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by Maureen A. Taylor
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 Monday, December 31, 2012
Twelve Months of the Photo Detective
Posted by Maureen
It's time to look back at the year. Every week I write a Photo Detective blog post—that's 52 columns in 12 months. It's a lot of free photographic advice and tips. Here are my month-by-month 2012 favorites.
January Last New Year's I offered advice on sharing images online, tackled a photo mystery about the identity of the mother in a picture, and discussed a Scottish picture.
February I got into the planning for my trip to WDYTYA Live in London by comparing British and American fashion.
March Hat's off to spring! Last March I featured toppers for men, graduation caps, and talked about the relationships between hairstyles and hat design. If you want to learn more about hats or hair, my books, Fashionable Folks: Bonnets and Hats 1840-1900 and Fashionable Folks: Hairstyles 1840-1900, will help.
April The whole month of April focused on identifying photographs of children. Study the clues to add names to those pictures of tykes.
May A trip to the National Genealogical Society inspired a series of columns on the Jeffers Family photo.
June You can view the entries in the Family Tree Magazine photo contest, study a photo of ancestral blue jeans or be awed by the images of wheat threshing.
July With the world watching the Olympics, I deciphered the clues in a picture from the 1908 Olympics.
August I revealed the winner of the Family Tree Magazine Photo Contest. That photo mystery now appears in my new book, The Family Photo Detective. It's now available in the ShopFamilyTree.com store.
Have you considered the relationship between photography and genealogy? I took a look at the types of records that help solve a picture mystery.
September This month was all about preservation. A badly damaged image encouraged me to talk about ways to save family pictures. There is more information on storage and labeling images in Preserving Your Family Photographs.
October A picture of a giant mechanical grasshopper appeared in my Photo Detective column in Family Tree Magazine, and some readers stepped forward to tell the story of their ancestors' fascination with creating these creatures.
I shared the story of a woman who found a family picture after three decades and explained how old-time photographers could alter pictures long before the development of Photoshop.
November Have you ever posed for a multi-generation photo? It's not a new phenomena. Our ancestors did, too. Mary Lutz sent me several images of her family. It turned into a series on identifying who's who in a group picture.
December I love snapshots! They are spontaneous and often capture bits of everyday life. Follow this series on a picture of a man standing in his backyard.
Thank you for reading this column and for submitting your family photos. If you'd like to participate, there is a link, "How to Submit Your Photo," in the left-hand margin. I can't wait to see your pictures!
Happy New Year!
Solve your family photo mysteries with these books by Maureen A. Taylor:
Fashionable Folks: Bonnets and Hats 1840-1900
Preserving Your Family Photographs
Fashionable Folks: Hairstyles 1840-1900
Finding the Civil War in Your Family Album
1860s photos | 1870s photos | 1880s photos | 1890s photos | 1900-1910 photos | 1910s photos | 1920s photos | candid photos | cased images | children | Civil War | group photos | hairstyles | hats | holiday | house/building photos | photo backgrounds | preserving photos | props in photos | ShopFamilyTree.com
Monday, December 31, 2012 4:07:01 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
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 Monday, August 20, 2012
Genealogy Fashions: Is Your Ancestor's Hat Back in Style?
Posted by Maureen
Fashion is looking back not merely to the 1970s, but all the way to the
1920s and even 1880s, at least as far as hats are concerned.
Last Sunday's
New York Times fashion supplement featured advertisements showing old-fashioned-looking hats by designers
Louis Vuitton and Donna Karan. Even the Bloomingdale's ad featured a
model in a vintage style hat.
I can't show you the Louis Vuitton ad, but I can show you hats that
resemble the ones worn by the models in the New York Times ads. It was a fashion spread for
handbags, but the head wear looked liked these workmen's hats from the 1850s. I'm serious! Vuitton added a grosgrain band above the brim, but the shape is very similar.

Donna Karan's ad is online. The hat on the woman in the video strongly resembles those worn in the 1880s. In fact, I featured a similar looking hat in Photo Contest Submissions: Shirley Jenks Jacobs submitted this photo of a woman in a rolled brimmed hat with trim and a high crown.

One more blast from the past was the Bloomingdale's ad of a young model wearing a plush hat with a very wide brim and a plume of animal fur. It looked something like this image I own of a wedding from circa 1920. Don't you love his hair? It helps date this image.

So which hat style will you wear this season? I'll be looking through the photos in my Fashionable Folks: Bonnets and Hats, 1840-1900 for more matches.
Solve your family photo mysteries with these books by Maureen A. Taylor:
Fashionable Folks: Bonnets and Hats 1840-1900
Preserving Your Family Photographs
Fashionable Folks: Hairstyles 1840-1900
Finding the Civil War in Your Family Album
1850s photos | 1880s photos | 1920s photos | hairstyles | hats | ShopFamilyTree.com | unusual photos
Monday, August 20, 2012 3:55:13 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Thursday, December 01, 2011
The Ultimate Photo Preservation Collection Is Back for a Limited Time!
Posted by Diane
Hi! I (Diane) am dropping in briefly to let Photo Detective blog fans know that we're bringing back a limited number of the Ultimate Photo Preservation Collections to ShopFamilyTree.com.
This kit offers tools to help you ensure your family's memories will be around for future generations to enjoy. It includes Maureen's signed Preserving Your Family Photographs book.
This deeply discounted collection sold out in less than a day in June. Only 25 are available, so jump on this chance to grab one. preserving photos | ShopFamilyTree.com
Thursday, December 01, 2011 2:18:56 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
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