What does it mean when a man puts His Hands in his pockets?
Is it just to have a place, with his hands instead of just hanging out? Do not know where does it take to prevent? The attempt, holding the girl? I had a picture of my husband and two friends. In a picture with my friend) a girl (and she put their hands in their pockets, but not so close to her. If they took a picture with me, they were very close to me, but not their hands in their pockets. Is the hand placement mean anything? Does that mean they like me, or you can not tell from this?
does it really matter? You have to analyze everything?
Breast Pocket Secretary in Bond Street’s exquisite Italian Leather with 6 credit card slots on right side, Back inside zipper and bill slot and Right side has 2 bill slots, 6 credit card slots and ID window.
Four weight port 400cc Ti alloy driver is both forgiving and adjustable Golf equipment includes two (2) six-gram tungsten weights Golf driver comes with graphite shaft in a standard flex
This Delta Golf wedge set features a stainless steel construction for a durable design. This set includes a sand wedge and a lob wedge with 56- and 60-degrees of loft respectively, and is designed for right-handed use.
Get out on the links with this Tour Edge golf club set. The HP7 includes every club you need and each features game-enhancing technology for lower scores.
Get out on the links with this Tour Edge Reaction golf club set. The Reaction includes every club you need and each features game-enhancing technology for lower scores.
This golf set from Orlimar is comprised of a forged 10.5 degree 460cc driver, low-profile fairway wood, 4 hybrid, 5-PW irons and an advanced mallet putter with alignment marks.
Nanospeed i club features cup stack carbon nanotubes and elastic Ti to maximize clubhead speed for explosive distanceGolf driver’s Dual Nanoscience technology in the head and shaft works to increase club head speed
Get out on the links with this Tour Edge golf club set. The HP7 includes every club you need and each features game-enhancing technology for lower scores.
This bold, modern bracelet is designed by artisan Henry Anthony SannyLeather bracelet is crafted by hand with sterling silver accentsStylish men’s jewelry is made in Indonesia
Save par with this men’s right-handed sand wedgeSandblaster golf equipment will help you get the ball out of the sandMen’s golf club has a 52-degree loft to get the ball high in the air
The international prayer symbol ‘His Hands in Prayer’ has become an inspirational source for manyThis magnificent creation is covered with sparkle in a multidimensional depiction of hands
This Le Chateau men’s watch features a new execution of a classic slim line design with a Japanese quartz movement. With an all steel case, luminescent hands and a genuine leather band this watch is the perfect accessory for a man on the go.
Disc 1:He`s Got the Whole World in His HandsCradle Rock, TheHanded DownSea Shells, (She Sells)Gospel Train, TheI Gotta RobeCasey Jones (Railroadin` Man)BoomerangeUp Above My HeadBasin Str…
This men’s ATS Sport combo golf set is designed to delivery unparalleled distance. This set is comprised of a forged 460cc driver, low profile 3 fairway wood, 4 and 5 hybrids, low COG 6-9 irons, a pitching wedge, putter and a stand bag.
Stay on time and in style with this stunning watch from Roberto BianciLe Chateau timepiece will make a handsome highlight to any wardrobeThis men wristwatch features a stainless steel case and band
A black dial is accented with goldtone praying hands on this watch from Hampden. Diamond chips at 3, 6, 9 and 12 o’clock add sparkle to this simple, elegant watch.
This 17-piece Z One Elite golf set from Nextt Golf offers the latest in equipment technology. With sets targeting different player profiles, the Z One is sure to meet the needs of every improving golfer.
This Le Chateau men’s watch features a new execution of a classic slim line design with a Japanese quartz movement. With an all steel case, luminescent hands and a genuine leather band this watch is the perfect accessory for a man on the go.
The world-class Sentry watch combines style and function with Luminox’s unique ‘Always Visible’ glow-in-the-dark technology. This technology provides a constant glow to the watch’s hands and hour markers, ensuring easy visibility under any conditions.
Disc 1:His Hand in MineI`m Gonna Walk Dem Golden StairsIn My Father`s HouseMilky White WayKnown Only to HimI Believe in the Man in the SkyJoshua Fit the BattleHe Knows Just What I NeedSwing Do…
Strategically placed Dri-FIT material in the back of hand, fingers and gussets provides breathability and moisture management. Premium cabretta leather tanning process for a soft, supple feel and excellent grip.
