70 Jim Baenen 1960's 35mm Slides Photos Archeology Site Anthropology Vtg
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--- 70 Kodachrome/Ektachrome 35mm slides date stamped in the 1960's. These are from a larger collection of slides from the estate of James Baenen who I understand was an archeology instructor at a local community college (a local dealer bought the collection locally a few years ago, he ended up donating a large portion on the Nez Perce to a local university). Location is unknown (I was guessing southwest). These had originally been on a slide tray but there were no notes or index etc. In my photos, I show the 70 photos in two batches, one of 40 and one of 39. I then show some close-ups. I took these with a handheld digital camera over a lightbox, so my own camera tried to compensate for differing dynamic ranges in the groups I was showing. In general he seemed to be an excellent photographer overall (also used good film stock in good light, hard to go wrong). I don't have a tray or holder for the slides, I will group them in small stacks and put them in small polybags so they don't move around.
--- See photos for condition details.
--- Will be well packed
--- See shipping options above
--- Payment expected within
3 days
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--- The item description is guaranteed to be accurate but all items are sold as-is unless otherwise stated.
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victoria heilshorn studio - the best in History
Title -
Indians from the "Wild West"
Description -
Indians from the "Wild West" at World's Fair in St. Louis, Missouri.
Description Source -
Library of Congress
Year -
1904
SKU -
NA-0018
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New borderless print
8"x10" (approximate)
Gloss finish
Heavy-weight professional paper
Coated for water-resistance
Acid free to prevent yellowing
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- Condition: FULL LISTING has 56 of my own digital PHOTOS of this item. If viewing on a phone/tablet you need to manually navigate to the FULL LISTING (tap "read more" or "item description" etc). 70 Kodachrome/Ektachrome 35mm slides date stamped in the 1960's. These are from a larger collection of slides from the estate of James Baenen who I understand was an archeology instructor at a local community college (a local dealer bought the collection locally a few years ago, he ended up donating a large portion on the Nez Perce to a local university). Location is unknown. These had originally been on a slide tray but there were no notes or index etc. In my photos, I show the 70 photos in two batches, one of 40 and one of 39. I then show some close-ups. I took these with a handheld digital camera over a lightbox, so my own camera tried to compensate for differing dynamic ranges in the groups I was showing. In general he seemed to be an excellent photographer overall...continued in FULL LISTING