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A young woman models in a studio for photographer Fitz W. Guerin. No date is recorded with the photo, but it was probably taken around 1902. View full size.
This reminds me of a Godward painting. Beautiful.
...looks like she's had plenty o' biscuits with mustard.
Some people call it a sling blade, I call it a kaiser blade.
So, how did the photographer make the ends of the sash float up in the air like that? A fan? But nothing else looks blown. It was wired up in some way? It was on a table that was later processed out of the image somehow? And, you have to love the tulle hanging down her back off the head piece. Just what I'm sure every reaper had in her closet. Makes her less grim, though.
A scythe is the tool carried by the grim reaper. A sickle is one the two tools (the other, a hammer) symbolizing the former Soviet Union. Both were equally scary thoughts in my youth.
I guess that would be an Italian machete.
Actually, we called it a sickle when I was a boy. Used it for whacking weeds in the corn rows, where you needed some control so you didn't take out the cornstalks.
A scythe is a big two-handed tool with a curved blade, used to cut big swaths of wheat or alfalfa. I never could get the one we had to work for me, but I either didn't have enough strength or my blade was too dull. Besides, Dad harvested that stuff with a toothy blade on the tractor.
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