Photographer John Myers’ work is relatively unknown but is considered superb among his contemporaries. Myers would typically photograph men, women, and children on their own, but also occasionally in groups. This selection is from a project showing ordinary people in their own homes or workplaces during the early 1970s.
I was interested to see quite a few large indoor plants, as I remember having those in my house at the time. Some of the subjects are also smoking, which would be less common today.
(All photos are copyright of John Myers)
A teenage girl in her bedroom. Obviously a Donny Osmond fan.
This elderly man is proud of his display unit.
A fashionable lady with a good supply of cigarettes to hand.
The young girl is dwarfed by a houseplant.
The car dealer is showing his patriotism.
A young girl wrapped up well against the cold.
A teenage boy next to his large cactus plants.
This housewife is photographed in her rather bleak back yard.
In many homes, the fireplace was still the main feature of living rooms. This lady is next to hers, but her chair is too big and her feet cannot touch the floor.
The boy is playing football alone in the small back yard of his house.
Beautiful pictures, each one with a story behind it.
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Glad you liked them, Shaily.
Best wishes, Pete.
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I enjoyed these.
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Happy to hear that, Jennie.
Best wishes, Pete.
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😀
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Very impressive, Pete! I think the fashion was nearly the same here. xx Michael
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He chose his subjects carefully, Michael.
Best wishes, Pete.
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Reblogged this on https:/BOOKS.ESLARN-NET.DE.
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The lady with cigarettes looks like the Donny Osmond fan all grown up and still grumpy!
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I’m guessing the photographer asked them not to smile. (Though the car salesman couldn’t stop himself)
Best wishes, Pete.
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I am sure you are right. Otherwise they would all have that “smile for the camera” expression.
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Reblogged this on Have We Had Help?.
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So much happened in the seventies…
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It certainly did, Jack. 🙂
Best wishes, Pete.
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Car dealer hs the Union Jack upside down, a sign of the seventies perhaps
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I would never have noticed that, Bobby. 🙂
Best wishes, Pete.
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Another window in time gone by. Warmest regards, Ed
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Very much so, Ed.
Best wishes, Pete.
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(1) I attended an Osmond Brothers performance in a small theater in Branson, Missouri back in 1996, and chatted with them afterwards. Donny and Marie had a residency in Las Vegas for years. I think Donny still performs, but without his sister.
(2) That elderly man has a lot on his plate.
(3) The fashionable lady doesn’t know how to match furniture.
(4) Is this a scene from “Little Shop of Horrors” that ended up on the cutting room floor?
(5) The car dealer is actually a member of SPECTRE. He only displayed the Union Jack after discovering the presence of a suspicious government plant.
(6) A farewell to arms.
(7) I feel like needling that boy for going with the plant trend.
(8) Bleak lives matter.
(9) All she has to do is raise the floor. #SimpleSolutions
(10) “I don’t need a photographer. I need a goalie.”
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I have seen Donny on TV here recently. He was plugging something on a chat show. I confess that group gave me the creeps, and I would never have watched them, or bought their records.
Best wishes, Pete.
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I moved to England much later, but I visited quite a few houses with the same decor, and I’ve seen a good share of similar pictures. Thanks for sharing, Pete.
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Fond memories for me, Olga.
Best wishes, Pete.
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Those kids would probably hate their old photographs! The fireplace is very familiar. There was a variety of ornaments that were solemnly dusted and polished. Nice selection.
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Fireplaces were always the ‘thing’ in my youth. By 1968, we had central heating, and no fireplace. My parents put their ‘stuff’ on the widow ledges instead. Now it is 2023, and I am doing the same thing. Nothing changes!
Best wishes, Pete.
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way too good to be unknown
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I had never heard of him before, Don.
Best wishes, Pete.
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I smoked Camel non-filtered cigarettes from the time I was 14 until just a few years ago. I have been smoke free ever since. My Dad was a Chesterfield smoker and I did try some “Players” once but found them too strong for my tastes.
