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General George Custer Libbie Custer Civil War SV Stereoview Stereocard 3D 03129

Description: Image information: Brigadier General George Custer and Mrs. Libbie Custer About "... that terrible day", Mrs. Libbie CusterIt was the day that would change George Armstrong Custer's life in both positive and negative ways. It happened during October of 1861. Custer was visiting his life-long confidant and sister, Ann Reed, in Monroe, Michigan. Monroe treated young officers as heroes unless proven otherwise. Custer proved otherwise. One night, Custer and a male companion got drunk and caroused thorough town like common drunks, shaming himself & his family.His appalled sister marched Custer into her bedroom and gave him the abstinence lecture that changed his life. Custer ended up promising before God to never touch another drop of intoxicating beverage as long as he lived. From that day forth, Custer never again touched alcohol, not even wine at formal dinner parties.Unfortunately for Custer, his future father-in-law, Judge Daniel Bacon & his 19 year old daughter Libbie, witnessed his last drunken walk about town. Neither father or daughter considered Custer marriage material based on that incident alone. Further, unlike the Reed or Custer families, the Bacons were part of the aristocratic class of Monroe making the match unsuitable.However, Custer fell for Elizabeth at their first formal meeting and was persistent in wooing her. Although she rebuffed his first efforts, Custer was able to charm Libbie into falling in love with him. But not her father. Despite Custer's promotion to Brigadier General, the judge continued to oppose the relationship. It was not until Custer gained fame for personal bravery that the judge finally relented. On February 9, 1864, Custer and Elizabeth Clift Bacon finally married. After his death in 1876, Elizabeth fought to prevent him from becoming a scapegoat for the Battle of Little Big Horn. She wrote books and gave lecture tours that praised her husband. Elizabeth survived another 57 years before passing away four days before her 91st birthday in 1933.What others are saying: Bob Zeller: (Author of Lincoln in 3D, Blue & Gray and Black and White, Civil War In Depth I & II) From the dawn of the photograph until the advent of practical color photography, images were hand-painted to add the color that was missing in the early photographic processes. This lost art has been admirably revived by Civil War In 3d in their meticulous tinting of stereo views of the Civil War. Following in the time-honored tradition of the anonymous artists who added color to Gardner's legendary wartime photographs and the Anthony War for the Union stereo series, Civil War In 3D reminds us with their work that the Civil War was not fought in a black-and-white world. Stephen M. Cobaugh: "I just received my order of stereoviews in the mail. All I can say is WOW! As you know, I'm a Civil War reenactor, but also a professional photographer and graphic designer. The quality of your products is extraordinary and is superior to anything I've seen, especially the color enhancements. It's a interesting reminder of the fact that the war was in color for those who experienced it. It's only modern people who picture it in the sense of black and white or sepia tone." Stephen M. Cobaugh is a writer, director and documentary film producer. Currently he is working on the story of the Ninety Third Pennsylvania Regiment with his film: “Brothers Ever Shall We Be” Awards: Civilwarin3d.com was awarded September 2010 "Must See 3D" by 3-D Review Online Magazine "for their outstanding restoration work in bringing these cards to the collecting world.” “CivilWarIn3D.com provided 3-D Review with several sample cards. We were amazed at the quality. Using magnifying glasses, we expected to find halftone dots when we inspected the details of the stereoviews. The cards are truly photographic in quality and extremely sharp in detail.” We are sure that you will be equally impressed! Shipping: First cards ships for $5.95. Order additional cards and shipping is only $1 per card! Background of the collection: Civil War In 3D images' were obtained from the Library of Congress, National Archives and other quality sources. Each image has been carefully restored to remove 150 years of wear, scratches, cracks and imperfections. Then each image has spent numerous hours being hand colored to recreate, as close as possible, the original scene as it may have appeared on the day it was taken. Due to the quality of work and loving restoration that has been done, Civil War In 3D images have been accepted into the collections of photography and historical museums. Hand coloring of images is a technique that dates to the very beginning of photography. There are many examples of period stereo view cards that were colored. With modern digital technology, the ability to color a photograph allows the image to move from a black and white photo with splashes of color, to photographs that duplicate as near as possible, life-like full color images. Each image was created from a scan of the original negative producing a brilliant digital image up to 100Mb in size for each half (total of up to 200 Mb for both images) of the image. After restoration and coloring, the size of the combined images grew to a staggering 1Gb in size before being commercially printed. By using commercial printing and mounting, we have produced a quality image that will last and become a valued part of your collection. After printing, each image is professionally mounted onto standard 'Holmes' size stereo card measuring 3 1/2" x 7". Each card uses a matte board to produce a durable card nearly identical to the original cards. Other reproduction cards are printed on a slightly heavy paper on a home printer and do not have the image quality of professional photo paper, or the "feel" of a commercially mounted card. A one inch stack of these other cards would hold 97 images, while ours, with our superior mount, would only hold 16! We pride ourselves in trying to recreate the original card with the best modern technology. Restoration and coloring copyright 2009-2013 by Civil War In 3D. Printed card does not contain watermark (text on image). Please indicate your preference of Color, Sepia or Black and White when ordering. Unless a preference is given, the color image with a Matte Finish will be shipped.

Price: 29.95 USD

Location: Los Angeles, CA

End Time: 2024-10-26T03:59:28.000Z

Shipping Cost: 5.95 USD

Product Images

General George Custer Libbie Custer Civil War SV Stereoview Stereocard 3D 03129

Item Specifics

Restocking Fee: No

Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer

All returns accepted: Returns Accepted

Item must be returned within: 14 Days

Refund will be given as: Money Back

Original/Licensed Reproduction: Reprint

Listed By: Dealer or Reseller

Signed?: Unsigned

Time Period Manufactured: Pre-1950

Production Technique: Stereoview

Subject: Military & Political

Color: Color

Region of Origin: US

Framing: Unframed

Size Type/Largest Dimension: 3.5x7" - Holmes Card

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