An American Odyssey

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These rediscovered Photochrom and Photostint postcard images were produced by the Detroit  Photographic Company between 1888 and 1924. Using a photolithographic process they offered peoplethe very first color photographs of The United States. For the first time, America’s colors were available for all to see. The rich reds, yellows and browns of the Grand Canyon, the sand and sea dazzle of Atlantic City, became a visual delight not only for travelers, but for Americans everywhere.

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Graphic designer, photographer and collector Marc Walter has amassed an extraordinary collection of photographs for TASCHEN’s new publication An American Odyssey. With them he creates a comprehensive picture of the new world in its earliest days, all ramshackle mining towns in the West, steam boats in New York’s harbor and the booming new industrial cities. The book has more than 600 pages including fold-out spreads, this sweeping panorama incorporates everything from Native American settlements to New York’s Chinatown, from some of the last cowboys to Coney Island’s heyday.

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A photochrom is a color proof obtained by transferring a black and white photographic negative on numerous lithographic stones: one for each final wanted color. This was done using a specific new process, “the Photochrom process”, invented in 1889 by the Swiss Hans Jakob Schmidt, chief lithographer at the Orell Füssli printworks in Zurich.  The Photochrom process was brought to the Detroit Photographic Company by a technician who had worked for the Swiss company, Albert Schuler, in 1895–96. In the United States, it was marketed under the name of the “Aäc color photography process.”

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The authors:

Marc Walter specializes in vintage travel photographs, particularly photochroms, of which he has one of the world’s largest collections. He has widely published books with images from his collection as well as his own photographs. Sabine Arqué is a documentarian, iconographer, and author. She has collaborated on numerous books on the subjects of travel, the history of tourism and photography.

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Are You Having A Laugh

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St George’s Church in Bloomsbury seems an unlikely location for London’s newest museum. The Museum of Comedy, Britain’s first museum dedicated to comedic artifacts, was founded by theater owner Martin Witts to display his collection of thousands of comedic curiosities. Opened just yesterday, the museum is situated in the church’s crypt and also features a 100-seat comedy venue. You can learn more right here.

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There’s No Mystique

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There is, I hope, a thesis in my work: we may encounter many defeats, but we must not be defeated. That sounds goody-two-shoes, I know, but I believe that a diamond is the result of extreme pressure and time. Less time is crystal. Less than that is coal. Less than that is fossilized leaves. Less than that it’s just plain dirt. In all my work, in the movies I write, the lyrics, the poetry, the prose, the essays, I am saying that we may encounter many defeats—maybe it’s imperative that we encounter the defeats—but we are much stronger than we appear to be and maybe much better than we allow ourselves to be. Human beings are more alike than unalike. There’s no real mystique. Every human being, every Jew, Christian, backslider, Muslim, Shintoist, Zen Buddhist, atheist, agnostic, every human being wants a nice place to live, a good place for the children to go to school, healthy children, somebody to love, the courage, the unmitigated gall to accept love in return, someplace to party on Saturday or Sunday night, and someplace to perpetuate that God. There’s no mystique. None. And if I’m right in my work, that’s what my work says.”

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Boeing Boeing

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Brothers Otavio and Gustavo Pandolfo (aka Os Gemeos) became legends in the street art community back in 2011 when they painted an entire train. Now they’ve topped themselves by painting an entire Boeing 737.

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The twin brothers completed the colossal project in under a week, using 1200 cans of spray paint to depict a crowd of fans. The GOL Airlines plane will be carrying Brazil’s national football team during this year’s World Cup competition.

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photo credit: Junior Lago/UOL

 

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Somebody Listened

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Boarding passes may not make anyone’s top ten list of air travel complaints, but they are really annoying. They don’t fit in pockets, passports or wallets, and by the time that you have to check-in they’re bent, torn or crumpled. But Virgin America has been listening to its passengers and has created an elegant fix—a folding boarding pass. The new design incorporates flight numbers, gate and terminal, seat assignment, departure and arrival times, as well as personal data. And it fits in your pocket.

 

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Warren Buffet Wants To Cover You Trip

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A new flight insurance plan, called AirCare, is a new angle on conventional travel insurance policies, which generally cover individuals who might have to cancel expensive trips, like high cost flights, tour packages or cruises, for medical or other emergencies. But AirCare’s protection is designed exclusively for airline-related problems. For the cost of only $25 per trip (payable up to an hour before departure), the flyer qualifies for an immediate payment for a variety of flight screw-ups, starting with $50 for a delay of more than two hours. The payment increases in proportion to the inconvenience: For a missed connection caused by a flight delay, AirCare pays $500; also for luggage that’s delayed for more than 12 hours. For fliers stuck on the tarmac for more than two hours (one hour less than the federally mandated trigger for penalties on the airlines), users get $1,000. Although some airlines do offer limited refunds or vouchers for some of these situations, the AirCare protections are in addition to whatever the airline eventually pays up—assuming they do at all.

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The AirCare plans are being sold by Berkshire Hathaway Travel Protection, a spin-off of one of billionaire Warren Buffett’s many enterprises. The new company is being run by John Noel, who launched Travel Guard.

The plans are currently available only for U.S. domestic flights, but plans are in place for expansion of protection for most international travel. Mobile apps are available for IOS and Android devices.iphone2

 

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Trinkets & Trash

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During two days this month, teams of guerilla artists from the anti-corporate street art project Brandalism reclaimed  360 ads in ten British cities with hand made art work by forty international artists, such as Ludo, Ron English, Ankles, Know Hope, Paul Insect and Anthony Lister.

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Brandalism is self-described as a revolt against corporate control of the visual realm. Their latest campaign takes aim at advertising pollution, consumerism run rampant, gender stereotyping, and corrosive capitalism.

 

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Oops…

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I’ve always been impressed by the speed, comfort and relative dependability of France’s national railway system, but it appears that SNCF has made an incredible blunder. After ordering 341 new TER regional trains, a simple measurement error is going to cost SCNF more than € 50 million to enlarge at least 1300 stations to accommodate the new cars. Engineers failed to check stations built more than 30 years ago for accurate spacing between platforms and the tracks.

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How Do You Write ?

George R. R. Martin’s recent revelation that he does all of his writing on an old computer running DOS seems to have inspired this infographic:

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Take the A Train

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I’ve ridden the New York City subway system since infancy, sadly I never paid much attention to the intricate tiling, murals and typography throughout many of the stations. However, New York-based designer Adam Chang has opened my eyes to the awesome art work there with his NY Train Project blog, which celebrates the hidden design treasures to be discovered within the city’s underground stations.

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Chang who runs the design studio Same Tomorrow—was inspired to begin the blog when he first noticed the 19th century tile and ceramic work in the Bleecker Street station in Greenwich Village. Now he aims to chronicle every subway station in the system. Even if you don’t care about public art, the blog is actually a handy guide to the intricate system.

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