Parlors 

67 creative works found

  • This tee bring good luck!

  • Getting ready for an appointment with destiny it seems! This horse was so big and beautiful, the poor woman had to stand on a saw horse to braid it’s mane! But she looked as though she was having a great time and you could see it meant a lot to her to get the job done just perfectly! It was a hot, sunny day too, so the horse was not really liking it, but she managed to get the job done after a few scoldings. Shot taken Aug.31/2007 at the IPE in Armstrong ,B.C., Canada.

  • Mouse drawn on the computer. / Not part of the series, but i thought it was appropriate to add here since our friend enters the Vampire’s castle unwittingly

  • The house is so big… it feels like you have moved from room to room without ever repeating the same one twice, until finally you return to one you do know – the parlor. Thirty minutes earlier, Gloria and her mother Sylvia had been discussing something in this room while listening to the victrola, but now it is empty and silent. Strange, that is not the only difference. It seems as if someone has spilt juice or, no, perhaps paint on the carpet. More than just that, there is a strange odor you’ve not smelled before, mingling heavily with the smell of cigar smoke. The Doctor must have been in here recently, as you noticed him smoking a large cigar earlier after dinner. / Come to look closer, some of that same red substance is on the wall… still wet. Suddenly, you feel very uneasy. It is just ink or paint, right? / Then why does it looks so much like blood?

  • 100% digital free. From the series & limited edition book: ‘Evidence’ / Details: / http://lauren-rabbit.deviantart.com/journal/18842732/

  • Pansies in colorful composition adorn traveller’s resting stop

  • Original is 12×9” acrylic on canvas and is for sale. Contact me at iginger@henderson.net if interested in purchasing the original or view other originals on my personal website, www.freewebs.com/gingerjar. Prints of various sizes available on this site.

  • Original is 9×12” acrylic on canvas. Prints available on this site. Other Paintings by Ginger can be viewed at http://www.freewebs.com/gingerjar and I can be reached at iginger@henderson.net

  • Annie Sams,preparing at the beauty parlor for her combo mothers day/birthday family cruise luncheon. / Mom,still, at 92, does not leave the house without (full make-up)gitin’ “her beauty’’ on.The finishing touch is always RED lipstick. / I love her eyes full of anticipation for her celebration.

  • I was exploring an abandoned farmhouse and I came across this web on the front porch. / / Visit my website On The Rock Photography / / The Tragic History Behind These Shots / / More In This Series / / / / / / / / / / / / / / /

  • Visit my website On The Rock Photography / / The Tragic History Behind These Shots / / More In This Series / / / / / / / / / / / / / / /

  • In tribute of Bela Lugosi’s birthday, which was on 20 October. He is my all time favorite Count Dracula, in my all time favorite Dracula movie, 1931. Hand drawn in NO.2 & 2B pencils, did late this afternoon, 21 October, 2008. Took about 1 1/2 hours

  • We spent the whole day here while my friends got inked. / Dylan works at a shop on the outskirts of Cleveland. (my favorite qoutes he said that day) “Of course I’m a douchebag, I have a rattail.” “Blowjobs don’t pay rent in the winter.”

  • Born into one of New Orleans’ oldest and most venerable families, Eugenia Planchette was no ordinary Southern belle. No matter how many governesses informed her that methodically dissecting crawdaddies and baby alligators was NOT ladylike behavior, little Eugenia would not be deterred. Despite her indelicate hobbies, Eugenia grew up to be an uncommonly fetching young lady, so if she was a trifle vain, who could blame her? She was certainly at no loss for suitors when she took up her studies at Tulane (medical school, of course), and her grades seemed impervious to her habit of dancing the nights away in the French Quarters’ most notorious nightclubs. Perhaps it was at one of these that she inadvertently insulted a voodoo priestess or just irked one of her more chemistry-minded classmates, but someone spiked her absinthe with something that caused an inexorable descent into madness. As far as the good doctors could tell, she became convinced that the best way to preserve her youthful appearance would be to remove her face and keep it in the icebox, only to be used when she really “needed” it, and apparently that is exactly what she did. Although the results would have made her a useful instructable for an anatomy class and certainly a pertinent case study in psychiatry, her surgical adventure, needless to say, ended her medical career. What Eugenia lacked in practicality she made up for in execution, however, and in truth the Face (as it came to be called) held up quite well. Eugenia and her removable face are pictured here in her parlor while her astonished cat, Poutine, looks on. This original artwork and story are copyright Ramona Szczerba 2008. Copyright to this material is in no way transferable with the sale of this item. The buyer is not entitled to any reproduction rights – neither image nor story can be reproduced without my express written permission. Thanks!

