Showing 1605 items matching "australian illustration"
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Tennis Australia
Hand Fan, Circa 1890s
A hand fan decorated with graphic illustration depicting a lawn tennis match. Paper on wood frame. Metal label adhered to backing below fan reads: 'AMERICAN ALLEN FAN/ CIRCA 1890S'. Fan also mounted to cloth-lined frame backing. Materials: Ink, Paper, Wood, Metal, Adhesive label, Glass, Clothtennis -
Tennis Australia
Playing cards, Circa 1890
Four tennis-themed playing cards, each featuring illustrations or either a male or female youth, demonstrating either a serve, volley, return, or net shot. The cards are derived from a card game set called 'Card Tennis' (TA 2009.14) Materials: Paper, Ink, Cardboard, Metal, Paint, Wood, Glasstennis -
Tennis Australia
Page from Magazine, Circa 1890, Circa 2000
Two snippets from a late 19th century magazine, featuring lithographic illustrations of men and women playing tennis. The illustration to the right features the text: LAWN TENNIS/THE TENNIS/BELLE/THE/TENNIS/SWELL. Materials: Paper, Ink, Cardboard, Glass, Wood, Adhesive label, Metaltennis -
Tennis Australia
Poster, Circa 1890, Circa 2000
A digital reproduction of a late 19th century poster, featuring the illustration of a male youth pushing a line marker. Inscription: THE/"CAXTON"/LAWN/TENNIS/MARKER/PATENTED &/REGISTERED/MANUFACd. BY F.H. AYRES LONDON/ARMITAGE & IBBETSON LITHOS BRADFORD. Materials: Paper, Ink, Cardboard, Foamcore, Glass, Woodtennis -
Tennis Australia
Photograph Album, Circa 1880
Leather bound German photograph album, with large brass clasp. Entitled 'Olympia' in gold lettering on front cover and also on frontispiece. Contains illustrations throughout depicting sporting scenes, including tennis, shooting, steeplechase, rowing, bowls, cricket, polo, fishing, yachting, cycling and rugby. Various monochrome photographs contained in album. Materials: Paper, Ink, Photographic emulsion, Cardboard, Leather, Metaltennis -
Tennis Australia
Action game, Circa 1956
A boxed Nintendo (Japan) game with unknown title. Design of game and illustration on lid indicates a tennis theme. Inside box are 3 play panels, two with 'shooters'. Materials: Cardboard, Paper, Ink, Plastic, Metaltennis -
Tennis Australia
Block puzzle, Circa 1920
French block puzzle entitled 'Les Cubes Humoristiques'. 21-part object; (1 to 15) 15 paper-covered wooden blocks which can be arranged to make six different scenes; (16) Wooden box for housing blocks with paper lithograph illustration on lid depicting a tennis match; (17 to 21) Five picture cards: colour lithographs pasted onto card, depicting various humourous sporting and leisure scenes. Materials: Wood, Paper, Metal, Cardboard, Ink, Cloth tapetennis -
Tennis Australia
Magazine, 25 Jul 1897
An issue of the New York Tribune, Illustrated Supplement, 25 July, 1897. The back cover features an illustration of couples playing lawn tennis in a park. Materials: Paper, Inktennis -
Tennis Australia
Box, Circa 1880
A dismantled cardboard box, with a string carry handle, featuring illustrations of children, including of children playing lawn tennis. Materials: Paper, Ink, Cardboard, Stringtennis -
Tennis Australia
Painting, Circa 1890
A small rectangular, blue silk cloth piece, featuring a painted illustration of a woman playing tennis. Materials: Paint, Silktennis -
Tennis Australia
Label, Circa 1885
Two identical labels (.1-.2) advertising Superior Chemical Co. Lawn Grass Fertilizer and Weed Destroyer. Illustration of a man and woman playing lawn tennis features. Materials: Paper, Inktennis -
Tennis Australia
Order form, Circa 1922
An order form for Eduscho coffee and tea, featuring illustration of lady playing tennis. Materials: Paper, Inktennis -
Tennis Australia
Advertisement, Circa 1923
A cardboard advertisement shaped in the form of a tennis bat/paddle, promoting Emerson's Ginger-Mint Julep. Front features illustration of a young ladt playing tennis. Materials: Cardboard, Inktennis -
Tennis Australia
Poster, Advertisement, Circa 1955
