Box 1
Contains 11 Results:
Lincoln-Douglas debates United States postal stamps, 1958
Beale lantern slide image of Lincoln/Douglas debate made into US postal stamp, 1958. Example of merchandizing of Beale images
Seven Wonders of the World Cuban postal stamps, 1997
Cuban stamps using Beale images. Example of how Beale's art was used for many different purposes.
Auld Lang Syne, Beale lantern slides, undated
All glass, 3.25" x 4" slides with bound edges. Example of the most common slide format post-1900.
Children's lantern slides, undated
Not Beale. Examples of small slides of different sizes used in children's lanterns, which were very popular. One slide with scenes of Jesus, one with an illustration of a children's parade, and another labeled "Heroes and Noted People - 1." Beale slides were also produced in this format, primarily with religious and historical subject matter.
Bible in Pictures (Old Testament Chapters 21-25), filmstrip, undated
Using Beale images from The Bible in Pictures set. Many Beale pictures, including The Village Blacksmith, were used in this format, post 1920, carrying Beale's images into schools and churches well into mid-twentieth century.
Where We with Loved Ones Dwell, Beale lantern slide, undated
Cardboard frame, 7" x 4". DeMoulin Bros. manufacturer. Rare format, used primarily for secret society images.
Beale magic lantern slide with circular image, undated
Wood frame, 7" x 4". Example of a common slide format pre-1900.
Negatives for producing slides, undated
Negatives for producing a slide from The Village Blacksmith and of Longfellow. Produced by the W.B. Moore Lantern Slide Company, possibly an illegal duplicate from a Briggs slide, as there is evidence of this practice elsewhere.
The Village Blacksmith lantern slides, undated
Six black and white slides. Such slides were substantially cheaper than the colored ones.
Paul Revere's Ride, 1942
Color lithographs made from Beale slides, published by Paul Revere Copper and Brass, Inc, 1942. Example of merchandizing of Beale images.