  • This photo was taken at Old World Wisconsin outside of Milwuakee, WI. It was a Three D’s Photography outing. My father my brother and I packed up the van and headed south to Milwaukee. A rather warm day with swarms of Japenese Beetles everywhere but yet a rather prosperous photo day. Please View Larger

  • The Waterhouse Residence Museum located in Maitland, Florida. This beautiful home was built in 1884 by Maitland resident and carpenter William Waterhouse. Construction of this gorgeous family home was completed in two years. Which is truly amazing considering Mr. Waterhouse built it by himself. Mr and Mrs. William Waterhouse lived here with their son and daughter. It remained in their family until the 1950’s. That is when the city of Maitland purchased and restored it back to what it would of looked like in 1884. The Waterhouse family would of used this room to entertain guests. It’s also known that Mrs. Waterhouse loved to host tea parties for her friends in this parlor.

  • I did a pet shoot yesterday and was wondering what ya’ll thought.

  • OK, I know thats what the spider said to the fly…but, I think it applies to The Praying Mantis too.

  • In Pinos Altos, New Mexico, known for the discovery of gold here in the mid 1800”s,This original adobe building was the towns Mercantile. These days the building houses the towns Post Office, Ice Cream Parlor and Gift Shop. Currently this image has been viewed 535 times! This photo has been feature in The New Mexico Group.

  • Massage parlor in San Francisco’s Tenderloin district. I decided this image lend itself to the DOORS song BACK DOOR MAN Wha, yeah!, cmon, yeah, yeah, cmon, yeah / Yeah, cmon, oh, yeah, ma / Yeah, Im a back door man, Im a back door man / The men dont know, but the little girl understand / Hey, all you people that tryin to sleep / Im out to make it with my midnight dream, yeah / cause Im a back door man, the men dont know / But the little girls understand, all right, yeah / You men eat your dinner, eat your pork and beans / I eat more chicken, than any man ever seen, yeah, yeah / Im a back door man, wha, the men dont know / But the little girl understand / Well, Im a back door man / Im a back door man / Whoa, baby, Im a back door man / The men dont know / But the little girls understand /

  • © 2009 RC deWinter ~ All Rights Reserved ~~ Chicago Joe was the nickname of one of the Old West’s most notorious and successful madams. Born in Chicago in 1846 to Italian immigrant parents, Josephine Hensley was given every advantage, including ‘finishing’ at an ‘etiquette school.’ Josephine was restless, however, and when she was 18 she hopped a train west. Although adventurous, she was naive and ill-prepared to make her own way. She ended up in a small Iowa town and became a prostitute. As soon as she had accumulated enough money, she continued westward to her goal – Helena, Montana, which was in the midst of gold rush fever. Josephine knew that where the was gold there were miners, and where there were miners there was money to be made in a brothel. At 23 she opened Helena’s first ‘house’ and was an instant success by virtue of her refinement, the orchestra she hired, the whiskey she sold and her stable of fresh young ladies recruited from Chicago. By all accounts her ‘girls’ were well-treated and shared in the house’s profits from their own work as well as the earnings from drinks and dances. Soon after opening her house, Josephine was dubbed ‘Chicago Joe’. She was so successful that in 1874 she was opened a larger, more elegant brothel and invested her remaining profits in Helena real estate. She formed partnerships with several of the town’s prominent businessmen and became the largest landowner in Helena’s notorious red-light district. In 1875 the Montana legislature began a crusade to get rid of bawdy houses and their principal target was Chicago Joe. Their efforts failed when she was exonerated by the court on a technicality. Chicago Joe shut up shop to avoid further legal entanglements, but eventually she opened a new venue, billed as a ‘variety theater’, which included the option of private entertainment. It was open until her death in 1899 from pneumonia, and her funeral was attended by much of Helena’s leading society.

  • This is the Village Ice Cream Parlor in Lebanon, 0H, closest city near my rural town. Its a very quaint place. Two movies were filmed here; “Harper Valley PTA” and “Milk Money.” /

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