Three identical poster advertisements for Victor Gut Strings, featuring illustration of a boy stringing a racquet. Materials: Paper, Inktennis -
Tennis Australia
Flyer, Advertisement, 1890
A flyer promoting Ivory Soap, featuring an illustration of a lady in her summer dress, holding up a tennis racquet, on a court. Materials: Paper, Inktennis -
Tennis Australia
Print, Circa 1891
A modern reproduction of a c.1891 illustration of M.C.C. members playing real tennis on an enclosed court within the grounds of Lord's. Lord's to this day, still maintains a Real Tennis court. Materials: Paper, Inktennis -
Tennis Australia
Print, Circa 1891
A modern reproduction of a c.1891 illustration of Dominican monks playing lawn tennis within the grounds of their monastery. Materials: Paper, Inktennis -
Tennis Australia
Print, 1880
A modern reproduction of an 1880 illustration of John Hartley and Herbert Lawford playing in the final of Wimbledon 1880. Materials: Paper, Inktennis -
Tennis Australia
Page from Magazine, Jul 1888
Pages 329-336, plus an illustration page featuring a reproduction of a drawing 'Serving the ball', by J. Carter Beard (10 pages, 5 folia), from 'Outing' magazine (Vol. 7, July, 1888). Pages feature an essay/article entitled: LAWN TENNIS. Materials: Paper, Inktennis -
Tennis Australia
Poster, Advertisement, Circa 1923
A small poster promoting the game of Paddle tennis (known in Australia as Bat Tennis). It features a photo image of boys and girls playing a bat tennis game in Washington Square, New York City; an illustration of a 'paddle'; lawn tennis player endorsements; and media reports. Materials: Paper, Inktennis -
Tennis Australia
Page from Magazine, Sep-26
An article entitled 'Beauty - safeguard it', featuring an illustration of a woman with tennis racquet. Materials: Paper, Inktennis -
Tennis Australia
Print, 1908
A print of an R. Hill illustration, featuring a young lady holding a tennis racquet, picking a rose. Materials: Paper, Inktennis -
Tennis Australia
Page from Magazine, Jun-26
Pages 29-30 of the June 1926 edition of McCall's, advertising Woodbury's Facial Soap, with an illustration of women playing tennis. Materials: Paper, Inktennis -
Tennis Australia
Metal container, Circa 1920
An empty tin printed with illustrations of tennis racquets and the word 'Tennis' on two sides. Other two sides printed with a tartan pattern. Has circular lid covered in houndstooth fabric. Materials: Metal, Painttennis -
Tennis Australia
Metal container, Circa 1930
An empty Country Club cigar box, top label printed with illustrations of sporting scenes, including a tennis match scene. Lid stapled to box. Materials: Wood, Paper, Ink, Metaltennis -
Tennis Australia
Magazine, Jul-79
The July 1979 issue of 'Tennis' magazine (Vol.15, No.3), with illustration, by John Sovjani, of Bjorn Borg, on the cover. Materials: Ink, Paper, Metaltennis -
Tennis Australia
Page from Magazine, 1895
Page 784 of the German language edition of Puck (1895), featuring, under the heading 'Tennis Tea', an illustration of men and women having tea on a lawn during a tennis match. Within a text box at the upper left, is a poem, in German, entitled 'Beim "Lawn Tennis" Thee' (trans. 'At the Lawn Tennis Tea'). Materials: Paper, Inktennis -
Tennis Australia
Page from Magazine, 3-May-24
Page 675 of The Graphic magazine (3 May 1924), featuring an article on Spring fashion, entitled FRILLS AND FRIVOLITIES. An illustration of a woman holding an Aquascutum tennis coat features. Materials: Paper, Inktennis -
Kew Historical Society Inc
Book, Rosalie Triolo, Our Schools and the War, 2012
