Weekly Photo Challenge, Yellow.

December 21, 2014 § Leave a comment

DSC_0219  Yellow

Arthur L. Benjamin, New President Of The Boot And Shoe Travelers’ Assn. Of New York | 1962

December 19, 2014 § 1 Comment

Doing some research on my grandfather Ben Benjamin,  I came across this “shoe” news item on my dad at The NY Public Library.

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B&STA (Boot and Shoe Travelers’ Assn.) of New York

There’s A New Cover Girl In Town | 1962.

December 15, 2014 § 1 Comment

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Recycled Designs | Bata, Deck Oxfords, 1962.

December 14, 2014 § Leave a comment

This Bata line from 1962, Deck Oxfords is reminiscent of present day Vans and predates them by 4 years.

Boot and Shoe Recorder 1961 - Bata

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Weekly Photo Challenge, Twinkle.

December 13, 2014 § Leave a comment

The Daily Post.

Window Display

Twinkle

Old Signage | MM and Robert Bestien Handbags – East 33rd Street.

December 12, 2014 § Leave a comment

I love the old signage that is becoming rarer and rarer to see in the city. Usually it’s only when a building is torn down that you have a brief window to take a pictutre before another building goes up.

Robert Bestien Handbags was a division of the Bestcraft Handbag Corp., MM stands for The Morris Moskowitz Corp. who was the president of the company.

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Do Not Touch The Legs.

December 11, 2014 § 2 Comments

Please Don't Touch The Legs

ZOHARA – Art on Tights, seen in Grand Central Terminal.

Today On The Street | Another Wet And Cold Day In Manhattan.

December 10, 2014 § 2 Comments

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Bata Shoes | Sun Charmer, 1960.

December 10, 2014 § Leave a comment

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Bata Shoes

Benjamin Home Movies

December 9, 2014 § 6 Comments

Growing up there was a rusted metal box in one of our closets that was filled with cans of 16mm film. As a child they seemed kind of creepy to me. Trapped memories. We had no way to watch them. By the time I was old enough to appreciate their value they had started to disintegrate. They had that vinegary smell that old film gets. Now working at a post house in New York that transferred film to tape, on one of my visits to my mother’s I put all of the film in ziplock bags and took it back with me on the plane to New York. I was able to transfer most it. A few rolls were badly melted and fused together, so had to be thrown out.  Most of the film was so delicate that we opted not to clean it before we transferred it. Again like the family photos there was little information written on the film boxes. –Sometimes I think of the journey that the photographs and films have made. Leaving New York, traveling thousands of miles to sit in a closet for years untouched then back to where they started. I’ll never forget the feeling of seeing them come to life. When I began my blog almost a year ago I posted this clip, so some of you who have been following may remember it. It’s a short sampling of some of the film footage I put together when I was working in Post Production.

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