Wednesday, June 18, 2025

The Kid on the Trellis


Here are some of the old snapshots I picked up at Covent Garden market on Monday. Some of you mentioned that you didn't know Covent Garden had an antiques market -- it's only on Mondays, in the Jubilee Market section. There's lots of knickknacks, china, glassware, stamps and coins, books, old jewelry, stuff like that -- and invariably someone will have a box of old photos.

I liked the strong light and graphic patterns in the photo above. It was only after I scanned it that I realized there's a kid climbing the trellis! (Most of these photos are very small in real life, as a lot of old snapshots used to be, so it's not easy to see details.)


A very 1930s-looking tennis game. Remember Monty Python's skit "Salad Days"?


Again, this picture is tiny in real life -- no bigger than a postage stamp. Thank goodness we can wear more comfortable clothes nowadays. That collar seems awfully stiff.

(Late edit: Is this the same guy as on the left in the tennis photo above?)


This is the only one of these photos to have a note on the back: "Eileen with Francis, Lucy and Martin Cassar, Villa Shangrila, Ta' Xbiex, Malta. April 1965."


More kids, on a distinctive duck-shaped bench. Speaking of which, the kid in the back looks like he's goosing that girl. I can't tell what the older girl is holding in her hand. I tried reverse image-searching this photo to see if the duck bench turned up a location, but no luck.


And finally, a typical '60s-looking beach scene. Someone's little brother is creeping into the frame from the left. Are we still in Malta, or back in England? Or somewhere else? Who knows.

I have a few more, and as usual, they'll all go on Flickr.

27 comments:

  1. That's a great set of photos, with lots of stories to imagine! The last one is my favourite, but I also love the smile of the elderly lady (she's probably my age) in the first picture, and the stylish look of the three tennis players (more 20s than 30s, is my guess).
    Have you ever had anyone contact you because they found themselves or a family member on one of the pictures you published?

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    1. No one's ever contacted me. Usually there's not enough information on the photo for anyone to be identifiable. Today, we have one photo with a first and last name, which is unusual. We'll see if I hear from him!

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  2. There's something wonderfully mysterious and nostalgic about old snapshots. Each one a tiny, timeless puzzle that hints at forgotten stories and invites us to imagine the lives behind the images

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  3. Fine looking trellis in the first photo. That "salad days" clip is bit gory, all that blood geysering all over.

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    1. That's what makes it so funny! It's so unexpected.

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  4. These are fascinating photos; I love looking back at the past.

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  5. Simple pleasures, back in those old black & white days.

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  6. From the first photo, photobombing has been around for a long time.

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  7. More interesting finds Steve. Have you heard of the "Mister Men" books? You would have no trouble winning the part of Mr Nosy!

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  8. I so love these photos. The first is my favorite. The last doesn’t look like any beach in England, of the ones I’ve seen.

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  9. Old photographs are fascinating. I wonder how the Cassar family lived.

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  10. These photos are treasures. I love them! Thank you for sharing.

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  11. These are always some of my favorite posts Steve. I guess I'm just a sucker for old photographs.

    Keep the faith that someone may find them someday. I've had people stumble onto old posts 20 years old and leave comments.

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  12. These could be a book. Lives Lost and Found. Love them all.

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  13. The woman in the first one seems happy while the man seems as stiff as his collar.

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  14. The grandmother in the first picture has such a beautiful smile.

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  15. Great photos. I love the trellis in the first photo. Someone did a fine job designing and building it. The granny in the photo looks very proud and happy with grandson looking on.
    The tennis players in their whites are looking very fine. Tennis club anyone?
    The beach photo has captured a new young love.
    I imagine their lives.

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  16. Old photographs are intriguing. We have a suitcase full from an old house. Professional photographs of people dressed in elaborate clothing. Even a Victorian death photo with a terrified looking girl next to an obviously dead infant. Literally scores of these. If you were here, you would be doing marvelous things. Me? *ignores suitcase*

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  17. As others have noted- the older lady in the first photo is just radiant, despite being covered head to toe in what looks like not very breathable fabrics. The little boy behind her is wearing a T-shirt so it can't be that chilly.
    I can see a resemblance between the tennis player and the man in the collar but are they from the same era, do you think? I don't know.
    I think that may be a goose bench, not a duck. Again- I could be wrong. Could the little boy behind the little girl be trying to help her stay perched? Whatever, it is a darling photograph.
    This is a good collection, Steve. I do like them very much.

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  18. I love this collection! At first I thought the girl on the duck was giving us the finger & I thought YES! Tell us all off!

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  19. I didn't see the kid on the trellis until you mentioned it. And, that guy in the tennis shot and the portrait do look very much alike. That collar on his shirt looks like it would be painful and leave a rash on the neck.
    A fun set of photos!

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  20. These are great, Steve. So fun to study them closely.

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  21. The man with the stiff collar looks like Steve Carrell ...
    It looks like the older girl on the bench might have a water pistol in her hand!

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  22. The kid isn't climbing the trellis but standing on a bench behind it. The portrait could be the same as the man in the tennis shot. My first impression is no but individual details of the man's face seem to correspond except the man's lower face in the tennis photo does not look as round. Maybe that's why I think not. And that little girl does not look happy about being goosed and the boy has a sort of mischievous look on his face.

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  23. I think that it is the same man...look at the ears....

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  24. I say! Bloody splendid array! Tennis anyone? The postage stamp sized man in the collar looks as though his head was placed on it. Comfy!! You have a great deal of patience to comb through all of those photos !

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  25. The shoes in the first picture are either from the thirties or a revival in the 60s. Likewise the tennis dress and the knee length beads. I had an outfit like that when thirties styles came around again in the early sixties. My mom was very amused -- she'd worn those styles when they first came out!

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