mail_outline sales@mediastorehouse.com
For Healths SakeComic illustration by Lawson Wood showing two cheeky monkey pilfering fruit from a sleeping orang utan, Gran pop. Title is For Healths Sake Take Things Quietly
Fifth of NovemberPlease to remember the fifth of November, The Gunpowder treason plot; I see no reason why Gunpowder treason, should ever be forgot. A stick and a stake for Victorias sake!
I had a Little Nut TreeI had a little nut tree, nothing would it bear but a silver nutmeg & a golden pear The king of Spains daughter came to visit me, all for the sake of my little nut tree
Japanese Wedding Ceremony series - Bride and Parents-in-Law. The bride performing a rite of drinking sake with her husbands parents in order to express the true heart of loving each other tenderly as
Japanese Wedding Ceremony series - Drinking SakeJapanese Wedding Ceremony - Bride and Bridegroom each drink Sake nine times to fasten the ties of matrimony - the most important ritual act in marriage. Date: circa 1910s
1860s Japan - portrait of a group of men and women enjoying a social meal with music dancing and sake Felice or Felix Beato (1832 - 29 January 1909)
Wife of the elite samurai class relaxingWife of the elite samurai class reading books, with other women writing with a pen, one looking at ukiyo-e prints, and one folding paper. Another woman delivers reams of paper and ink
For Belgiums Sake, by John Hassall For Belgiums Sake, by John HassallFor Belgiums Sake, illustration by John Hassall. 1914
Patriotic poster, Buy British - What you & your fellows makeBuy what you & your fellows make - Buy British - for employments sake. Part of a government campaign to tackle a balance of payments crisis
Poster, For comforts sake stagger office hours, WW2Wartime poster, For comforts sake stagger office hours -- how to avoid congestion on the London Underground. Designed by Misha Black and David Langdon. 1942
For her childrens sake by Theo. Kremer : the companion play to The fatal wedding. Date c1903
Japanese sake barrels in Yoyogi Park, Harajuku, Tokyo, Japan
WW1 soldier -- For Belgiums Sake -- Savoy Theatre programme, 6 November 1914. 1914
Advert for Robinsons Barley, 1927 Drink this daily for beautys sake Date: 1927
A man lifting a sake barrel. Print shows a man from behind lifting a sake barrel and holding it aloft with one arm. Date between 1804 and 1818
Man drinking sake before the hearth. Print shows an old man seated next to a sunken hearth, drinking sake with his meal. Date 1913
Sukeroku: selling white sake
Sake cup. Print shows a man and woman seated on the floor, a shamisen between them, a child climbing on the mans back, the woman holding a cup; standing behind them is a woman with many hairpins
A samurai drinking sake. Preliminary drawing for a woodblock design showing a wounded warrior drinking from a bowl. Date between 1870 and 1890
Fugitives for conscience sake leaving the flemish coast for America. Date c1880
Home from Andersonville, Blessed are they that suffer for ri
Japanese Tea and SakiJapanese tea ceremony (Sado); a custom strongly influenced by Zen Buddhism, in which the many rituals must be learned by heart Date: circa 1860
A Street vendor of rice wine - JapanA street vendor serves a female client with rice wine in Kobe, Japan. The man carries the two boxes by means of a pole on his shoulders and cries " Amesake!"
Dress Reform - SandalsA party of pedestrians walk through the streets of Berlin, wearing sandals for their healths sake, despite falling snow and the curious looks of passers-by
Little Nut Tree (Crane)I had a little nut tree, nothing would it bear but a silver nutmeg & a golden pear The king of Spains daughter came to visit me, all for the sake of my little nut tree
Tea Party / GreenawayThin faced little girls in mob caps partake of cake & tea seated on rush chairs. A racquet & shuttlecock have momentarily been abandoned for the sake of refreshment
Carrying the GuyPlease to remember the fifth of November, The Gunpowder treason plot; I see no reason why Gunpowder treason, should ever be forgot. A stick and a stake for Victorias sake!