EditorialKelly Rowland enjoys her favorite meal at Houston soul food restaurant beloved by Destiny?s Child for Pepsi?s ?Local Eats with Pepsi? campaign
EditorialCup on legs with the inscription: Somtijdsop / Somtijds licorice, Cylinder-shaped cup with inserted soul, standing on three flattened full-shaped legs. The bottom edge is trimmed with a thread. Calligraphy inscription on the body: Somtijdsop / Somtijds...
EditorialIllustrated cover of a cookery book. Delicious dishes: a reference book for all households. [London] : Published by Armour & Company, Chcago. London, [1901]. Source: YD.2004.a.2554 back cover.
EditorialA view of boats and ships sailing on a lake or river, with two men and a bird standing before a group of buildings including courtyard buildings and a pagoda set among rock formations on a walled promontory in the foreground. A rocky landscape in the d...
EditorialFire screen (?cran), Georges Jacob (French, 1739?1814), Fabric panel in the style of Philippe de Lasalle (French, 1723?1804), ca. 1786, French, Paris, Carved, gilded and silvered beech; 18th-century silk brocade (not original to frame), H. 42 x W. 26-3...
EditorialBookish woman in a library talking to an author. She says, Your last novel is delicious with an indescribable charm. She thinks, Although I only read a few pages. Handcoloured lithograph by the Gihaut brothers after an illustration by Swiss artist Jean...
EditorialOtis Himalayanus (young male) or Delicious Bustard, Otis deliciosa. Birds from the Himalaya Mountains, engraving 1831 by Elizabeth Gould and John Gould. John Gould was working as a taxidermist,he was known as the 'bird-stuffer', by the Zoological Socie...
EditorialOtis Himalayanus (female) or Delicious Bustard, Otis deliciosa. Birds from the Himalaya Mountains, engraving 1831 by Elizabeth Gould and John Gould. John Gould was working as a taxidermist,he was known as the 'bird-stuffer', by the Zoological Society. ...
EditorialOtis Himalayanus or Delicious Bustard, Otis deliciosa. Birds from the Himalaya Mountains, engraving 1831 by Elizabeth Gould and John Gould. John Gould was working as a taxidermist,he was known as the 'bird-stuffer', by the Zoological Society. Gould's f...