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hoodoothatvoodoo:

Jean Harlow
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hoodoothatvoodoo:

Jean Harlow

    • #photography
    • #aviation
    • #fashion
    • #vintage
  • 3 months ago > hoodoothatvoodoo
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Japanese propaganda from the Siberian Intervention (1918-1922), c. 1919. English text at the bottom reads: “Our Army Attacks From Sky, Water And Shore, And Repulsed Enemy Of Siberia”
Following the overthrow of both the Russian Empire and the Provisional Government under Kerensky in 1917 and the rise of Soviet Russia, the Allied powers attempted a military intervention to support the anti-Bolshevik White Army. 
During the intervention, Japan attempted not only to help put down the Communist forces but to ultimately secure Siberian territory as a buffer zone against future Russian aggression. The two powers suffered significant hostility toward one another as their respective imperialist ambitions came into conflict over Manchuria and Korea, which had manifested in the Russo-Japanese War of 1904-1905.
While initially successful, Japan’s intervention was an expensive undertaking and Japan came under increasing pressure to withdraw after the other Allied powers departed in 1920 (especially from the United States, which feared Japan’s rival ambitions in East Asia and the Pacific). This pressure, combined with increasing war weariness at home, led to Japan withdrawing its forces from Siberia in 1922.
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Japanese propaganda from the Siberian Intervention (1918-1922), c. 1919. English text at the bottom reads: “Our Army Attacks From Sky, Water And Shore, And Repulsed Enemy Of Siberia”

Following the overthrow of both the Russian Empire and the Provisional Government under Kerensky in 1917 and the rise of Soviet Russia, the Allied powers attempted a military intervention to support the anti-Bolshevik White Army. 

During the intervention, Japan attempted not only to help put down the Communist forces but to ultimately secure Siberian territory as a buffer zone against future Russian aggression. The two powers suffered significant hostility toward one another as their respective imperialist ambitions came into conflict over Manchuria and Korea, which had manifested in the Russo-Japanese War of 1904-1905.

While initially successful, Japan’s intervention was an expensive undertaking and Japan came under increasing pressure to withdraw after the other Allied powers departed in 1920 (especially from the United States, which feared Japan’s rival ambitions in East Asia and the Pacific). This pressure, combined with increasing war weariness at home, led to Japan withdrawing its forces from Siberia in 1922.

    • #art
    • #vintage
    • #first world war
    • #japan
    • #Aviation
    • #1910s
    • #russian civil war
    • #siberian intervention
    • #russia
  • 4 months ago
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proteges:

Experts predicted that in future wars, zeppelins would accommodate battleships to sea. Aeronautics engineers proposed installing mooring rigids to the masts of converted cruisers, which would act as the dirigibles’ depot ships. The front of the ship would house a small hangar and launching pad for fighting planes. Guide ropes projecting from the sides of the ship would hold the dirigible in place while ship crews fastened its nose cone to the mooring device. (via Archive Gallery: The Golden Age of Zeppelins | Popular Science)
Related articles
 The Airship: an aesthetic appreciation (scottlocklin.wordpress.com)
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proteges:

Experts predicted that in future wars, zeppelins would accommodate battleships to sea. Aeronautics engineers proposed installing mooring rigids to the masts of converted cruisers, which would act as the dirigibles’ depot ships. The front of the ship would house a small hangar and launching pad for fighting planes. Guide ropes projecting from the sides of the ship would hold the dirigible in place while ship crews fastened its nose cone to the mooring device. (via Archive Gallery: The Golden Age of Zeppelins | Popular Science)

Related articles
  • The Airship: an aesthetic appreciation (scottlocklin.wordpress.com)
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    • #art
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    • #boats and ships
    • #military
    • #20th century
    • #vintage
  • 5 months ago > proteges
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lostsplendor:

Belgium, c. 1918.  By drakegoodman
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lostsplendor:

