A lovely white and red love tree vector graphic, with leaves made of hears, A perfectly romantic tree that will fit on a valentine's card or as a desktop background.
This is a silhouette of the Salt Lake Temple of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Mormon) made by my friend Jay and I. It is optimized for cutting on a Cricut.
This image was donated by Pearson Scott Foresman, an educational publisher, to Wikimedia Commons, and is thereby in the Public Domain.
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See http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Pearson_Scott_Foresman_publisher
"I shot the turkey but I did not shoot the deputy!" this guy is handing a murdered bird over to a couple in order to help the celebrate the american Thanksgiving holiday. I suppose this is back in the day when you would take a fresh one home and then pluck it yourself.
This image was donated by Pearson Scott Foresman, an educational publisher, to Wikimedia Commons, and is thereby in the Public Domain. --- See http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Pearson_Scott_Foresman_publisher
Two young lovers, in a field, exchanging a valentines day card. Awwww, so cute, right? Well, except the poem that accompanied this super old picture (from the 1910 Los Angeles Herald) seemed somehow profane:
"Jack Horner wrote a valentine. Bo Peep, sweet maid. My heart is thine; Let me tend your flock, rest beside my haycock, I'll share my pie if you'll be mine."
Is it just me or are many old illustrations really quite creepy? Why is Santa dancing with this ferocious looking bear? Why are the children lining up behind them without being scared? I don't why, this whole picture just creeps me out. Originally used to illustrate a December 1904 (read that as: totally public domain) advertisement in the The San Francisco Call newspaper. The original ad was for a company called Pragers. They sold things like: scarf pins for men, women and children (50 cents), vests ($3.85), kindergarten goods for girls (50 cents), porcelain clocks ($2.50) and all other manner of things. (They should have posted the ad with a warning like this: prices subject to change due to temporal readjustment when advertisement is read over 100 years later.)