

Living + extinct: The Megalethoscope. A
rather huge optical apparatus designed circa 1870
by Carlo Ponti, a Swiss optician living in Venice.


Living: The Oxford Shoe (re-christened The John c. 1950 and photographed by the Cordwainers
College Historic Shoe Collection.

"Equestian couture a la Dries van Noten"

"Regal towers of cumin, coriander, ginger and turmeric"

"As life has been, so it continues to be"

"How many times are we going to get the chance
to buy something excreted from a goat?"
Living: Marrakech, through the eyes + words
Blog for highlighting Ancient Industries.)




The personal photographs of a real life Dick Avery,
whilst on a fashion assignment in Paris and

The goods (jazz jumper from Scotland)

The proprietress

The Norfolk coast
Living: Old Town, noted clothiers and publishers of obscure British fabrics the clothes are tailored on
the coast of Norfolk (and their silk ties are now



Extinct: Cecil Beaton, sometime illustrator,
1904-1980. A dandy who also eschewed and
embraced Edwardian values and dress.
Portrait by Bachrach.



Extinct: Sir Osbert Lancaster, illustrator,
1908-1986. A dandy who both eschewed
and embraced Edwardian values and dress.

Underrated: Indiscreet, 1958,
directed by Stanley Donen, starring
Ingrid Bergman and Cary Grant.

Interior at Paddington, 1951

Bacon and Freud, Old Compton Street, 1974
Gannex raincoat wearing habitué of Soho,
he sometimes photographed artists in
theirs and posed for them in his.

Edward & Mrs Simpson photographed by Dorothy Wilding.


Living: Royal Stewart,
punk tartan of choice.
Sex Pistols graphics by Jamie Reid.
Hand crafted in Maine since 1912.

Extinct: The travelling salesman. Pre-Avon Lady,
he brought household goods to the door such as
pots, brushes, whicker baskets and bolts of fabric.
Postcard from the collection of Old Town.



Unremembered: Reginald Marsh,
1898-1954. Born in Montparnasse and
educated at Yale, Marsh was a New York
Social Realist who appreciated women.

Candy Counter, 1969, 2004
Living: The gumball machine. Created by the
Greeks, who used vending machines for holy water,
New Yorkers had to wait until 1907 to get one for gum.
Industries. Painting by Wayne Thiebaud.
Living:
Skating. Primitive man had a go with
bits of bone, but the metal bladed skate was
made by the Dutch during the 13th century.
Painting by Sir Henry Raeburn, 1795.
contributors
Reed Wilson, Kendra Wilson