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I also preferred American cigarettes when I smoked. My favourite were Lucky Stikes. I gave up in 2012.
Best wishes, Pete.
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The photos seem to define people with poses that include just the right props.
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There were no props other than what was already in their houses, Geoff. And I can tell you from personal experience that those rooms are very typical of England in the 1970s, at least in working class homes. 🙂
Best wishes, Pete.
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I sometimes choose the wrong word. I found the photos very authentic precisely because the subjects were surrounded by something relevant. Thanks for posting them.
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Understood. Thanks, Geoff. 🙂
Best wishes, Pete.
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In the first photo, the little girl’s panda looks like it’s been in some kind of accident.
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‘Well-loved’, as they say in the antiques trade. 🙂
Best wishes, Pete.
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😀
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The lady with the black hair and shoes sits on a settee exactly the same as my parents had. We had large indoor plants too, but I had David Cassidy and T. Rex posters on my bedroom wall instead of Donny Osmond.
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Those sofas were certainly ubiquitous, Stevie. 🙂
Best wishes, Pete.
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I’ve got a photo of Sam and I sitting on my parents’ sofa in 1979; garish wallpaper too!
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A good assortment, Pete.
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Memories for me, GP. 🙂
Best wishes, Pete.
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All good, I hope.
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They were good days for me. Regular work in a good job, new car, first marriage.
It all went wrong for me in the mid-1980s, but I clawed it back eventually. 🙂
Best wishes, Pete.
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Nice one, Pete! Now, here’s a thing. In 1974, when I was 14/15, I had EXACTLY THE SAME SHOES as the woman in the third photo. They were my school shoes. Different tabs, though. I smoked Rothmans in the 70s.
Also, in my first rented place on leaving home (1979), I had a cheese plant in the corner like the fourth photo … as did most people I knew!!!!
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Glad to bring back the memories, Terry. I was 22 in 1974, and also smoked Rothmans at the time, later switching to Marlboro and Lucky Strike. By 1977 I was married, and my first wife cultivated huge houseplants all around our house. 🙂
Best wishes, Pete.
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70’s a decade I’d prefer to forget.. BTW – WP is playing silly beggars again. No Reblog/Twitter, and or Facebook buttons AGAIN!!!
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I can see those buttons on my page, Jack. And they are all working.
Best wishes, Pete.
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Jack… check to see if you might have accidentally been logged out of wordpress.com —
The Reblog button only shows to users who are logged in at WordPress.com. — so check to make sure that you are logged in…..If that is not the problem then look on the sidebar of your blog and find “Tools” and then “Marketing” and then “Sharing Buttons.” — When you find the sharing buttons, click on all the following choices: Front Page, Posts, Pages and Media. — That should take care of the problem. If that does not solve the problem with the reblogs, then use the following: https://wordpress.com/help and find the chat button or the email option to connect with a Happiness Engineer. Hope some of this is useful for you.
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Thanks, John. This comment had found its way into the Trash folder, for some reason.
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That is probably because it was intended to be useful and helpful to someone. I do hope that Jack find a solution.
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I did. I’d forgotten that I’d loaded an Adblock app. I removed it and hey presto WP is back to normal! This is the second time an Adblock app has done this. No more Adblock apps!!!
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Dear Jack, the Ad-Block aps are very useful and the secret to keeping them from interfering with your blog is to go into the “Options” feature of your ad-block extension and “White List” your blog or check “Pause On This Website”. In order to use “Pause On This Website,” you need to have your blog open whilst you are adjusting the preferences on your ad block program.
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I love that he chose people in their homes, makes the understanding so much clearer
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Also a lovely time-capsule about homes at the time.
Best wishes, Pete.
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Thank you Pete….fascinating .
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Hard to imagine that I was in my early 20s when these were taken, Janet. 🙂
Best wishes, Pete.
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Nice selection, Pete. Cheers, Jon.
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It took me back to my early 20s, Jon. 🙂
Best wishes, Pete.
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