Box 11
Contains 129 Results:
Item 2: Bleaching Linen, Near Belfast, Ireland
Black and white image of of men either loading linen onto a horse-drawn cart or unloading it. Linen can be bleached after being woven by having it spread out in the fields to be bleached by the sun and dew, as can be seen in the background here. [Meadville, Pa.]: Keystone View Company, ca. 1900-1920. 18 x 9 cm.
Format: Stereoptic print.
Item 1: Attrezzi per l'incisione dell Planches da stampa. [Tools for engraving of Planches]
Museo didattico della Seta Como. Foto Enzo Pifferi stampa Tip Ed. Cesare Nani.
Format: Postcard.
Item 2: Dipinto rafffigurante stampatori al lavoro (A. Colombo). [Painted rafffigurante printers at work]
Museo didattico della Seta Como. Foto Enzo Pifferi stampa Tip Ed. Cesare Nani.
Format: Postcard.
Item 3: Copying design on copper rolls for printing cotton cloth, Lawrence, Mass.
Item 4: Printing Room, Cotton Mills, Orizaba, Mexico., 1904
Black and white image of a printing room in a cotton mill in Orizaba, Mexico. A row of printing machines lines the wall to the left. A printing machine can print up to 14 colors. Cotton is by far the most common fabric to be printed. Meadville, Pa.: Keystone View Company. 17.5 x 9 cm.
Format: Stereoptic print.
Item 5: Printing color designs on silk cloth, 10 colors at once, in a great silk dyeing works, N.J.
Item 6: General View in Large Printing Room of Cotton Mills, Lawrence, Mass.
Item 7: Printing Cloth--Silk Industry, So. Manchester, Conn., 1914
Black-and-white image shows large printing cylinder used to print silk cloth. Up to twelve rollers may be used to print a design directly on the silk cloth, rather than have it woven into the cloth. Although not specificed, this is the Cheney Bros. plant in South Manchester, Conn. Meadville, Pa.: Keystone View Company. 17.75 x 9 cm.
Format: Stereoptic print.
Item 8: Cotton print stampers
Black and white image of two Indian men in traditional dress, kneeling in front of a low table on which is spread a printed fabric, using hand blocks to stamp the fabric. Universal Postal Union, British India. ca. 1900-1905. 13. 5 x 9 cm.
Format: Postcard.
Item 9: Setting the Rug Patterns
Black and white image of women working setting rug patterns in an unknown carpet mill. The tables at which the women work are loaded with spindles of yarn. Addressed to someone in Bloomsburg, Pa.; may possibly be the Magee Carpet Co. in Bloomsburg. Written on reverse: "Aunt Lydia worked here." ca. 1905-1907. 14 x 8.5 cm.
Format: Postcard.