Maybe I am missing something (USA copyright law is not my area of expertise) but I see recent photographs of old things, which would make the photos the copyright of Dovie Horvitz (who is described as the person who took the photos). If the copyright has been assigned to the university, the university's website asserts copyright over things in electronic format (which seems to cover anything on a website!).
Sent from my iPad
On 22 Oct 2014, at 9:13 am, Sarah Stierch sarah.stierch@gmail.com wrote:
Fabulous collection of images, see below. Most are public domain - meaning ripe for uploading to Commons :)
---------- Forwarded message ---------- From: Carol Stabile carol.stabile@gmail.com Date: Tue, Oct 21, 2014 at 4:11 PM Subject: fembot: Announcing a new pictorial digital women's history collection To: media & technology collaboration gender fembot@lists.uoregon.edu
Thought some of you would be interested in this.
best,
Carol A. Stabile, Professor School of Journalism and Communication/Department of Women’s and Gender Studies University of Oregon Editor, The Fembot Collective
Dear WMST-Lers
I am pleased to announce the availability of a wonderful online collection of photographs of women’s everyday possessions in the 19th and early 20th centuries, plus numerous digitized texts (magazines, books, postcards, posters, and more) concerning women during that period. The objects and printed works themselves were amassed by Dovie Horvitz, and Illinois-based collector who hopes to find an institutional home for the entire collection some day — perhaps the presence of the photographs and digitized works will spark that interest. We hope so.
Objects in the collection include clothing (dresses, hosiery, bustles, garters, swimwear, undergarments, aprons, and more), accessories such as shoes and boots, hats, gloves, purses, fans, handkerchiefs, furs, and parasols; menstrual and other health products; cosmetic and grooming kits, powders, and related make-up items; dresser sets (combs and brushes); curling irons and other hair care devices; perfumes; boudoir pillow covers; eye glasses; and exercise equipment. The printed matter includes numerous women’s magazines, Sunday supplement illustrations, sheet music about women, suffrage postcards, World War I and II posters, photographs of teen parties, and pamphlets about sex, health, and menstruation. Page after page of ad-filled women’s magazines, as well as packaging elements such as hairnet envelopes, hosiery, handkerchief and hat boxes, constitute an important part of the collection. Most of the material is American in origin.
The collection seems of most immediate interest to women’s history classes, but American literature, communication arts (especially marketing), medical history, design, and other fields should also find it useful. It is also simply a pleasure to browse!
Please pass this message along to others at your institution.
The fully searchable and browsable online collection homepage is athttp://digital.library.wisc.edu/1711.dl/GenderStudies.DovieHorvitz
An article about the collection is at http://www.library.wisc.edu/news/2014/10/13/dovie-horvitz-collection-showcas... .
Phyllis Holman Weisbard Women's Studies Librarian Emerita phweisba@wisc.edu
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-- Sarah Stierch
Diverse and engaging consulting for your organization.
www.sarahstierch.com
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