When Matthew Dragna inherits an old casino, he gets more than he bargained for when he discovers the decrepit gambling palace was once the site of a bloody mob massacre. Worse still, a pair of undead mobsters–played by B-movie legends Sid Haig (FOXY…
An ultra forgiving, large-head design on this driver improves distance and focus off the tee. This No Limit men’s driver includes a graphite shaft, 460 cubic centimeter head, white color option and a right-handed design.
An ultra forgiving, large-head design improves distance and focus off the tee. This MVP Revolution men’s driver includes a graphite shaft, 460 cubic centimeter head, white color option and a right-handed design.
Disc 1:DISC 1:Behind the Curtains – Cle/Steve BugWhisper Had It, The – Simon FlowerRelapse – Jeff SamuelMan High – Martin LandskyWorld Without, A – Steve BugDo It Right – Matthias HeilbronnIndigo -…
Update your home decor with this transitional rug Area rug his hand-hooked with pure virgin wool pile Floor rug has a fringeless border for a clean, elegant look
This soap is inspired by the world famous bar that Emperor Napoleon had created for his beloved wife Josephine. The soap is made with extra virgin olive oil, healing herbs and pure essential oil of lavender from the fields of Provence.
  Peter Selgin was cursed/blessed with an unusual childhood. The son of Italian immigrants—his father an electronics inventor and a mother so good looking UPS drivers swerved off thei…
The fifth installment in Carrie Vaughn`s werewolf series sends Kitty and Ben off to Vegas. The two wolves-in-love are planning a Sin City vacation topped off with a wedding! Unfortunately relaxing is not exactly on the itinerary–that activity has been…
Radiant in fiery vermilion, this bowl’s undulating shape brings a dynamic sense to your home decorVase feature a unique design of speckled ash in the glassSmall air bubbles in the glass make his hand-blown bowl charming
This soap is inspired by the world famous bar that Emperor Napoleon had created for his beloved wife Josephine. The soap is made with extra virgin olive oil, healing herbs, and pure essential oil of verbena from the fields of Provence.
The daughter of a German and a Jew, Anna`s dreams of becoming a famous ballerina are crushed by increasing Nazi persecution, but she is sustained, even while in a Nazi work camp, by her strong Christian faith and the conviction that she will one day
Update your home decor with his hand-tufted wool rug Contemporary rug is perfect for any room in the house Rug features yellow-gold, green, lavender, rust and beige colors
This wall art is a reproduction of a famous work, Monet’s, ‘The Japanese Bridge’, from a series of paintings he did in his garden at Giverny, France. The canvas print will make a lovely decorative addition to any room in your home or office.
Spiritual, scenic and family inspired illustrations tell the tale of the folk song`s message, capturing a young child and his family as they go about their daily life and engage in the world around them.
This bar of soap is inspired by the world famous bar that Emperor Napoleon had created for his beloved wife Josephine. The soap is made with extra virgin olive oil, healing herbs and pure essential oil of lavender from the fields of Provence.
