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- Title
- Pretty Hula Girls, Honolulu, Hawaii
- Description
- Photograph showing four Hawaiian women playing musical instruments and dancing outside at Punch Bowl Mountain in Honolulu. The women wear their long hair down and are attired in flower leis around the crown of their heads and around their necks, white chemise shirts, and skirts. Two women sit holding a gourd and a guitar. Behind them, two women stand with their left arms out as they dance the hula., Title from item., Date from copyright statement: Copyright 1901, by B. L. Singley., Text printed on verso: We here see a group of hula dancers, with leis of fragrant leaves and flowers crowning their heads and cast about their necks, a very pretty custom of the Hawaiians, especially worn on festive occasions. The hula hula has always been a feature of court festivities and also a common entertainment of the islanders, often danced in the lanai or open parlor of the home. The ancient hula was not danced to the accompaniment of musical instruments but rhythmic measures muttered by old men who kept time by striking a gourd; in the modern version of the dance, the lissom dancers, trained from childhood to delight the senses, sway their graceful figures to the music of the flute, guitar and other stringed instuments and the beat of the tom-tom. The white chemise and airy skirt with garlands about head and shoulders and sometimes ankle decorations form the dress of the dusky hula girls. This view was taken in the crater of Punch Bowl Mountain, an extinct volcano., Keystone View Company was founded in 1892 by B.L. Singley, an amateur photographer from Meadville, Pennsylvania. Keystone View Company was the leader in promoting stereographs for educational purposes. In 1912 the company purchased rights to some Underwood & Underwood negatives for use in educational sets, and in 1922 purchased the remaining stock of Underwood materials. The company remained in business until 1970.
- Creator
- Keystone View Company
- Date
- 1901
- Location
- Library Company of Philadelphia | Print Department stereo - Keystone View Company - Portraits & Genre [P.2014.12.5]
- Title
- A typical scene in Hawaii. The hula-hula dance
- Description
- Photograph depicting six Hawaiian women hula dancing in front of spectators during King Kalakaua's Silver Jubiliee celebrating his fiftieth birthday in 1886 in Honolulu. The women, barefooted and attired in flower leis around the crown of their heads and around their necks, anklets, white long-sleeved shirts, and fabric skirts, dance with their arms out to the left. Behind them a large crowd of spectators sit and stand and watch. Also visible are a palm tree and partial views of tents and a pavillion. In the right of the postcard is an advertisement for "Zenith Art Lusters" from N.Z. Graves Co., Philadelphia. Nelson Z. Graves (1849–1930) formed N.Z. Graves & Co., a manufacturer of varnish, japan, and pigments, in 1888., Text from item., Date inferred from postcard design., Text printed on recto: Put heavy accent on the syllables marked thus: -. Speak lightly the syllables marked thus: U. Zenith Art Lusters! Oh, come in and buy. They’ll brighten your home up and tickle the eye. There never was anything suited to please. Equal in quality, like unto these. Floors, chairs and tables, all shine at their touch, Old furniture scuffed, from using too much. Walls, ceilings and plaster and any such things, Wear better, look better, covered with stains. Step in and ask and the dealer will give a fine little booklet that helps you to live. Like artists, with comfort and beauty about. Costs you naught, aids you much, counsels you well. To learn more about “Zenith Art Lusters” ask the dealer from whom this card came or Dept. “R.”, Sheet number: 40B02A, Divided back.
- Creator
- Brightbill, George M., collector
- Date
- [ca. 1909]
- Location
- Library Company of Philadelphia | PRINT PRINT Brightbill postcards [Business and Industry - Miscellaneous - 40]

