- She burst into tears
Young lady bursting into tears at some bad news - Lady sitting thoughtfully in the garden
Young lady sitting thoughtfully in an arbor in the garden holding a book - Horizontal Chignon
It requires from twenty-five to thirty years for an Ishogo woman to be able to build upon her head one of their grotesque head-dresses. The accompanying picture will show you how they look. But you will ask how they can arrange hair in such a manner. I will tell you : A frame is made, and the hair is worked upon it ; but if there is no frame, then they use grass-cloth, or any other stuffing, and give the shape they wish to the head-dress. A well-known hair-dresser, who, by the way, is always a female, is a great person in an Ishogo village, and is kept pretty busy from morning till after-noon. It takes much time to work up the long wool on these negroes' heads, but, when one of these heads of hair, or chignons, is made, it lasts for a long time—sometimes for two or three months—without requiring repair. I need not tell you that after a few weeks the head gets filled with specimens of natural history. A great quantity of palm oil is used in dressing the hair, and, as the natives never wash their heads, the odor is not pleasant. When a woman comes out with a newly-made chignon, the little Ishogo girls exclaim, "When shall I be old enough to wear one of these? How beautiful they are!" Every morning, instead of taking a bath, the Ishogos rub themselves with oil, mixed with a red dye made from the wood of a forest tree. - Vertical Chignon
It requires from twenty-five to thirty years for an Ishogo woman to be able to build upon her head one of their grotesque head-dresses. The accompanying picture will show you how they look. But you will ask how they can arrange hair in such a manner. I will tell you : A frame is made, and the hair is worked upon it ; but if there is no frame, then they usd grass-cloth, or any other stuffing, and give the shape they wish to the head-dress. A well-known hair-dresser, who, by the way, is always a female, is a great person in an Ishogo village, and is kept pretty busy from morning till after-noon. It takes much time to work up the long wool on these negroes' heads, but, when one of these heads of hair, or chignons, is made, it lasts for a long time—sometimes for two or three months—without requiring repair. I need not tell you that after a few weeks the head gets filled with specimens of natural history. A great quantity of palm oil is used in dressing the hair, and, as the natives never wash their heads, the odor is not pleasant. When a woman comes out with a newly-made chignon, the little Ishogo girls exclaim, "When shall I be old enough to wear one of these? How beau-tiful they are!" Every morning, instead of taking a bath, the Ishogos rub themselves with oil, mixed with a red dye made from the wood of a forest tree. - Oblique Chignon
It requires from twenty-five to thirty years for an Ishogo woman to be able to build upon her head one of their grotesque head-dresses. The accompanying picture will show you how they look. But you will ask how they can arrange hair in such a manner. I will tell you : A frame is made, and the hair is worked upon it ; but if there is no frame, then they usd grass-cloth, or any other stuffing, and give the shape they wish to the head-dress. A well-known hair-dresser, who, by the way, is always a female, is a great person in an Ishogo village, and is kept pretty busy from morning till after-noon. It takes much time to work up the long wool on these negroes' heads, but, when one of these heads of hair, or chignons, is made, it lasts for a long time—sometimes for two or three months—without requiring repair. I need not tell you that after a few weeks the head gets filled with specimens of natural history. A great quantity of palm oil is used in dressing the hair, and, as the natives never wash their heads, the odor is not pleasant. When a woman comes out with a newly-made chignon, the little Ishogo girls exclaim, "When shall I be old enough to wear one of these? How beau-tiful they are!" Every morning, instead of taking a bath, the Ishogos rub themselves with oil, mixed with a red dye made from the wood of a forest tree. - Cultivating the crops
The men and women had very different daily tasks. Women took care of the young children; planted, tended and harvested the crops; cooked the meals; and made the pottery, baskets, mats and clothing. Men’s work consisted of housebuilding, canoe-making, and clearing land for gardens, along with defense, hunting, woodcutting, and making the tools for these chores. The men also had primary responsibilities for ritual and political activities. - Two ladies in the crowd at the park
Two ladies in the crowd at the park - Oh Dear, not a county family?
