14.3.18

Street Photographers-South Africa.

Cape Town.

 

This is a photo of a negative which I got from my father. The negative is thick and quite big so it is difficult to scan. I took the photo (Nikon D70) on my My Light-Box and adjusted it in Adobe Photoshop.  It was taken at the Grand Parade, Cape Town. Circa 1939. From left to right is my father (Dad age 7) Petrus Johannes Smit (2.1.1932-24.12.2014), My Paternal Grandfather Jan Harmse Nieuwoudt Smit. (20.9.1894-1.10.1970), my Grandmother Pieteriza Cilliers Van Ellewee (7.10.01- 7.7.1992) and my aunt (Dad‘s sister) Christina Philippina Magrietha Smit (5.7.1936-21.6.1939) I have scrap-booked this photo see “Moment in time




 

Caledonian Market S.A. Aka Cape Town's Caledonian Market Click above for more. The backdrop looks very similar to the first photo.

Caledonian Market S.A. Aka Cape Town's Caledonian Market (1940)

 

This is a photo of a negative which I got from my father. The negative is thick and quite big, so it is difficult to scan. I took a photo (Nikon D70) of the negative on my My Light-Box and adjusted it in Adobe Photoshop.  It was taken at the Grand Parade, Cape Town. Circa 1939. It looks as if it was taken on the same day as the first photo. The backdrop looks the same as in the photo in Caledonian Market S.A. Aka Cape Town's Caledonian Market


Great Aunt Alida. Scrapbooked.
“The Grand Parade is the main public square in Cape Town, South Africa. The square is surrounded by the Cape Town City Hall, the Castle of Good Hope, and the Cape Town railway station. The square is generally used as a market place and parking area.” Wikipedia
“Up until the early 1980s, the Grand Parade was described as “the pulsating heart of Cape Town,” a resemblance of London’s Petticoat Lane or Hyde Park corner, where raucous commercial activity would come to assert the space’s character as a long-standing and essential feature of city life. Customers had the luxury of being able to buy anything from flowers and fruit to cold drinks and even property in Belville, all at one flea market. At that time, many of those running stalls were third generation parade fruit-sellers.”- Urbanafrica.net


My husband's grandfather Philip John George Meyer (14.12.1900 – 24.6.1976) In a Salvation Army uniform. He’s daughter and he used to collect money for the Salvation Army.


Photo: Movie Snaps, Cape Town, South Africa. Circa 1950My husband's grandfather Philip John George Meyer (14.12.1900 – 24.6.1976) and he's daughter. Collecting money for St. John.   
Photo: Movie Snaps, Cape Town, South Africa. Circa 1950





Movie Snaps in Darling street, Cape Town, South Africa. Photo from Etienne du Plessis.




Movie Snaps, Parade Corner, Darling Street, Cape Town.
Movie Snaps on Facebook.




  "Movie Snaps, a well-known photography studio that operated for decades on the Grand Parade, along with a smaller branch at Muizenberg beach."- Snapshots of different times, same place

A walk in time

"The ‘Movie Snaps’ studio that began in a building on the edge of the Grand Parade at the start of the second World War, provides the photographic backdrop of Jewish families in South Africa on the one hand, and on the other, the further annihilation and fragmentation of lives legislated through apartheid in 1948. Positioned opposite the Cape Town General Post Office, photographers snapped thousands of Cape Town residents going about their daily lives, continuing this practice for over forty years." - Movie Snaps, Cape Town Remembers Differently


  "Once they crossed the photographer’s chalk line, they were convinced to take a ticket in the hope that they would purchase the image a few days later from the kiosk. These snapshots show women resplendent in tulle dresses or wearing flared bell-bottoms, sailors boasted their crisp white uniforms while Muslim children celebrated Christmas with their Christian friends. The pictures illustrate moments of ordinary living in extraordinary times. They offer a counterpoint to the now familiar narrative of apartheid’s series of carefully composed images of burning tires, mass protests and violence and urge a consideration of the afterlives of apartheid."- Movie Snaps, Cape Town Remembers Differently


My great-uncle Van Ellewee and he's daughter.  Possibly taken by Movie Snaps in Darlingstreet Cape Town, South Africa  Circa 1945

Movie Snaps PROMO

Johannesburg.


My My Mother in Law and My Father in Law
Photo: Film Tests, 68 Joubert Street, Johannesburg, South Africa, Circa 1951

My husbands aunts. Circa 1960. Possibly Johannesburg, South Africa.
Wearing  The “New Look” dresses.



My mother, myself and my dad. March 1962. Johannesburg, South Africa. The New Movie Snaps. 9 Moseley buildings, Rissik street, Johannesburg, South Africa.

Durban.


Durban Beachfront with Scotty's yellow booth on the right. Pinterest.
Mermaid. My Sister in law. Happy Days Studio, Durban, South Africa.


 


"A photographer, Scotty, always dressed in a khaki pith helmet wandered around outside the Lido taking ad hoc photographs and giving folk a numbered card to pick up their photos the next day. His circular kiosk, always plastered outside with his shots of beachgoers was on the promenade on the hotel/ road side of the lido and Scotty had a wide variety of painted boards with heads cut out of them to enable people to pose as, for example, a muscular weightlifter, Superman or a busty female in a polka dot bikini. " -  Facts about Durban

Margate:


My great-aunt Maria and my Grandmother Hilda Blackie . Photo: "Happy day tours" Margate Circa 1967

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DISCLAIMER: Some images unless otherwise noted, were taken from the internet and are assumed to be in the public domain. In the event that there is still a problem or error with copyrighted material, the break of the copyright is unintentional and non commercial and the material will be removed upon request.

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