Harold Lloyd was a comic genius of the silent screen and an innovative filmmaker. Lloyd’s character was the “boy next door” in horn-rimmed glasses with undaunted optimism. Among Lloyd’s film masterpieces are The Freshman (1925), The Kid Brother (1927), and Speedy (1928). Even those who have never seen a Harold Lloyd film can recognize him from Safety Last! (1923), hanging from the hands of a clock, on the side of a skyscraper high above a busy city street. The image remains one of the most iconic in American film.

After Harold retired from filmmaking, he became obsessed with 3-d photography. For over 20 years he traveled all over the world, taking close to 300,000 slides! 

Throughout the 1950s, Harold snapped close to a hundred thousand photographs of young women, most of them nude. The girls came to his studio, or traveled with him to various locations around the country -- hundreds and hundreds of gorgeous models, whose curvaceous figures made them perfect subjects for 3-D photography. 

The Harold Lloyd Collection represents the finest photos taken from the vaults of the Harold Lloyd Trust. Click here to learn more and purchase images!

 


©2008 The Harold Lloyd Trust & Harold Lloyd Entertainment, Inc.
Harold Lloyd™ is a trademark and service mark of The Harold Lloyd Trust.