Bill Binzen: Blog https://billbinzen1527.zenfolio.com/blog en-us (C) Bill Binzen Photography (Bill Binzen) Sun, 09 Jan 2022 16:01:00 GMT Sun, 09 Jan 2022 16:01:00 GMT https://billbinzen1527.zenfolio.com/img/s/v-12/u112787735-o417145840-50.jpg Bill Binzen: Blog https://billbinzen1527.zenfolio.com/blog 120 76 Carmen, a book by Bill Binzen https://billbinzen1527.zenfolio.com/blog/2022/1/carmen-book Carmen, recently arrived in New York City from Puerto Rico, makes an unexpected friend. Published in 1969. A reading of the children's book by Bill Binzen illustrated with black-and-white photos.
 

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(Bill Binzen) https://billbinzen1527.zenfolio.com/blog/2022/1/carmen-book Sun, 09 Jan 2022 15:56:41 GMT
Postcards and notecards for sale on Etsy https://billbinzen1527.zenfolio.com/blog/2021/5/bill-binzen-notecards-for-sale-on-etsy Visit etsy.com/shop/BillBinzenEditions to buy posters and notecards originally sold in the 1990s/early 2000s and now available again!  

Listings include:

"The Yellow Canoe" on a lake, photo taken in Northwest Connecticut, 1970s, in a fine poster produced in the 1990s. Poster is 28.75" tall by 22" wide; actual image is 14 x 19".

"The Berkshires", striking blue lake photo taken in the Berkshires, New England, 1970s, in a fine poster produced by Bill Binzen in the 1990s. Poster is 28" tall by 22" wide; actual image is 20" x 14". 

"The Four Trees", four-season photos taken in the Oblong Valley, New York, c. 1971, in a set of four prints (four-color process; not photo prints) produced in the late 1970s. While four-season nature images have since become a common photographic trope, this set made quite an impression when it was introduced. Print is 11" tall by 14" wide; actual image is 9 3/4" x 12". Signature printed on bottom right of each.

"Over the Hills and Far Away", children and large teddy bear photo taken in rural England, 1960s, in a fine poster produced in the 1990s. Poster is 19.5" tall by 25.25" wide; actual image is 13.5" x 20.25". 

Note cards: vintage photos (1960s-80s) packaged in tasteful note cards for any occasion, 6.5" x 4.25". Set of 10 note cards with envelopes - one or more of each picture/card. Or bulk order, 100 cards (no envelopes).

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(Bill Binzen) https://billbinzen1527.zenfolio.com/blog/2021/5/bill-binzen-notecards-for-sale-on-etsy Sun, 02 May 2021 02:32:29 GMT
The Adman: creating ad layouts in the 1950s https://billbinzen1527.zenfolio.com/blog/2021/4/the-adman-creating-ad-layouts-in-the-1950s Schweppes with the jockiesSchweppes with the jockies Back by popular demand, see this revived and doubly-vintage 1990s project, in its original HTML 1.0 glory: "Advertising in the 1950s: A personal history of an advertising career as told by Bill Binzen". Before there was Madmen, there was this - Bill Binzen's Madison Avenue insider tale of creating ad campaigns and layouts at Ogilvy & Mather, where he served as art director for David Ogilvy until the early 1960s, before he emerged into his freelance photography career. 

- Nate Binzen

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(Bill Binzen) https://billbinzen1527.zenfolio.com/blog/2021/4/the-adman-creating-ad-layouts-in-the-1950s Sun, 04 Apr 2021 19:17:24 GMT
Punch and Jonathan, a short film by Bill Binzen https://billbinzen1527.zenfolio.com/blog/2021/1/punch-and-jonathan-film Follow the adventures of young Jonathan as he rescues the puppet Punch, star of the seaside Punch and Judy show. Punch and Jonathan, a short film from 1966 by Bill Binzen was filmed in charmingly scenic Swanage, Dorset, England.
 

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(Bill Binzen) short film https://billbinzen1527.zenfolio.com/blog/2021/1/punch-and-jonathan-film Thu, 28 Jan 2021 02:57:23 GMT
A reading of Little Will the Bugle Boy by Bill Binzen https://billbinzen1527.zenfolio.com/blog/2020/11/little-will-the-bugle-boy Little Will the Bugle Boy was the first of 15 books published by Bill Binzen, in 1963, and his only published books featuring illustrations (all the rest used photographs). The Binzen family is making it available in celebration of the author, who died in 2010 at the age of 92. Digitized creative content tends to earn little for its creators. We are considering having this wonderful, rare and out-of-print book republished. Play it full screen and enjoy this reading!
 