Two women talking - A Lady
A Lady - Lady in house-robe. Period, 1816
Lady in house-robe. Period, 1816 - A Niam-niam girl
The social position of the Niam-niam women differ materially from what is found amongst other negroes in Africa. The Bongo and Mittoo women are on the same familiar terms with the foreigner as the men, and the Monbuttoo ladies are as forward , inquisitive and prying as can be imagined; but the women of the Niam-niam treat every stranger with marked reserve. Whenever I met any women coming along a narrow pathway in the woods or on the steppe, I noticed that they always made a wide circuit to avoid me, and returned into the path further on; and many a time I saw them waiting at a distance with averted face until I had passed by. - A Healthy Complexion
Lady looking at herself in a mirror - Woman writing letters at cluttered Victorian desk
Woman writing letters at cluttered Victorian desk - What will the girl become
The Two Paths: What Will the Girl Become? At 13 Bad Literature, At 20 Flirting Coquettery, At 26 Fast Life and Dissipation, At 40 An Outcast; At 13 Study & Obedience, At 20 Virtue & Devotion, At 26 A Loving Mother, At 60 An Honored Grandmother - The Doctors Visit
Man and woman sitting down talking - The Corset in the 18th Century
During the 18th century corsets were largely made from a species of leather known as "Bend," which was not unlike that used for shoe soles, and measured nearly a quarter of an inch in thickness. - Save the girls
Depiction of the choice a woman must make in life. - Same time next week
A man leaving a house while a woman has a notepad to write something in. - Preparing to entertain her lover
Preparing to entertain her lover - Mother and daughter
Mother and daughter - Love of Home
Young lady smelling a rose that she has received - Lady writing a love letter
Young lady writing - Lady Reading the Bible
Lady Reading the Bible - Joan of Arc
Joan of Arc - Improve your speech by reading
A family sitting around reading - illustrating magnetic influences
animal magnetism is supposed to radiate from and encircle every human being - Found upon the doorstep
Woman opening the door to find a baby in a basket - Confidence
Two young ladies talking - Children Should be taught early the lessons of Propriety and Good Manners
Mother and daughter - Asking an honest question
A man and woman talking - An easy-going disposition
A cat eating from the counter while a lady ignores the cat - Lady with a pitcher of lemonade
Lady walking with a pitcher of drink - Lady and boy discuss a kite
Lady and boy discuss a kite - Rose-Red's mamma gathered her up in her arms and comforted her
Mother and child embrace - Water-carriers, Duna Földvár
Women water carriers - Washer-women
At every available point of the crowded river-front washerwomen, with their petticoats wet to the waist, stood knee-deep in the stream, and accompanied their lively chatter with the vigorous tattoo of their active mallets. In the shadow of the houses near the landing great piles of watermelons were the centres of groups of all ages, every individual busy with the luscious, juicy fruit. - Roumanian Peasant Girl
Roumanian Peasant Girl - Returning from Market
Woman returning from market pushing a barrow with empty baskets - Pump at Pöchlarn
Woman standing in front of the Pump at Pöchlarn - In Sunday Dress, Monostorszég
In Sunday Dress, Monostorszég - Hungarian Girls at Bezdán
Hungarian Girls at Bezdán - Donaueschingen Girls
Donaueschingen Girls - A Haymaker
A Haymaker - Peasant Woman and Churn
Peasant Woman and Churn - Boy discussing two women
Boy telling his friend to respect his mother - A windy day
Small girl waiting for old lady on a windy day. - Man and Woman
Upper class man and his wife - I have the honor to surrender to the loveliest woman the sword surrendered to me by one of the bravest of men,
- two walking dresses as well as an indoors and evening dress 1836
two walking dresses as well as an indoors and evening dress 1836 - Hair fashions 1834 England
Hair fashions 1834 England - The fashions of 1833 include two walking-dresses, one dinner, and one ball-dress,
The fashions of 1833 include two walking-dresses, one dinner, and one ball-dress, - The dresses for 1837 are two walking-dresses and a ball dress, and also a child's costume
The dresses for 1837 are two walking-dresses and a ball dress, and also a child's costume - hair dressing which were in vogue in 1832
hair styles which were in vogue in 1832 - English dress fashions worn in 1830
English dress fashions worn in 1830 Two walking dresses, one evening, and one ball dress. - different styles of hair-dressing fashionable in 1830-31
different styles of hair-dressing fashionable in 1830-31 - different modes of dressing the hair.in 1835
different modes of dressing the hair.in 1835 - Hairstyles for 1837
Hairstyles for 1837 - English Fashions 1832
a dinner, two ball, and a walking dress 1832 - Buy a broom girl
One of the features of the streets at that time was the "buy a broom girl," so called from her cry. Her costume was picturesque, and she was rather an ornament to the extremely prosaic street. "From Deutschland I come, with my light wares all laden, To dear, happy England, in summer's gay bloom; Then listen, fair ladies, and young pretty maidens, And buy of a wand'ring Bavarian, a broom. Buy a broom? Buy a broom?" - bonnets worn in 1830
bonnets worn in England in 1830