Hand Tinted Black

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1869 Hand-tinted engraving of a Black Woodpecker


1869 Hand-tinted engraving of a Black Woodpecker


$4.68


Black Hawk Chief Sauk Tribe- Hand-Tinted Print


Black Hawk Chief Sauk Tribe- Hand-Tinted Print


$19.99

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Put Your Hands Up


Put Your Hands Up


$12.99



KLEIN TOOLS Protective Eyewear, Black Frame w/ Tinted Lens Part No. 60055


KLEIN TOOLS Protective Eyewear, Black Frame w/ Tinted Lens Part No. 60055


$12.99


Wrap-around polycarbonate lens for clear peripheral vision and protection Frame and lens ventilation channel reduces lens moisture build-up and fogging Soft- flexible nosepiece provides snug non-slip fit Soft- comfortable brow-guard for impact energy absorption Lens available in brown tint Brown tinted lens for outdoor use- meets traffic signal color recognition of ANSI Z80 3-2001 Item #60055…

Elite High Fashion Sunglasses Adorned with Swarovski Crystals and Hand-Polished Frames for Modern, Youthful Women.


Elite High Fashion Sunglasses Adorned with Swarovski Crystals and Hand-Polished Frames for Modern, Youthful Women.


$34.99


Elite designer sunglasses are the same style worn by high-fashion movie stars! The cut-out styling of the frames and unique contours of the lenses are perfect for playful gals who ever had dreams of making it big. But, the real kicker is the temple embellishment encrusted with genuine Swarovski Crystals that twinkle in the sun. Treat yourself to a little glamour and try our Elites!…

Black Faced Ram - Paper Poster (18.75 x 28.5)


Black Faced Ram – Paper Poster (18.75 x 28.5)



Engravings of horned mammals in natural settings, hand tinted. by Stewart, John -1836…

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36-inch Bamboo Tall Floor Vase


36-inch Bamboo Tall Floor Vase


$116.99


Bamboo floor vase with floral arrangement brings exotic elegance to any roomVase is hand-sanded to a smooth surface, then coated in red-mahogany tinted oil stainNatural bamboo vase handcrafted by artisans in Southeast Asia

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Haunting Memories: Echoes and Images of Tennessee's Past: Hand-Tinted Photographs


Haunting Memories: Echoes and Images of Tennessee’s Past: Hand-Tinted Photographs


$22.97


Haunting Memories: Echoes and Images of Tennessee’s Past: Hand-Tinted Photographs

The Black Hand


The Black Hand


$65


The Black Hand

The Tinted Venus


The Tinted Venus


$22.97


The Tinted Venus

Tinted Windows


Tinted Windows


$24.48


Tinted Windows

Minuteman FG-18 Gas Fender - Flame - Tinted-Poly


Minuteman FG-18 Gas Fender – Flame – Tinted-Poly


$101.25


Experience the art of being unique with this elegant Wrought Iron Fireplace Fender. It is genuinely decorated and hand forged from wrought iron and has a tinted polyurethane finish for lasting beauty. The flame inspired design of this gas log fender is made to fit 18 gas logs and measures 27 wide x 10 high.

The White Hand and the Black


The White Hand and the Black


$20.77


The White Hand and the Black

The Tinted Venus (Illustrated Edition) (Dodo Press)


The Tinted Venus (Illustrated Edition) (Dodo Press)


$18.99


Thomas Anstey Guthrie (1856-1934), was an English novelist and journalist, who wrote his comic novels under the pseudonym F. Anstey. He was educated at King’’s College London and at Trinity Hall, Cambridge, and was called to the bar in 1880. But the popular success of his story Vice Versa (1882) with its topsy-turvy substitution of a father for his schoolboy son, at once made his reputation as a humorist of an original type. He published in 1883 a serious novel, The Giant’’s Robe; but, in spite of its excellence, he discovered that it was not as a serious novelist but as a humorist that the public insisted on regarding him. As such his reputation was further confirmed by The Black Poodle (1884), The Tinted Venus (1885), and A Fallen Idol (1886). Many of Anstey’’s stories have been adapted into theatrical productions and motion pictures. The Tinted Venus (1885) was adapted by S. J. Perelman, Ogden Nash, and Kurt Weill into One Touch of Venus in 1943.

The Black Hand (Hardcover)


The Black Hand (Hardcover)


$81.97


This book examines the history of Black Hand crime in Chicago primarily from 1905 to 1920 and challenges the belief that the Black Hand was an extension of the Sicilian Mafia. A crude method of extorting money from primarily wealthy Italians, the Black Hand involved sending victims a letter stating that they would come to harm if the blackmailers` demands were not met; the threatening letter often included a drawing of a black hand or other frightening symbols. While many criminologists and scholars believe that Black Hand crime originated in Italy, that only Southern Italians and Sicilians committed Black Hand crime, and that only Southern Italians and Sicilians were Black Hand victims, Robert M. Lombardo argues that Black Hand crime actually evolved as the result of social conditions within American society such as the isolation of the Italian community, political corruption, and an ineffective criminal justice system. He shows that this association of the Black Hand and the Sicilian Mafia is a media construction, resulting from a narrative created by the news media despite the fact that many non-Italians also committed Black Hand crimes. Looking at the Black Hand from a sociological perspective, the book discusses the "news-making criminology" that tied Black Hand crime to the Sicilian Mafia and Neapolitan Camorra and the evolution of traditional organized crime in Chicago and elsewhere. 

The Black Hand (Paperback)


The Black Hand (Paperback)


$31.53


This book examines the history of Black Hand crime in Chicago primarily from 1905 to 1920 and challenges the belief that the Black Hand was an extension of the Sicilian Mafia. A crude method of extorting money from primarily wealthy Italians, the Black Hand involved sending victims a letter stating that they would come to harm if the blackmailers` demands were not met; the threatening letter often included a drawing of a black hand or other frightening symbols. While many criminologists and scholars believe that Black Hand crime originated in Italy, that only Southern Italians and Sicilians committed Black Hand crime, and that only Southern Italians and Sicilians were Black Hand victims, Robert M. Lombardo argues that Black Hand crime actually evolved as the result of social conditions within American society such as the isolation of the Italian community, political corruption, and an ineffective criminal justice system. He shows that this association of the Black Hand and the Sicilian Mafia is a media construction, resulting from a narrative created by the news media despite the fact that many non-Italians also committed Black Hand crimes. Looking at the Black Hand from a sociological perspective, the book discusses the "news-making criminology" that tied Black Hand crime to the Sicilian Mafia and Neapolitan Camorra and the evolution of traditional organized crime in Chicago and elsewhere. 
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