Posted 9 months ago
stefdesign
(81 items)
I love old maps, and old atlases. I have about a dozen of them of various ages (the oldest is from the early '20s) up to the '60s. They mostly Hammond, but I have a couple of Rand McNally and Literary Digest atlases too. I like to use maps for my art and genealogy projects, the older the better.
If These Shirts Could Talk: The Tantalizing Tales Behind Used Clothes
Jockeying for Position: How Boxers and Briefs Got Into Men's Pants
Gloriously Grotesque 19th-Century Pipes
In the Hot Seat: Is Your Antique Windsor a Fake?
Love at First Kite: How Pizza and Pente Led to One Oklahoman's High-Flying Obsession
Blood, Sweat, and Steel: My Afternoon with the Ace of Swords
'The Great Gatsby' Still Gets Flappers Wrong
Say Ahhh: An Oral Surgeon's Quest to Reimagine the Garage-Band Guitar
Forget TV Pickers, Meet the Real Mavericks of the Antiques World
Coveting The Craziest Cat-People Collectibles




Thank heaven for scanners! I haven't cut up any of my old atlases yet, but I have scanned a lot of maps and they would make great gift wrap, note paper, etc.