Vernacular Snapshot
Amateur, candid photographs from the Kodak era onward — vernacular history, in shoeboxes.
Vintage Snapshot Family On Porch In Rocking Chairs 1930s
Vintage Snapshot Young Woman In Dress With Hat 1940s
Vintage Snapshot Snow Covered Trees In Winter 1930s
Vintage Snapshot Family In Living Room 1950s
Vintage Snapshot Young Man Standing By Canyon 1940s
Vintage Snapshot Rustic House With Stone Foundation 1930s
Vintage Snapshot Young Woman Smiling In Woods 1930s
Vintage Snapshot Group At Cocktail Party 1950s
Vintage Snapshot Industrial Structures 1930s
Vintage Snapshot Elderly Woman With Rake In Garden 1930s
Vintage Snapshot Group Of Three Adults On Porch 1930s
Vintage Snapshot Young Woman Holding Baby 1950s
Vintage Snapshot Of Man With Baby On Couch 1950s
Vintage Snapshot Group On Hotel Steps 1950s
Vintage Snapshot Tree General Sherman 1930s
Vintage Snapshot Group On Logs In Forest 1940s
Vintage Snapshot Family On Porch 1930s
Vintage Snapshot Group Of Girls Standing Outdoors 1930s
Vintage Snapshot Woman with Children Outdoors 1940s
Vintage Snapshot Log Cabin In Wooded Area 1930s
Vintage Snapshot Couple Sitting On Rocks 1940s
Vintage Snapshot Women By Seaside Rail 1950s
Vintage Snapshot Snowy Winter Scene By Lake 1940s
Vintage Snapshot Smiling Woman In Cap And Gown 1940s
Snapshots are amateur photographs — candid, casual, made by ordinary people with consumer cameras. The snapshot era opens with George Eastman's 1888 Kodak No. 1 (the first true consumer roll-film camera) and goes mass-market with the $1 Brownie in 1900. Sizes follow the film format and printing technology of the day, so dating a snapshot often comes down to its dimensions and paper.
HistoryOrigin & era
The first widespread amateur prints came from the 1888 Kodak No. 1 and exploded after the 1900 Brownie; the postcard-back era (1907–1930s) gave us the Real Photo Postcard (RPPC). Mid-century brought silver-gelatin prints with deckled (scalloped) edges; from the late 1950s the standard shifted to chromogenic color, finally settling on the 4 × 6 in print that still dominates today.
IdentificationHow to spot a Snapshot
- Silver-gelatin paper (most pre-1970 black-and-white) has a slight surface sheen.
- Deckled / scalloped edges are typical of c. 1940s–1960s prints.
- "AZO" or "VELOX" stamps on the back date the paper to specific decades.
- Postcard-back prints (POST CARD divided back) are 1907 onwards.
- Color prints with white borders are largely 1950s–1970s.
Snapshot sizes
Snapshot sizes track consumer film formats. Each entry below lists the print size and the era it dominates.
| Format | Inches | Millimeters | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| No. 1 / 2 Brownie contact print | 2¼ × 3¼ in | 57 × 83 mm | Early Kodak roll-film, c. 1900–1930s. |
| Real Photo Postcard (RPPC) | 3½ × 5½ in | 89 × 140 mm | Postcard-back era, 1907–1930s. |
| Postcard variant | 2½ × 4¼ in | 64 × 108 mm | Less common postcard-era trim. |
| 116 / 616 contact print | 2½ × 4¼ in | 64 × 108 mm | Folding-Kodak roll film, 1900s–1950s. |
| 620 contact print | 2¼ × 3¼ in | 57 × 83 mm | Box and folding cameras, 1930s–1950s. |
| Square (127 / 620 square) | 3½ × 3½ in | 89 × 89 mm | Mid-century box cameras, 1940s–1960s. |
| Standard small print | 3½ × 5 in | 89 × 127 mm | Silver-gelatin, c. 1940s–1970s. |
| Modern enlargement | 4 × 6 in | 102 × 152 mm | Color processing, 1970s onward (still standard). |
| Studio enlargement | 5 × 7 in | 127 × 178 mm | Common formal-portrait enlargement. |
| Large enlargement | 8 × 10 in | 203 × 254 mm | Studio portraits and event photos. |
Common questions
What counts as a vernacular snapshot?
A vernacular snapshot is an amateur photograph made by an ordinary person rather than a studio — candid, informal, often unposed. The format begins with Eastman's 1888 Kodak No. 1 (the first true amateur roll-film camera) and went mass-market with the $1 Brownie in 1900. The term covers everything from Real Photo Postcards to mid-century color prints.
What is a Real Photo Postcard (RPPC)?
A Real Photo Postcard is an actual silver-gelatin photograph printed on postcard-back paper, sized about 3½ × 5½ inches. Popular from 1907 into the 1930s, RPPCs are real photographic prints (not lithographs) and can often be dated within a few years by the stamp box on the back (AZO, VELOX, KRUXO, etc.).
How do I date a snapshot?
Border, edge, and paper give the strongest clues. Postcard-backs are 1907–1930s. Deckled (scalloped) white-bordered prints are roughly 1940s–1960s. Square prints (3½ × 3½ in) come from mid-century box cameras. Color prints with white borders are 1950s–1970s; borderless 4 × 6 in color prints are late 1970s onward.
Are old snapshots worth anything?
Most family snapshots have only sentimental value, but vernacular photography has a strong collector market. Snapshots with striking compositions, unusual subjects, early color (1940s–1950s Kodachrome), occupational scenes, or historical content (war, civil rights, Americana) can range from $5 to several hundred dollars individually, and large curated lots routinely fetch multiples of that.
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