50p
It really depends on the purpose and the occasion. For a regular photo, there would be no need to buy a photograph envelope, but if it is a delicate photo and/or you want to send it to someone, it would be worth it to but a photograph envelop.
Janet stepped into the round room with the high dome ceiling, and heard the guide describe it as a rotunda.
Rotunda would come before rough in the dictionary as it begins with the letter "r" which comes before "u" alphabetically.
Depending on the picture, it could be worth anywhere from $20 to $1500.
i have an original and a trophy. edward was my grandfather. I have a 1929 newspaper photograph of the stanczak brothers..would you like to have a copy of your grandfather..let me know..
The photograph would remind us all about the prom.
On Bruno's grandmother's casket, there is a swastika painted, which she would not have liked because it symbolizes the Nazi regime and the persecution of Jews.
That would be a undertaker...... and not the wrestler
These chairs are common but are collected. If it is a single dining chair, then it would not be worth very much. A set of 6 or 8 dining chairs would be worth more. If it is an single easy chair with a more complex frame, then it might be worth more money but it would be impossible to value it without seeing a photograph.
You answered your own question, if the casket is closed- there is no viewing, so no need to cosmeticize the remains, apart from health considerations- he or she would be embalmed, and one hopes, dressed. as the legal phrase goes- this case is closed. a photograph of the deceased- say good portrait head-shot ( no pun intended) should be prominently displayed to show what the deceased looked like in life!
A fly could have secretly entered the body through the nose or some other body orifice before the casket was sealed.
You can paint on a photograph. Normal acrylic would work.