Essence by Vanity Tintype.
Tintype, 2026
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Essence by Vanity Tintype.
Tintype, 2026

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Tintype of what appears to be a light-hearted spot of stabbing between friends, circa 1880
“Nevermore” © Tommy Nease, 2014
Diprosopus, Theda Desmond
Part of the Portraits Of Perversions series
Tintype. USA, ca. 1885
(via The Metropolitan Museum of Art)

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
Tin types from my partners upcoming art show :3
Early photographic portraits, some hand-coloured (early 1850's -1860's, not in date order) by Jacob Byerly (American, 1807 - 1883).
Daguerreotypes. The last one which is entitled 'Belle (Sherman) Upton' is a tintype.
Images and text information courtesy The Getty.
Editing photographs wasn’t so easy before the advent of the smartphone or Photoshop, but people always found a way to alter images. Our current display entitled “Trying to Forget: The Removal of Figures from Early Photographic Images,” guest curated by Madison Brown, John R. and Barbara Robinson Family Curatorial Fellow in Photography at Harvard Art Museums, examines our desire to forget or erase certain memories. Madison selected examples that show the creative and sometimes laborious modes of alteration in early photographic work. Some tintype photos, as shown in this post, figures carved out with shears or faces roughly scratched out. These scratches and rough edges only highlight the very act of erasure, rather than achieving a complete annihilation of memory.
These objects from Special Collections at the Fine Arts Library demonstrate an enduring desire to forget, as well as the persistence of visual evidence that often forces us to remember.
The Fine Arts Library is open to all Harvard ID holders. We recently switched out tintypes and turned pages in the case, so check out the new images currently on display!