/photography/@darth-azrael/vintage-photos-lot-6-005



Check out my other Social Media haunts (though most content is links to stuff I posted on Hive or re-posts of stuff originally posted on Hive):

Wordpress: https://www.megalextoria.com/wordpress
Tumblr: https://www.tumblr.com/blog/darth-azrael
Blogger: https://megalextoria.blogspot.com/
Odyssee: https://odysee.com/@Megalextoria:b
Rumble: https://rumble.com/c/c-2385054
Daily Motion: https://www.dailymotion.com/Megalextoria


Books I am reading or have recently read:

Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone by J.K. Rowling.
You Like It Darker by Stephen King.
The Altar Path by Joseph Lisiewski.


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Check out the frames on granny's glasses. It really was every single person's style back in those days wasn't it? All the photos of my own grandparents have a very similar style to them. Those folding chairs with that indestructible mesh weave plastic.. wow, that alone brings back memories of my own childhood.

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I remember my grandparents having those chairs well into the 80s. My grandfather would re-cover them (if that's the right word) whenever they needed it. I guess you could buy that plastic stuff in rolls or something.

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