I suppose it's very interesting to look at a car, completely disassembled... but, why take a photo of your mechanics at that point?

The first car in Nova Friburgo. It looks like the same guy holding the steering wheel in both photos. The passenger might be the guy holding the tin and paintbrush to the far right.


https://forums.aaca.org/topic/341211-period-images-to-relieve-some-of-the-stress/page/678

The invention of refrigeration by Carl von Linde in the 1870s was a direct response to brewers needing cool storage for bottom-fermented lagers, which need cold temps to ferment properly.


The ability to produce and distribute cold beer led to the growth of massive brewing empires

 Mechanical refrigeration was actually a response to the needs of brewers, since the process of brewing and fermentation required natural cooling of the fermenting beer. That is often why the best beer came from cold, northern European climates, but even then, it could often not be brewed year round. Milwaukeans had prime access to ice from the lake water, which may have helped the success of brewing in the city.

 Cold storage made cold, crisp lagers widely available, leading to their immense popularity and eclipsing traditional, warmer-served ales 

Friday, December 26, 2025

Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig dressed in cowboy gear at Dexter Park in Brooklyn. Several players from the Brooklyn Bushwicks semipro team (far left) look on. 1927



The event was part of a publicity stunt to advertise the World's Championship Rodeo. 

 The tour, organized by their agent Christy Walsh, took place after the New York Yankees swept the 1927 World Series and featured teams called the "Bustin' Babes" and the "Larrupin' Lou's".

interesting milkman's delivery truck



Notice the area between the cab, and the painting of the cow... there is a really big milk can, 50 gallons or so, just a guess. 

Really nice lettering too. That license plate, makes me guess this is about 1912

the coolest thing that has happened to me all year.... Larry sent me a Christmas card, and doubled down with a tip jar dragster! Then tripled down with the compliment of the year!



Lol., read the fine print, Hot Wheels doesn't make a Christmas card! HA! 

Ain't that the coolest! 

Thank you Larry! This is incredible, you made my day, clanged my tip jar (and designed a new one!) and sent me a Christmas card!  That's so dang generous, and awesome! 

if you know what this is, then your childhood had some cool movies. It also might be the only time a tractor has been portrayed as a movie's antagonist!







If you've got to here, without recognizing the movie, it's the Secret of NIHM - a masterpiece by Don Bluth, who was stifled by Disney, and led an exodus of animators away from a dying Disney animation studio, and they created their own, and made some really damn cool movies: Titan AE, All Dogs Go To Heaven, Anastasia, the Land Before Time

While at Disney, he worked on Sleeping Beauty, Robin Hood, and was the animation director for such films as The Rescuers and Pete's Dragon 

Steven Spielberg teamed up with Don in the late 80s for the films An American Tail and The Land Before Time, and Disney had NOTHING that came close to comparing. 

Netflix has a documentary on car design, (lots of 90s Mopar concept cars!) focused on Ralph Gilles, head of design for Mopar/Dodge/Chrysler/FCA "Abstract: The Art Of Design" (Season 1 ep 4) and it seems you can watch it on You Tube



Of course you can watch it at home on your big screen too, on Netflix

I had no idea he was born in Montreal, whose parents were Haitian immigrants, who must have been incredible parents, he became the youngest, fastest achieving head of design of one of the major dozen car making corporations, and his brother became a doctor, was an emergency room Dr at St Joe's in Elgin Illinois, and now is a board member of Morris Hospital (both are in the Chicago area) 

Dr Gilles is now Medical Director of the Department of Emergency Medicine at Morris, prior to this, he practiced at hospitals throughout the Chicago area for nearly 20 years.

tough looking street sweepers!

The Austin-Western Road Machinery Co.’s 1938 “motor pick-up sweepers” were the height of sweeping technology at the time. They boasted larger, more resilient brooms, hydraulic rather than manual controls for raising the rear broom and elevator, and the relatively recent innovation of using water to wet down the cleaning area before it was swept with the broom. 

photographer: Leo Tiede

https://www.bowers.org/index.php/collections-blog/the-fast-and-the-curious-leo-tiede-s-photographs-of-cars