Nearly 30 years and 15 albums deep into one of {\contemporary jazz}’s most consistently melodic and funky careers, {$Bobby Lyle} continues to take a {^Hands On} approach to creating a perfect balance of elegance and groove. On his {@Heads Up} debut, the v
Joseph’s grandpa could do almost anything with his hands. He could play the piano, throw a curveball, and tie a triple bowline knot in three seconds flat. But in the 1950s and 60s, he could not bake bread at the Wonder Bread factory. Factory bosses
The successful self-titled reissue of Fame-era material released in early 2004 allowed Candi Staton to make this, her first secular album in several years. Where 1999′s Outside In was a way to take advantage of her unplanned return to the clubs — a couple singles released during the ’90s used a vocal she recorded for a documentary about a man’s struggle with life-threatening obesity — His Hands is 100 percent Southern soul. Staton involves several family members and longtime associates, including son Marcus Williams (a seasoned drummer who has played with her for years), daughter Cassandra Hightower, sister Maggie Staton Peebles, and Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section organist Barry Beckett. It might be surprising to see that Lambchop’s Mark Nevers produced the session, and that Lambchop ally Lloyd Barry arranged the horns, but both men have done extensive work with Staton’s peers in the gospel world. Though seven of the 11 songs are provided by others (Merle Haggard, Red Simpson, Bert Berns, Will Oldham), Staton uses almost all of the album to work through the pain caused by her brutal past relationships, some of which came and went as she was churning out gospel material. Something like this has evidently been a long time coming. Going by her performances, she’s possibly more familiar with the emotions running through the likes of “When Hearts Grow Cold” and “You Never Really Wanted Me” than the songwriters, and her voice remains a rich and powerful instrument — it’s amazing how little her voice has changed through nearly four decades. Even when the arrangements come too close to resembling slight facsimiles of classic Southern soul (which isn’t too frequently), Staton’s heartache is enough to cut through your soul. This is a very good album, and knowing that Staton seems to have cleared a glorious path through her dependencies and abusive relationships makes it all the more sweet. ~ Andy Kellman, Rovi Performers: Andrew Bird – Strings; Barry Beckett – Organ (Hammond); Barry Green – Horn; Carey Kotsionis – Vocals (Background); Cassandra Hightower – Vocals (Background); Darryn Ray – Vocals (Background); Dennis Crouch – Bass (Upright); Ensemble of Cassandra Hightower – Vocals (Background); Jimmy Bowland – Horn;
Dave Holland is best known as one of the great jazz bassists of his generation. Pepe Habichuela is an awe-inspiring flamenco guitarist. The two of them together, with Josemi and Carlos Carmona on additional guitars as well as a pair of percussionists, pro
A new collection of short fiction presents eleven stories, some of them previously unpublished, including the story of a prizefighter whose ferocity in the ring is matched only by his fierce demand for justice.
Wallace Nutting sold more hand-colored photographs during America’s 1900-1940 “Golden Age of Hand-Colored Photography” than any other photographer of his time. It is estimated that between 5,000,000-10,000,000 of his pictures decorated the walls of middle class American homes during the early 20th century. Why was Wallace Nutting so successful? And why are his pictures still being widely collected today? This article represents a basic introduction into the world of Wallace Nutting Pictures.
It was shortly after 1900 that Wallace Nutting retired from the ministry due to ill health (he was a Congregational Minister in Providence RI at the time). As part of his recovery, he began touring the New England countryside by carriage or car, taking photographs of rural New England. Nutting was one of the first to recognize that the American scene was changing. Industrialization was altering the way our country looked and our pure and picturesque landscape would never look the same again. He seemed to feel it his divine calling to record the beauty of America for future generations.
Beginning first in Vermont, then Massachusetts and Connecticut, and eventually throughout the rest of New England, Nutting began photographing country lanes, streams, rivers, lakes, orchards, blossoms, birches, and mountains. Wallace Nutting would take the photograph, assign a title, and instruct his colorists how it should be hand-tinted. Each picture that met Nutting’s high standards of color, composition, and taste would be affixed to its matting and signed by his employees with the distinctive “Wallace Nutting” name. (He hardly ever signed any pictures by himself). Those pictures that did not meet his strict standards were destroyed. Beginning first with outdoor (Exterior) scenes in New England, Nutting eventually traveled throughout the United States and Europe, taking photographs in 26 states and 17 foreign countries between 1900-1935. Overall, he took more than 50,000 pictures, 10,000 of which he felt met his high standards. The balance were destroyed.
It was around 1905 that Nutting began taking his first indoor (Interior) pictures. Supposedly one day while it was raining outside, Mrs. Nutting suggested that he take a more “Personable” picture indoors. So, he set up a colonial scene, near a kitchen hearth, had an employee dress up in a colonial fashion, and took several different pictures. These sold relatively easily which encouraged him to expand more into this area. Nutting’s love of antiques, his passion for the pilgrim period, and his unquestionable desire to turn a profit led him to eventually purchase and restore five colonial homes:
Webb House, Wethersfield, CT
Wentworth-Gardner House, Portsmouth, NH
Cutler-Bartlett House, Newburyport, MA
Hazen-Garrison House, Haverhill, MA
Saugus Iron Works (Broadhearth), Saugus, MA
Nutting purchased these homes because he felt each represented a different period of early colonial American style and taste. It was here, along with his own homes Nuttinghame (Southbury, CT) and Nuttingholme (Framingham, MA), that the majority of his Interior pictures were taken. Nutting’s desire to provide the most correct and appropriate settings for his Interior scenes led him in his quest to gather one of the best collections of early American furniture ever assembled. He would use the best examples of early American furniture in his Interior scenes and, when he couldn’t find it, he would reproduce it. (We’ll focus on his reproduction furniture in a subsequent article).
