Treat that with respect! Such a cool find, and very well documented with the retro feel. Are the game pieces made of wood, and is the train engine painted red?
I have never seen a 1936 version of Monopoly but I like the original rather than all the spinoffs. Hmmmm, family farm house - they are lucky the mice/other critters didn't make lunch of the treasure!
...is to fill 52 themes, one a week for the year. Some weeks, maybe I'll try to find several photos to fit the themes. Others, I may spend more time trying to perfect one that seems best to represent the theme. Three years of a photo-a-day opened my eyes, now I want to hone my skills.
Somehow, a camera allows me to see more deeply and awakens the eye. For me, undertaking these year-long challenges is a way to become more aware of the world that swirls around me.
Treat that with respect! Such a cool find, and very well documented with the retro feel. Are the game pieces made of wood, and is the train engine painted red?
ReplyDeleteThe houses and hotels are wood. I don't remember if the train was red.
ReplyDeletewhat a great find! Looks like something that came from Steven's attic!
ReplyDeleteVery neat find...and I love the processing you have used to enhance the vintage feel.
ReplyDeleteI think it like gerberbaby, one of the original games must be a real treasure
ReplyDeleteVery cool! The illustrations on the cards are unexpected. Great processing on this.
ReplyDeletePerfect processing for this wonderful treasure. Hope they are going to keep it?
ReplyDeleteGreat find and perfect processing.
ReplyDeleteI have never seen a 1936 version of Monopoly but I like the original rather than all the spinoffs. Hmmmm, family farm house - they are lucky the mice/other critters didn't make lunch of the treasure!
ReplyDeleteFascinating...this might be worth some money at an auction.
ReplyDelete