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Amsterdam

Hollandsche, Fransche & Weener Broodbakkerij – Weduwe E.A. Rekers – Prinsengracht & Leidsestraat – Gevelreclame – Amsterdam, NL

© Frank H. Jump

Dutch, French & Viennese Bread Bakery – Widow E.A. Rekers

From the Art Nouveau Jugendstil font style, this sign can be dated from 1890 – 1910 – with my estimate towards the later end of this period. According to the Dutch site Winkelstories – Rekers, Wed. EA, bakery was founded in 1878. The building has a date of 1896 – which may be when it was renovated. Now Kwakman bakery. Prinsengracht 462 / Leidsestraat corner

Municipality of Amsterdam - City Archive

Guest Featured Fade: Of Palimpsests & Pentimento: Discovering hidden treasures in Washington, D.C. – By Arnold Berke

Pasternak © Arnold Berke - CLICK FOR FLICKR SLIDESHOW!

Often the relic remains in full view—a “palimpsest” or object that echoes its history, a surface feature that probes within. Or, like the Pasternak sign, it slumbers hidden for years, until alterations bring it back to light. A similar process, pentimento, marks painting, as writer Lillian Hellman wrote in her eponymous memoir: “Old paint on a canvas, as it ages, sometimes becomes transparent. Arnold Berke – for the National Trust for Historic Preservation – May 16, 2011

For more on Pentimento:

pentimento-pentimento (plural pentimenti) is an alteration in a painting showing that the artist has changed his mind as to the composition during the process of painting. The word derives from the Italian pentirsi, meaning to repent.

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Street art and photography

The term has sometimes been used in a modern sense to describe the appearance of the sides of buildings with painted advertising. Often they are painted over with newer ads and the paint wears away to reveal the older layers.

Examples of this can be found at http://www.fadingad.com and http://www.frankjump.com that had been taken by Frank H. Jump in Amsterdam, 1998. The caption was “Amsterdam August 1998- This an example of what I call “ediglyph” – where fading ads and graffiti intersect”. http://www.fadingad.com/009.html

(taken from Wiki-pedia)

 

Gatske Broekveldt-de Jong – Bloemen en Planten – 70 Korte Leidsedwarsstraat – Amsterdam, NL

Taken after WWII in front of my great grandmother's home and flower & plant store - © Frank H. Jump

Flowers & Plants © Frank H. Jump

After WWII, my great grandmother, Gatske de Jong sold flowers & plants from her domicile storefront a block southeast of Leidseplein in Amsterdam. My mother remembers spending days with her at the flower market learning the “bloemenhandel” or flower trade. I love the surprise when I enlarged this to find my grand mother with her back turned in the window to the left and the little girl hiding in the lower stoop looking around the steps. I don’t know who the customer in front was, but I know from her upturned smile, she was pleased with her purchase.

UPDATE: Just sitting with my mom, she remembers riding on the bicycle flower cart with her grandfather during WWII when they came upon young men from the Dutch Underground being lined up and shot down by the Nazis. The SS soldiers made everyone watch or else they were shot as well. My great grandfather grabbed my mother by the pigtails and held her still so she would see.

Other postings:

Suikerwerk Fabriek Petrovitch – Amsterdam, NL

Suikerwerk Fabriek Petrovitch

Sugar Works Factory - Petrovitch, Amsterdam NL - © Frank H. Jump

© Frank H. Jump

A War Story – ‘n Oorlogs Verhaal – Former Home of Gatske de Jong – 70 Korte Leidsedwarsstraat – Amsterdam, NL

© Frank H. Jump

This is the site where my great-grandmother Gatske de Jong lived and where she later sold flowers during and after World World II. Gatske was originally from Leeuwarden, Friesland before moving to Amsterdam and marrying my great-grandfather Frans Ludwig Broekveldt on April 27, 1904 – who died before my grandfather, Frans Ludwig Broekveldt II was born.  She remarried Jan de Wit, a professional diamond cutter who lost an eye and became a flower merchant, and continued to live here until she died in 1960 of tuberculosis. Due to her illness, Gatske did not want to see me through a window – not being able to take me in her arms. I was ninth months old when she died on my first trip to Amsterdam.

Gatske's passport - Previously posted on Fading Ad Blog on February 26, 2009

Marriage license of my maternal great grandfather & grandmother (Netherlands) from online exhibition Bronnen uit Amsterdam (www.bronnenuitamsterdam.nl)

(Documents above previously posted on Fading Ad Blog on February 26, 2009)

During the war, a Canadian airman was shot over Leidseplein and parachuted to uncertain safety in front Gatske’s modest little stoop, which is now next door to a headshop. Ignoring Jan de Wit’s protests about getting caught by the Germans, Gatske pulled in the Canadian arm over arm, parachute and all, and cleaned his wounds with Jonge Jenever – a Dutch gin. Gatske nursed the pilot back to health – returning him to the Dutch resistance where he disappeared into obscurity.

Gatske de Jong - widowed by Frans Ludwig Broekveldt (below)

Frans Ludwig Broekveldt - Gatske's first husband and my maternal great-grandfather.

Jan de Wit - Gatske's second husband - wed April 17, 1912

Gatske de Jong - Frans Ludwig Broekveldt II - Jan de Wit

Mother & Child

Frans Ludwig Broekveldt II - my maternal grandfather - met hoepel

Children rolling hoops, Holland, 1560 - Pieter Bruegel - Wikipedia

My grandfather as a young man on a bicycle - Frans Ludwig Broekveldt II op fiets

Happy Birthday Willy Broekveldt Jump – August 2, 1936

Koper & Ijzerwaren – Copper & Ironware – Halvemaansteeg – Amsterdam, NL

Just north of Rembrantsplein © Frank H. Jump

Café-Slijterij ‘Oost-West’ – Anno 1731 – Zeedijk, Amsterdam NL

Café - Liquor Store - East - West - Zeedijk, Amsterdam - © Frank H. Jump

All well known brands available here.

I drink, then I decay – I  do not drink, then I die.
Better drunk and decayed then not drunk and dead anyway.

Wijs en Zonen Theehandel – Ingang Kantoor – Zeedijk, Amsterdam NL

Wijs - pronounced vice with the ÿ dipthong for 'i' - & sons. Tea warehouse - Office Entrance - Zeedijk, Amsterdam NL © Frank H. Jump

Prinses Juliana Kinderdagverbligf – Childrens’ Nursery – Oudekerksplein 8 – Amsterdam, NL

© Frank H. Jump

© Frank H. Jump

Amazing how integrated Amsterdam’s public services are with the Red Light district. The oldest church, De Oudekerk, is situated in the heart of the Red Light District – coffeeshops (marijuana smokehouses) and prostitutes’ windows are directly across the street from the church – as is this children’s nursery. Only in Amsterdam!

Prinses Juliana – Kleine Kinderen Bewaarplaats – Anno 1911 – Amsterdam, NL

Small Children's Repository (Nursery) - 71 Warmoesstraat - Now a leather shop © Frank H. Jump

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