Brigitte Bardot photographed by Walter Carone in Louveciennes in May 1952. Part four. All of these were publicity photos for her first film, LE TROU NORMAND, taken for Paris Match.
Finally, these can be presented the way they were supposed to be seen. I’ve only come across cropped, flipped and discolored versions.
Nighttime in Mexico: Brigitte Bardot photographed by Gérard Géry during the shooting of VIVA MARIA! (1965). She stayed in a house in Cuernavaca—no glass in the windows, and with a great view of the spectacular night sky.
🤯 Julio Lafuente was a Spanish architect who worked mainly in Italy. This is a summer cabin he built with structural engineer Gaetano Rebecchini on Capocotta beach near Rome in 1965. We have never seen anything like it. What a playful to stack bunkers!
Softly through the shadow of the evening sun, stealing past the windows of the blissfully dead @dani_divine x @iheartboris • Only a few Suck It thongs & panties left in stock! #Creepettes #Lullaby (at Los Angeles, California) https://www.instagram.com/p/CIWcNodDwRC/?igshid=7m4mdb6js87y
The Terrorists by Maj Sjöwall and Per Wahlöö, cover by Unknown Artist (1978)
I don’t usually like photographic covers, especially on mystery novels, because the genre has such a strong tradition of beautiful painted paperback covers. I admit I don’t mind the covers of these early Vintage Books editions of the classic Martin Beck mysteries by Swedish geniuses Maj Sjöwalla...
The Death Master by Benjamin Appel, cover by Paul Lehr (1974)
Here is another Paul Lehrcover with his usual subject: a huge circular object in the background that dwarfs the tiny figures in the foreground. Lehr’s many science fiction covers in the 1960s and 1970s profoundly elevated the standards of the genre. No matter what the content, a Lehr cover indicated that the...