Posted 3 years ago
laurarene68
(3 items)
here are some more pics from the magazines so u can all see more content and see if u know much about them or if u have seen these magazines before
more pics from the magazine 1922 | ||
laurarene68's items2 of 3 |
Create a Show & TellReport as inappropriate
Posted 3 years ago
laurarene68
(3 items)
here are some more pics from the magazines so u can all see more content and see if u know much about them or if u have seen these magazines before
Create an account or login in order to post a comment.
Hi again, laurarene68. :-)
Well, Conrad Nagel is certainly a familiar name for me, probably because his career survived past the silent film era. Well past, in fact:
https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0619261/
Here's a picture of Nagel, his wife, and baby:
https://www.wisconsinhistory.org/Records/Image/IM97380
That second picture tells me what I wanted to know about one image in your other post (that the publication in question is Picture Show). About Picture Show magazine:
https://collectingoldmagazines.com/magazines/picture-show/
Unfortunately, that link to the comprehensive, library of Picture Show magazine images (pictureshowmagazine dot com) isn't working right now, because it's either not configured properly, or offline for some other reason.
I looked it up in whois at domaintools dot com:
*snip*
Created on 2015-11-05
Expires on 2022-11-05
Updated on 2020-10-08
*snip*
https://whois.domaintools.com/pictureshowmagazine.com
Its registration is valid until early November 2022; however, it looks like the last update was in 2020, so I'm not quite sure what's going on there. :-(
OK, I looked it up at whois dot com, which showed an update in late 2021:
Domain:
pictureshowmagazine.com
Registrar:
TLD Registrar Solutions Ltd.
Registered On:
2015-11-05
Expires On:
2022-11-05
Updated On:
2021-10-23
*snip*
https://www.whois.com/whois/pictureshowmagazine.com
That still doesn't explain why they're offline. Perhaps they've gone out of business.
thankyou
laurarene68, You're welcome. :-)
I'm actually a big vintage movie fan, and can identify many actors from decades ago, but I'm afraid the cutoff for me is about 1930.
With a few exceptions, I just can't watch silent films, because I find myself impatiently awaiting the next intertitle card.
I was hoping to find some major online trove of Picture Show magazine scans, and that website sounded like it fit the bill.
FWIW, Mr. Peabody's Wayback machine has a copy of some 1919/1920 issues:
https://archive.org/details/pictureshow1919102unse
It looks like PhilDMorris has given you some advice on disposition, so that's good.
As to preservation, perhaps treating them like newspaper is the way to go:
https://www.archives.gov/preservation/holdings-maintenance/newspaper.html
laurarene68, Here is another potential disposition for your Picture Show Art Supplements.
There is actually a wiki archive for Picture Show Movie Magazine, but they all seem to be missing the Art Supplements. Perhaps the OP might want yours:
https://magawiki.com/cliff-aliperti/
I kept looking for a way to contact the OP of the magazine wiki without the need of yet another account such as eBay, Facebook, etc. >8-0
It turns out he has his own eponymous website with a contact interface:
https://cliffaliperti.com/about/