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(Bill Binzen) children's book https://billbinzen1527.zenfolio.com/blog/2020/11/little-will-the-bugle-boy Fri, 27 Nov 2020 00:42:06 GMT
Can you identify this Manhattan skyscraper? https://billbinzen1527.zenfolio.com/blog/2020/3/can-you-identify-this-manhattan-skyscraper Scenes from the Corporate Life - Harper's, March 1980Scenes from the Corporate Life - Harper's, March 1980Scenes from the Corporate Life - Harper's, March 1980 This photo montage, or "double" as Bill called them - literally two slides sandwiched together - includes a view looking up at a Manhattan skyscraper, taken in the early 1970s. The montage itself was used in various contexts in the 1970s, like this Harper's cover from March, 1980. I've been wondering, can anyone identify the building? Please let me know via the comment form below!  -- Nate Binzen

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(Bill Binzen) https://billbinzen1527.zenfolio.com/blog/2020/3/can-you-identify-this-manhattan-skyscraper Sun, 29 Mar 2020 00:40:49 GMT
Books by Bill Binzen https://billbinzen1527.zenfolio.com/blog/2020/3/books-by-bill-binzen

Tenth StreetTenth Street

DoubletakeDoubletake

Little Will the Bugle BoyLittle Will the Bugle Boy

Miguel's MountainMiguel's Mountain

CarmenCarmen

Bill Binzen published 15 books between 1963 and 1989. Most were children's books; all of them featured his photographs, except Little Will the Bugle Boy, which he illustrated. Look at any collection of children's books and you'll realize that such extensive photo-illustration is quite unusual in the genre.  


Photography books
  • Tenth Street, 1968
  • Doubletake, 1972
  • The Berkshires, 1989 
 
Children's books
  • Little Will the Bugle Boy, 1963
  • Miguel's Mountain, 1968
  • Carmen, 1969
  • Punch and Jonathan, 1969
  • Alfred the Little Bear, 1970
  • All On a Summer's Day, by William Wise and Bill Binzen, 1971
  • Rooftop Hogi, 1972 
  • First Day in School, 1972
  • The Rory Story, 1974
  • Alfred Goes House Hunting, 1974
  • Alfred Goes Flying, 1976
  • Year After Year, 1976

Punch and Jonathan   Alfred the Little BearAlfred the Little Bear

All on a Summer's DayAll on a Summer's Day First Day in SchoolFirst Day in School

Alfred Goes House HuntingAlfred Goes House Hunting   Alfred Goes FlyingAlfred Goes Flying

 

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(Bill Binzen) https://billbinzen1527.zenfolio.com/blog/2020/3/books-by-bill-binzen Sat, 28 Mar 2020 04:18:28 GMT
Rough transcript on Instagram: Previously unseen New York photos by Bill Binzen from the mid-1960s https://billbinzen1527.zenfolio.com/blog/2020/3/rough-transcript-previously-unseen-new-york-photos-by-bill-binzen-from-the-mid-1960s Rough transcript: New York 1960s montageRough transcript: New York 1960s montage

See more at instagram.com/billbinzen … In 1968, Grossman Publishers published a book of Bill Binzen’s photographs called Tenth Street, documenting life on one street in lower Manhattan in the 1960s. Bill left many other photographs from that time. Recently, I have been scanning the contact sheets. While properly handled digital renderings from the negatives will emerge in time, I and others in Bill’s family have chosen to share on Instagram some of these pictures from the past now, in admittedly rough form straight from the contact sheets. The project is just getting started (March 18, 2020), so look for more to come. If you are a New Yorker who can identify and describe the precise location of a shot, a person shown, or a relevant memory, we would love to hear you share.

- Nate Binzen (son of Bill)

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(Bill Binzen) https://billbinzen1527.zenfolio.com/blog/2020/3/rough-transcript-previously-unseen-new-york-photos-by-bill-binzen-from-the-mid-1960s Wed, 18 Mar 2020 14:29:15 GMT
More about Bill Binzen https://billbinzen1527.zenfolio.com/blog/2018/7/more-about-bill-binzen Bill BinzenBill BinzenBill Binzen Bill Binzen (1918-2010) was a professional photographer active mainly from the 1950s to the 1990s, and author of more than a dozen children's books.

Bill Binzen was a “man of parts” (as he might have put it) whose varied and interesting life experiences – from prep school student to cowboy, from pilot to children’s book author – combined with a whimsical approach to life and friendly manner made him entertaining company.  More than anything else, though, he was an artist – photographer, sketcher, painter, sculptor – whose creative and discerning eye made art out of found objects, twigs in snow, “sandwiching” photographs (long before Photoshop was invented), or the perfectly balanced framing of a scene in nature.  “I find it very hard to describe what I’m looking for when I look through my camera lens,” he said, “but I do know that it has everything to do with balanced composition and subtle mood.  When those are right, the picture makes itself.”

F. William Binzen was born on September 21, 1918 in Montclair, New Jersey, to Frederick William and Lucy Husted Binzen.  Bill was the eldest of three sons who were all the greatest of friends.  They were lucky to grow up almost untouched by the Great Depression, as their father was a lifelong J.C. Penney executive.  Their childhoods were full of sports and games with their neighborhood pals, and equally happy summers spent often in the Lakeville, Connecticut area.

