November 14, 2009

Wilson Avenue Beach, Uptown Chicago

Up for sale is this century-old image of Wilson Avenue Beach. Find it here: Wilson Avenue Beach

Another cool image of the beach taken from a different angle is available as a buy-it-now from here: Wilson Avenue Beach

November 11, 2009

1335 W. Hood Avenue, Edgewater Chicago, Early 20th Century Street View


Another great postcard image on eBay, so we're helping to spread the word. Bid on it here.

Here's the view today, courtesy Google Streetviews. Each of the three houses from the original photo has had its front porch enclosed sometime over the decades.


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Collector finds Zepped, a lost Charlie Chaplin film, on eBay for £3.20; Uptown Chicago Connection

Editor's Note: The Chicago Tribune had an article this morning about a previously unknown Chaplin film, with footage shot at the Essanay Studio in Uptown Chicago. Excerpt with link below:

For nearly a century "Zepped," a 6-minute 1916 film of mysterious pedigree starring Charlie Chaplin, was lost. Now it’s found.
Zepped

Earlier this year, an Essex, England, film collector named Morace Park made a successful eBay bid of £3.20 (or $5.68 American) on a nitrate film canister containing unlabeled footage. The footage turned out to be the obscure Chaplin short, a World War I propaganda effort designed to buck up British morale, combining stop-motion animation and outtakes and unused alternate shots from films Chaplin made for both Keystone and Essanay studios

The hybrid, over which Chaplin apparently exercised no creative control, includes a shot or two from "His New Job," the short film Chaplin made for the Chicago-based Essanay during his 23-day residency here in late 1914 and early 1915...

Complete article can be read on the Tribune site.

***

The article below, excerpted from the UK paper The Guardian, has more details:

Collector finds unseen Charlie Chaplin film in tin sold for £3.20 on eBay

Morace Park was footling around on eBay looking for antiques when he stumbled on an item that was listed casually as an "old film" – and even then he was really more interested in the tin it was in.

"It had a lovely look to it," said Park. But the contents of the battered container, which he bought for the princely sum of £3.20, have turned out to be a previously unknown film by Charlie Chaplin...

For entire article, go to The Guardian.

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