Vintage advertisements posted online for Mission Dry Sparkling beverages showing these bottle labels date to 1930 and identify the California Crushed Fruit Corporation as the manufacturer.
Uncle Sam dressed as a construction worker in a star pattern shirt and striped overalls and a Better Housing Program emblem on his cap. He points to a sign reading "Paint up and cheer up!"
Entrance portal with elaborate relief sculpture and tall wooden doors with metalwork, and framed by cypress trees at the Pierce Brothers Mortuary, located at 720 W. Washington.
Two Trophies awarded to Adohr Farms dairy. The inscription engraved on the front trophy reads "Certified Milk Contest, [...], First Prize, June 25, 1923, San Francisco, Adohr Stock Farms."
Open icebox with a block of ice and food inside. The label, center top, reads "Ward Cabinet[...]". The organization of the food follows recommended guidelines with dairy below the ice block on the left, and, on the right, fruit and vegetables at the top, cooked vegetables and eggs in the middle and meat at the bottom.
Brock & Company Jewelers was the most important jewelry and giftware store in Los Angeles. Founded by George A. Brock in 1903, it was sold in 1964 and the business ended s few years later. It was located at 515 West Seventh St. and had a 2nd location at the Beverly-Wilshire Hotel.
Brock & Company Jewelers was the most important jewelry and giftware store in Los Angeles. Founded by George A. Brock in 1903, it was sold in 1964 and the business ended s few years later. It was located at 515 West Seventh St. and had a 2nd location at the Beverly-Wilshire Hotel.
Two watches, a bracelet and another piece of jewelry, all with set diamonds, photographed against autumn leaves, at the Brock & Company jewelry and gift store.
Two etched glass jewelry boxes, two etched glass candle holders with sculptural silver bases in the form of sea serpents, and a bowl carved from stone with a silver, stone-footed base.
Brock & Company Jewelers was the most important jewelry and giftware store in Los Angeles. Founded by George A. Brock in 1903, it was sold in 1964 and the business ended s few years later. It was located at 515 West Seventh St. and had a 2nd location at the Beverly-Wilshire Hotel.
Brock & Company Jewelers was the most important jewelry and giftware store in Los Angeles. Founded by George A. Brock in 1903, it was sold in 1964 and the business ended s few years later. It was located at 515 West Seventh St. and had a 2nd location at the Beverly-Wilshire Hotel.
Brock & Company Jewelers was the most important jewelry and giftware store in Los Angeles. Founded by George A. Brock in 1903, it was sold in 1964 and the business ended s few years later. It was located at 515 West Seventh St. and had a 2nd location at the Beverly-Wilshire Hotel.
Interior view of "Irene LTD," a fitting area in a dress shop of designer Irene Lentz Gibbons, with art deco furnishings including an x-back chair with an upholstered seat and a small round ottoman in front of a wall mirror illuminated by a sconce, and a window with sheer drapery with the hem cut diagonally from the floor, on the left. to the top of the window.
Detail view of a recess with an art deco wood veneered table in a zig-zag pattern in front of a small wall mirror and x-back chair in the "Irene LTD," a dress shop of designer Irene Lentz Gibbons.
Photograph of George Sprague, probably the architect, seated at a piano, and an unidentified woman, both with drinks at a social gathering. There are 2 paintings on the wall behind them.
This is probably George Newman Sprague, an architect who earned his Master's Degree in Architecture from Harvard University, opened his office in Los Angeles in 1930, taught at USC and the Art Center, married Katherine Devlin in 1931, and who lived in Chadd's Ford, PA from 1947 on. Will Connell taught at the art Center during the time that Sprague was there.
Room in the art deco styled The Bachelors haberdashery, designed by Julius Ralph Davidson, furnished with director's chairs and wood table. The wall on the left is faced with closets with wood paneled sliding doors.
Although the negative sleeve attributes this work in this image to Jock Peters, other images in this negative group represent the Bachelors haberdashery by J. R. Davidson.
Although the negative sleeve attributes this work in this image to Jock Peters, other images in this negative group represent the Bachelors haberdashery by J. R. Davidson.
Although the negative sleeve attributes this work in this image to Jock Peters, other images in this negative group represent the Bachelors haberdashery by J. R. Davidson.
Although the negative sleeve attributes this work in this image to Jock Peters, other images in this negative group represent the Bachelors haberdashery by J. R. Davidson.
Although the negative sleeve attributes this work in this image to Jock Peters, other images in this negative group represent the Bachelors haberdashery by J. R. Davidson.
Although the negative sleeve attributes this work in this image to Jock Peters, other images in this negative group represent the Bachelors haberdashery by J. R. Davidson.
Artist Stanley Reckless seated of the edge of a table in his studio holding paint brushes and wearing a white shirt and tie and light-colored trousers. He is gazing towards a painting on an easel, the back of which is visible on the left. Canvases are stacked on the floor on the right and a pleated curtain fills the background below clerestory windows above.
Photograph of artist Stanley Reckless standing on a balcony of his home on a hillside in the Silver Lake neighborhood. He is dressed in light-colored trousers, a white shirt and light-colored tie.