Bill, however, did not follow his father into business.  In fact, it took a while before he found his true calling of photographer in his forties.  Although he was a lifelong curious learner and great reader, academics were not his strong suit; after graduating from The Choate School (where he held the record for the high jump, in part thanks to his tall lanky frame, and was co-captain of the track team), he attended the University of Virginia for one year before deciding it was not for him.  Instead, he studied art at the University of Arizona for a while.

Bill was working as a tour guide at Radio City Music Hall in New York City (happily returning the greetings of the ever gracious performer Dinah Shore) when, on break one day in the teletype room, the news came over the wires that Pearl Harbor had been bombed.  Bill’s initial attempts to enlist were thwarted by his always slender build; he didn’t weigh enough to qualify for the army.  To put on some pounds, he headed west to Jackson Hole, Wyoming where he worked as a cowhand at the Triangle X Ranch for nine months.  Long days riding the range in a Western saddle were followed by ample meals, and he put on enough weight to qualify for the Army Air Corps, where he trained to be a B17 bomber pilot.

B-17 pilotsB-17 pilotsB-17 aviators Al Brown and Bill Binzen A pilot in the 15th Air Force, he was stationed in Italy and flew 26 bombing missions over Germany and Italy.  Among his great flight crew was radioman Norman Lear, who became a lifelong friend.  When the war was over, he traveled north in Italy to meet up with his brother Peter, who had been fighting in the Alps as part of the 10th Mountain Division.

Back in New York after the war, Bill studied at the Arts Students League, a formative experience he always remembered fondly.  He became a lifelong member of the League, and carried its card in his wallet until the day he died.  He soon embarked on two careers at which he excelled: father, when his son William was born, and Art Director, when he started working in advertising.  For most of the 1950s, he worked at Ogilvy Benson & Mather for the legendary David Ogilvy, and handled such accounts as Schweppes, Hathaway, and the government of Puerto Rico.  He enjoyed the creative aspects of the job and the camaraderie (including getting to know advertising copywriter Gaile Longden, whom he married in 1959), but the job began to hold less fascination for him, and his artistic pursuits more, so in 1959 he and his new wife went to live in Florence, Italy for a sabbatical year.  “It was a wonderful experience,” he said of that year, “and I did a great deal of drawing and photography during that second sojourn in Italy.”

He returned to Ogilvy for two years, and then in 1962 began his true career as a freelance photographer.  Over the years, he worked for a variety of magazines – Life, McCall’s, Esquire, Psychology Today (where he often employed his technique of “sandwiching” two transparencies to get an interesting effect), Time, Holiday, Fortune, the New York Times Magazine, and Parents – for the latter often pressing his growing family – daughter Susanna and sons Timothy and Nathaniel – into action modeling for assignments.  Even more often, however, the children (and family pets) were unknowing subjects of informal photos, caught playing or reading or in other unstaged pursuits. (These were sometimes also turned into books, such as The Rory Story.)

The family lived during the 1960s on 10th Street in New York’s East Village.  The neighborhood abounded with interesting material for photos; as Bill wrote, “There was never a dull moment in those ‘Flower Power’ days!”  Some of this material was turned into two books for children and one (Tenth Street) for adults.

In 1970 Bill and his family moved to Salisbury, Connecticut.  Bill traveled frequently to New York for assignments, but this was more than balanced by the pleasure of living in the beautiful Berkshires, which became both subject of and backdrop to many wonderful photographs and books.  Altogether, he wrote and illustrated with his photographs eleven children’s books and three books for adults.  (His first book, however – Little Will the Bugle Boy – was illustrated with his drawings and came out of the Florence experience.)  Creating books gave him more satisfaction than anything else, and even when he was no longer publishing books, he made “mock ups” of his new ideas and many small one-off books written and illustrated specifically for his fortunate grandchildren.  Of all his children’s books, the most beloved may well be Alfred the Little Bear and its two sequels; he often received letters from both adults and children who loved Alfred.

Bill never retired from photography; even when he was no longer doing assignments, he worked with his vast catalogue of photos on new projects, and even managed a (limited) mastery of the computer and digital camera, and was working on assembling a collection of his best works when he died.

Bill was inspired continually by the people and landscapes of his beloved Northwest Corner.  He served on the Democratic Town Committee, the Salisbury Association Historical Society (where he was very involved in putting together the World War II exhibit several years ago), and the Board of Christian Action of the Salisbury Congregational Church.  He was also a member of the American Society of Magazine Photographers and the Society of Illustrators in New York.

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(Bill Binzen) https://billbinzen1527.zenfolio.com/blog/2018/7/more-about-bill-binzen Wed, 25 Jul 2018 03:49:05 GMT