"The Great War profoundly touched the lives of Australian teachers, school children and local communities, and with lasting consequences. Every teacher had the task of explaining the war to their students. Many teachers, a disproportionately large number, fought and died, and were joined by their older students. For years after, the names of those who fell were respectfully displayed on school honor boards, in honor books and remembered by other commemorative means, including through the introduction of Anzac Day. How teachers and school communities were affected by patriotic appeals and activities, and how they responded to the long years of grim news from Gallipoli, the Western Front and other sites of training, fighting and convalescence, is revealed in an account that historians, general readers and today's students will find illuminating and deeply moving." --Back cover.North Melbourne, Vic. : Australian Scholarly Publishing, 2012 : xvii, 364 pages : illustrations, facsimiles, portraits ; 25 cm non-fiction"The Great War profoundly touched the lives of Australian teachers, school children and local communities, and with lasting consequences. Every teacher had the task of explaining the war to their students. Many teachers, a disproportionately large number, fought and died, and were joined by their older students. For years after, the names of those who fell were respectfully displayed on school honor boards, in honor books and remembered by other commemorative means, including through the introduction of Anzac Day. How teachers and school communities were affected by patriotic appeals and activities, and how they responded to the long years of grim news from Gallipoli, the Western Front and other sites of training, fighting and convalescence, is revealed in an account that historians, general readers and today's students will find illuminating and deeply moving." --Back cover.ww1, first world war, schools, education, wwi -
Kew Historical Society Inc
Photograph, Anglo-Australasian Photographic Company, Junction of the River Watt and Contentment Creek, c. 1876
Nicholas Caire was born on Guernsey in the Channel Islands in 1837. He arrived in Adelaide with his parents in about 1860. In 1867, following photographic journeys in Gippsland, he opened a studio in Adelaide. From 1870 to 1876 he lived and worked in Talbot in Central Victoria. In 1876 he purchased T. F. Chuck's studios in the Royal Arcade Melbourne. In 1885, following the introduction of dry plate photography, he began a series of landscape series, which were commercially successful. As a photographer, he travelled extensively through Victoria, photographing places few of his contemporaries had previously seen. He died in 1918. Reference: Jack Cato, 'Caire, Nicholas John (1837–1918)', Australian Dictionary of Biography.An original, rare photograph from the series 'Views of Victoria: General Series' by the photographer, Nicholas Caire (1837-1918). The series of 60 photographs that comprise the series was issued c. 1876 and reinforced a neo-Romantic view of the Australian landscape to which a growing nationalist movement would respond. Nicholas Caire was active as a photographer in Australia from 1858 until his death in 1918. His vision of the Australian bush and pioneer life had a counterpart in the works of Henry Lawson and other nationalist poets, authors and painters.Albumen Silver Photograph, mounted on Board. printed in ink on support l.c.: JUNCTION OF THE RIVER WATT AND CONTENTMENT CREEK. / COPYRIGHT REGISTERED. printed in ink on support reverse c.: VIEWS OF VICTORIA. / (GENERAL SERIES.) / No. 1. / JUNCTION OF THE RIVER WATT AND CONTENTMENT CREEK. / This scene is situated about two miles to the westward of Fernshawe, a small but extremely romantic township. / The river, at this juncture, is crossed by a fallen tree, as may be seen in the illustration. The track which is seen on / the opposite side of the river leads to the summit of Mt. Munda (3,500 feet high), 4 miles distant, from which place / visitors can see the Australian Alps, in all their mighty grandeur, stretching for hundreds of miles on either side, / and, as far as the eye can reach, impressing a beholder with the appropriateness of their title, being that of the Great Dividing Range. printed in ink on support reverse l.c.l.: J.W. FORBES, Agent, printed in ink on support reverse l.c.: ANGLO-AUSTRALASIAN PHOTOGRAPHIC COMPANY, MELBOURNE. printed in ink on support reverse l.c.r.: 10 Temple Court, Collins Street West.nicholas caire, views of victoria - general series, landscape photography