JF Ptak Science Books Quick Post
Just a few days ago I made a post here about camouflage ("Art & Artists as Wartime Magi--Making Things Disappear, 1918", and now comes another, a WWI news service photo, "Camouflage Shop at the Front". Camouflage imagery has been relatively scarce in my experience with WWI photographs, particularly one like this, with women workers at the front ("A lattice work finished and rolled up in the hangars, 6/17/18"), shown at shift change or lunch break. Women were heavily involved in the production of camouflage during WWI (as with the U.S. Women's reserve Camouflage Corps), with some netting and uniform designs being produced in domestic settings and then sent to the front.
What draws me in here, in this photo, is the woman at front-left: she seems tallish and ramrod-straight...and I like the long swing of her left arm. I imagine that it is lunch since there are no shadows to speak of and it was obviously sunny, and at some point of the 17th day of June 1918, these workers were on their way to a break. (I suspect that the date wasn't very accurate for when the photo was made, as everyone here is wearing pretty heavy clothing for June, somewhere in north-eastern France or Belgium. They were constructing camouflage made of rags and natural bits, piles of which you can see in the detail. The "hangars" are small ganged huts covered by camouflage netting.
In any event I share this as I don't easily see another example online quite like this one.
Collage of the full image and detail:
The full image, along with the suggested caption to be used on publication (supplied by the photo news agency):
The hangars:
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