Can anyone help with a query I have.
Did professional photographers (about 1895 to 1905) have clothes, hats and other props in their studios for the sitters to wear?
Also I have seen a photo with husband and wife with an empty seat between them with an open book on the table in front of the empty seat. Is there any significance in the open book or in fact, the empty seat?
Any thoughts?
Jean
Yes they did. My cousin inherited a garage full of backdrops and scenes, tables and a variety of different chairs, swords and helmets and gauntlets and mini canon, animal skin rugs and Chinese screens, a human skull and various animal skulls, artificial walls and ruins and finally a vast array of clothing.
Oh, and a list of "people of colour" who could be employed as human props - servants of all descriptions, slaves, black-a-moors and so on. All long since dead by then, of course.
I would think an empty chair would be for a dead person, probably a child.
Regards
Chas