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torimask

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Posts posted by torimask

  1. On 9/2/2016 at 4:11 PM, FilioScotia said:

    Am I the only one here who remembers the Pizza Yoint on Spencer Hwy in South Houston? I think I remember I set a record for chugging a mug of beer one night in the sixties when i was a student at San Jac College just down the road.

     

    70+pizza+yoint+ad.jpg

    • Like 3
  2. Well, if anyone searches for this information, here's a comparison:

    Briscoe Center: requires a week lead time to request specific boxes to be pulled from offsite. Currently requiring appointments. They will require you lock up all your belongings but you can take your cellphone. I was allowed to photograph negatives for personal review, but to publish any of them (anywhere) it was $50 per photograph. Took six weeks to get those from the time I gave them my list (15 photographs) to download. 

    Houston Public Library (Julia Ideson Texas Reading Room): asks a few days notice to pull materials if possible, but depending on how busy they are, they have been able to go look up things on the spot, no appointment necessary. Lockers required for belongings, cell phones allowed. Charge per photograph $12.50. I have ordered batches of anywhere from 3 to 12 photographs on three different occasions and have had them delivered within a few days. 

    University of Houston Center for Public History: no appointment, no lead time, materials are pulled on the spot. Copies are FREE (up to 250!) and depending on how busy they are, could be supplied while you wait or pick up later/have mailed. PDFs will be emailed. 

     

     

     

    • Like 4
  3. It's currently a work in progress, but here is a link to the index.

    Houston Area Yearbook Series

    Currently has 16 active links:

    Houston Skylines and Aerials

    Houston Street Views (largely from parade photos)

    The Houston Zoo

    Houston Airports 

    Houston Kiddie Rides, Amusement Parks, and Playgrounds

    Houston Area Diners, Drugstore Soda Fountains, & Drive-Ins

    Houston Area Gas Stations

    Houston Area Grocery Markets

    Houston Area Music Advertising

    Houston Area Mystery Places

    Houston Area Restaurants

    Houston Area Shopping

    Houston Area Snow

    Cars & Dealership Photo Ads

    Technology Photos

    Almeda/Northwest Photos

    The ones that would benefit greatly from the collective HAIF wisdom are locations for the Street Views, Skylines/Aerials, and the Mystery Places.

     

    • Like 1
  4. I've got a date with the Briscoe Center in Austin after the holidays to visit and view some Bob Bailey photographs of my little corner of Houston. I'm still reeling with the sticker shock, though, of buying the rights to a print for the SBHDHA (what a terrible acronym -- what was I thinking?)

     

    It's $50 a pop. Thank God for GoFundMe and some nice donors!

     

    Makes the $12.50 charged by HPL look like a downright bargain.

     

    Anyway, shortly thereafter I'm back in Houston for some more research and the Foley's Department Store Records housed at UH are calling my name. 

     

    I can't seem to locate the info about how much they charge per negative/photo, however. 

     

    Does anyone here happen to know?

    • Like 1
  5. Thanks gnu!

     

    Since it's clear the photographer was allowed in the front door, I wonder what other photos might be lost. Wouldn't it be a bit strange, knowing the set up involved in one interior shot back then,  to cart all that equipment for just a four glass plates?

     

    There is no vehicle in the drive, and it appears the side of the house on the street where the first two photos were taken also had vendor/servant entrances. 

     

    I don't know why, maybe the size of those baby trees and a few staked larger trees (visible from the front drive photo), but it seems like the place, if not new, has very new landscaping.

     

    Didn't glass plate negatives fall out of common use by the 1930s?

  6. Looking at both shots, this is the side of the house, and those urns are probably on a circular drive at the front, where the marbled columns can be seen. There's also a fountain out there, too. It seems like an awfully large place in the "middle of nowhere" (huge estate?) to not be recognizable, unless it's long been demolished?

     

    The front appears to have six Corinthian columns along the face of the house, with another one on each side. Maybe that helps narrow it down to someone more familiar with the Simms estate? I can't seem to find any photos of it online. Zoomed in from the "street view" one. And is that a screened in porch area top right with the four dark vertical panes?  Second zoomed in screen grab shows the urn on the column out front really clearly, the other fountain,  as well as the very young line of trees planted and the ornate iron work on the (gas?) lamp stand (maybe?).

     

     

    post-12498-0-81971300-1423979188_thumb.p

    post-12498-0-89986400-1423979350_thumb.p

  7. Does he sell to individuals, or just in wholesale quantities? I'd definitely be interested in picking up some of that candy and reliving the chip-basket discoveries of years past. 

     

    His family runs the order side of things and it's very individual.

     

    Email lacolmena.gina@gmail.com and let Gina know you'd like to be on their email list.

     

    Once they've got a batch going, she sends out a mass email asking for orders. She'll meet you for free in some areas around Houston/Clear Lake or will ship to you. $7 per half pound, or $13 for a full. 

  8. I'm not too sure about "makes Mexican food taste like it should" but as a kid, I loved the Saltillo platter and fighting over the candy at the bottom of the chip basket!

     

    (The candy maker who supplied Monterey House as well as a number of other places around Houston in the 1970s is still cooking and selling candy out of his house! Just like I remember it as a kid.)

    • Like 1
  9. I came across this article in the Chronicle Morgue Files with a piece on the 20 Oldest Restaurants in Houston, published in 1986.

    How many of these are still in existence?

    Apologies for the crappy chopped up photos -- they don't let you use anything except your phone in the Texas Room.

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    post-12498-0-21451800-1404262903_thumb.j

    post-12498-0-13217300-1404262912_thumb.j

    post-12498-0-64121700-1404262946_thumb.j

    post-12498-0-99777600-1404262954_thumb.j

    post-12498-0-53444200-1404262965_thumb.j

    post-12498-0-79649400-1404262971_thumb.j

    • Like 2
  10. I've only gotten through the 1980s in the stacks from the South Belt Leader offices, but pulled together most of the history of the uncovering of the Brio DOP dumping that had come out by the end of the decade. 

     

    Will take me another trip back home to get into the 1990s, but I think it's a pretty good overview of how things unfolded in the early days. 

     

    http://southbelthouston.blogspot.com/2014/06/brio-1980s-leader-coverage.html

     

     

    • Like 2
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