Working in Southbury CT from 1905-12, and then in Framingham MA from 1912 until his death in 1941, Nutting sold literally millions of his hand-colored photographs. He claims to have sold around 10,000,000 pictures although, knowing his habit of exaggeration, that number is probably somewhat high.
Whatever the true number, it was large. Wallace Nutting pictures were sometimes called “poor man’s prints“. Sold throughout the first quarter of the 20th century, well before the invention of color photography, these pictures initially sold literally for pennies. His market was primarily the middle and lower middle classes…those households which could not afford finer forms of art. Because of their low price, Wallace Nutting pictures were purchased in large numbers. By 1925, hardly an American middle-class household was without one as they were purchased as gifts for weddings, showers, Christmas, birthdays, and for just about any other reason imaginable.
Nutting sold many pictures directly through his studios where he also provided his own framing services. But he also sold his pictures through many other outlets as well: department stores, drug stores, and gift shops, all around the country. He even had full-time salesmen on the road whose sole job was to sell his pictures to these retail establishments. Salesmen whom, he claims, sold enough pictures to retire quite handsomely themselves.
The height of Wallace Nutting picture popularity was 1915-25. During This Time Nutting had nearly 100 colorists in his employment, along with another 100 employees who acted as framers, matters, salesmen, management, and assorted administrative office personnel. Let there be no mistake about it…Wallace Nutting’s pictures were big business. But by the late 1920′s, people began to tire of Wallace Nutting. As with any other fashion or style, tastes began to change with time. Wallace Nutting pictures became passé and sales showed a steady decline. Even the introduction of different matting styles, greeting cards, pen-type silhouettes, and lower priced machine-produced process prints could not rejuvenate sales.
The Wall Street crash of 1929 and the following depression all but sealed the fate of the Wallace Nutting picture business. Although it remained in operation even after his death, the output was inconsequential after the early 1930′s. Over the years, millions of Wallace Nutting pictures were probably thrown away. Many of those that remain show the signs of 60-90 years of wear after being stored in attics and basements, with water stains, broken glass, dust, dirt, and mildew.
As the original owners of Wallace Nutting pictures have grown older or passed on, their Wallace Nutting pictures have also been passed on to another generation. Some were given directly as gifts, others were inherited by children and grandchildren. Those that weren’t passed along to families were sold at auctions, estate sales, tag sales, and flea markets where they re-entered the collectibles mainstream during the 1975-2000 period.
What are collectors looking for? Just as in Wallace Nutting’s time, Exterior scenes have the widest appeal. Interior scenes have a more limited appeal, but since they are rarer, they typically command a higher price than Exterior scenes. However, we have seen that as America’s fascination with the “Country” look has diminished over the past 5-10 years, interest in Nutting’s Interior scenes has softened as well.
The most desirable pictures to serious Nutting collectors are Miscellaneous Unusual Scenes. These are pictures which fall outside the more standard Interior and Exterior scenes: Architecturals, Children, Florals, Foreign, Men, Seascapes, Snow scenes, and a select few geographical rarities. Nutting’s original sales in these categories were significantly lower than with his Exterior and Interior scenes, hence their “/i>rarity” attracts collectors. Just as in other areas of collecting, the rarest examples, in the best condition, are the easiest to sell, regardless of price. But just as important as rarity and subject matter is condition. Collectors want pieces in excellent condition and imperfections such as water stains, blemishes, poor coloring, or damaged frames can all significantly reduce value.
As of 2010 the Auction record for a Wallace Nutting hand-colored photograph stands at $9,300.00, which is quite reasonable within the high-priced world of Antiques & Collectibles. However, as the economy has softened, so too have Wallace Nutting prices and perhaps 90% of Wallace Nutting pictures are selling in today’s market for less than $150-$200. And many can be had for $50-$75 or less. Which means that if you appreciate Wallace Nutting Pictures, this is probably the best time to buy them in the past 25 years.