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1912. "Football, Costello; Georgetown-Virginia game." Costello seems to be having a pretty good time. Harris & Ewing Collection glass negative. View full size.
I looked up this game in the Virginia football media guide. Georgetown won the 1912 game at home by a score of 16-13.
Georgetown and Virginia played 16 times between 1889 and 1913. The final record was 7 wins, 7 losses and 2 ties.
They used to do overhead bicycle kicks in American Football?
Please tell me that those cleats are made out of rubber?! Can you imagine being run over by those cleats if they were made out of metal?
This is a wonderful example of a stop-action photograph, made in an era when such things were generally thought impossible to do. Before the 1930s, photo emulsions -- the light sensitive chemistry applied to glass plates or film -- were 'slow', meaning that you either had to have enormously high light levels or your subject had to remain relatively still. Compounding the problem were lens optics that were not terribly efficient at gathering up what light was available. Yet, here we have a photo that shows very little blurring and is on a par with that seen in Sports Illustrated. Kudos!
[That's a perception maybe encouraged by historical accounts of daguerreotype studios using neck braces on portrait-sitters to allow for two-minute exposures. But 60 years later in 1912, improved emulsions allowed for shutter speeds of hundredths of a second even on inexpensive cameras. There are hundreds of stop-action sports photos from the 1910s and 20s in the LOC archive, mainly the National Photo and Bain collections. Below, another photo from the Georgetown game. These were made using 5x7 plates. I think probably the most challenging part of photography like this would have been bulk -- the heavy camera, and glass-plate boxes that weighed 5 or 10 pounds -- and what must have been the cumbersome process of changing the plates for each exposure. It would be interesting to see an account of what that was like. - Dave]
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