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October 1919. Washington D.C. "Harry C. Grove, front, G Street N.W." National Photo Company Collection glass negative. View full size.
Those hubcaps were available as a Studebaker aftermarket item.
The big car is a Studebaker Light Six.
Found a site with that same hubcap and this picture of an advertisement. Looks like the same car.
Graphophone and Grafonola were trade names of the Columbia phonograph company, which competed with Edison in the cylinder era, and later, with the far more popular Victor in the 78rpm Victrola era. They made both kinds of machines, but there were no "combination" players, as there is virtually nothing in common between a cylinder phonograph and a flat-disc 78 phonograph. Columbia managed to coexist with Victor, often by emphasizing ethnic "race" records that are prized by collectors today. Through many reorganizations, Columbia made it into the radio and TV era (CBS) and developed the LP record in 1948 which became an industry standard until displaced by digital CDs.
Car on the left is definitely a Model T Ford, no idea about the one on the right, the hubcaps look distinctive though. Anyone have an idea?
The Grafonola was preceded by the Graphophone, a device that played both the Edison recorded cylinders and the newer 78 RPM records. This was sort of like the DVD/VCR combos we are more familiar with, however they took up a lot more space.
Previous Shorpy Post: 1917 Opening of Grafonola Hall
Washington Post, Mar 3, 1949Dr. Otterback
Funeral services for Dr. Morgan Otterback, 69, of 513 Seward Sq. se., dental surgeon here for many years, will be held Saturday at 11 a.m. at the Lee Funeral Home, 300 4th st ne. Burial will be in Congressional Cemetery.
Dr. Otterback, a native of Fairfax County, Va., died Tuesday at his country home in California, St. Mary's County, Md., after a long illness. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Mamie A. Otterback; a daughter, Mrs. Jean O. Wilderson; a sister, Miss Agnes C. Otterback, and a brother, Guy P. Otterback.
As opposed to sheet film. George Eastman was kind of the Henry Ford of photography - he made taking pictures simple and inexpensive, bringing it to the masses. The earliest Kodaks were sealed shut - you bought it, took your pictures, then mailed the whole camera back to Kodak, who sent you your prints, negative, and your camera reloaded with film. No muss, no fuss. This was only a few years after the time when photographers actually had to mix and pour the emulsion chemicals onto glass plates right on the spot before the shoot!
Buster Keaton's "Parlor, Bedroom and Bath" came out in 1931.
An earlier version was produced in 1920.
Another interesting view of times past. I was thinking the touring car behind the "T" was a Lincoln, but I might be wrong. Other guesses?
Note that they sell Kodaks. Apparently no cameras to be found there.
I wonder if Kodak had any viable competitors in this era.
I wondered what the poster for "Three Faces East" was advertising. According to the following link, it was a play on Broadway in 1918-1919.
[The playbill in the window is advertising the same drama, at the National Theater. - Dave]
One of the movies advertised on posters in the window of the barber shop is "Parlor, Bedroom and Bath." You can watch, or download this movie at:
Based on the sign next to the Grafonolas shop, it looks like the photographer didn't have to travel too far from his headquarters to get this image.
I grew up with a Grafonola in our house, something we'd gotten from my paternal (I think) grandparents. It had an internal horn and looked something like an overgrown music box. The volume control was a set of louvers. Every so often I'd crank it up and play one of the old acoustic 78s we'd inherited. Not too often, because the tone arm had a tracking force of about a pound, it seemed. There was a supply of steel and cactus thorn needles, and the whole thing smelled of machine oil.
Dentists above the Barber Shop -- a holdover from the even older days or awesome coincidence?
I believe you can see the photographer's reflection in the Dulin store window. You have to look through the automobile to see it. I assume he is standing to the side of his camera while the shutter was open, making adjustments or waiting to close the shutter or something.
How nice to be able to go back in time and walk in and buy a nice selection of cameras from this era. I collect antique cameras and still use them on a regular basis, so this would be a treasure trove for me.
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