Belgium, c. 1918.  By drakegoodman

    • #aviation
    • #military
    • #uniforms
    • #first world war
    • #belgium
    • #germany
    • #firearms
    • #aeroplanes
  • 7 months ago > lostsplendor
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xplanes:

sunday fantasy #291: Popular Mechanics, Sept 1930
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xplanes:

sunday fantasy #291: Popular Mechanics, Sept 1930

(via my-ear-trumpet)

    • #art
    • #vintage
    • #aviation
    • #inventions
    • #science fiction
    • #1930s
  • 7 months ago > xplanes
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xplanes:

sunday fantasy #293: Justo Miranda
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xplanes:

sunday fantasy #293: Justo Miranda

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    • #art
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  • 10 months ago > xplanes
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    • #photography
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    • #buildings
    • #vintage
  • 10 months ago > fietssleutel
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Blood In The Skies is now in print and available for sale. Check it out on Good Reads. You can also purchase a copy from Amazon, Barnes and Noble, and Wildside Press.
Want a preview before purchase? Check out an excerpt of the prologue and first chapter on Tor.com. Also, you may still have time to win a signed copy of the novel from a contest being held by Tor.com.
Here is what people are saying about Blood In The Skies:
Praise for Blood in the Skies: “This is steampunk clanking to life on the page.” —Jay Lake, Campbell Award winner and author of Mainspring “G. D. Falksen’s witty, anachronistic, and downright fun writing style makes him a storyteller to watch.”—Terrance Zdunich, creator of REPO! The Genetic Opera and The Molting “A piston blast of pure pulp adventure.” —John Leavitt, author of Dr. Sketchy’s Official Rainy Day Colouring Book and Scarlet Takes Manhattan “A rousing adventure filled with a wealth of imagery, action and technological wonders.” —Chet Phillips, award winning illustrator and digital artist “G.D. Falksen is not only one of the most important authors in Steampunk literature, he is arguably the most enjoyable.”—Art Donovan, author of The Art of Steampunk “A delightfully crunchy alternate reality that lets you feel the gears grinding.” —Phil Foglio, creator of the Hugo Award winning Girl Genius
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Blood In The Skies is now in print and available for sale. Check it out on Good Reads. You can also purchase a copy from Amazon, Barnes and Noble, and Wildside Press.

Want a preview before purchase? Check out an excerpt of the prologue and first chapter on Tor.com. Also, you may still have time to win a signed copy of the novel from a contest being held by Tor.com.

Here is what people are saying about Blood In The Skies:

Praise for Blood in the Skies:
“This is steampunk clanking to life on the page.”
—Jay Lake, Campbell Award winner and author of Mainspring

“G. D. Falksen’s witty, anachronistic, and downright fun writing style makes him a storyteller to watch.”
—Terrance Zdunich, creator of REPO! The Genetic Opera and The Molting

“A piston blast of pure pulp adventure.”
—John Leavitt, author of Dr. Sketchy’s Official Rainy Day Colouring Book and Scarlet Takes Manhattan

“A rousing adventure filled with a wealth of imagery, action and technological wonders.”
—Chet Phillips, award winning illustrator and digital artist

“G.D. Falksen is not only one of the most important authors in Steampunk literature, he is arguably the most enjoyable.”
—Art Donovan, author of The Art of Steampunk

“A delightfully crunchy alternate reality that lets you feel the gears grinding.”
—Phil Foglio, creator of the Hugo Award winning Girl Genius

    • #blood in the skies
    • #writing
    • #g d falksen
    • #steampunk
    • #fiction
    • #art
    • #aviation
    • #uniforms
  • 10 months ago
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    • #art
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    • #fashion
    • #belle epoque
    • #20th century
  • 10 months ago > votefitzwilliam
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(via my-ear-trumpet)

    • #photography
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  • 12 months ago > tindink
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About

Avatar G. D. Falksen
author, historian, man about town

Pages

  • About G. D. Falksen
  • Blood In The Skies
  • Bibliography
  • Press
  • Appearances
  • Falksen Fox Charm
  • Steampunk: A Soundtrack for Blood In The Skies
  • What is Steampunk

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