Wellcome uses cookies.

Read our policy
Skip to main content
366 results
  • A naked man catches a rugby ball, drops it, then kicks it with his right foot. Collotype after Eadweard Muybridge, 1887.
  • A naked man carries a wooden beam on his right shoulder then drops it onto the ground. Collotype after Eadweard Muybridge, 1887.
  • New : the most potent orally active tissue builder Dianabol for debilitated and wasting patients whether young or old : when a sulphonamide is needed for children...how much is one teaspoonful? : 'Madribon' Drops.
  • New : the most potent orally active tissue builder Dianabol for debilitated and wasting patients whether young or old : when a sulphonamide is needed for children...how much is one teaspoonful? : 'Madribon' Drops.
  • A naked man catches a rugby ball, drops it, then kicks it with his right foot and walks away. Collotype after Eadweard Muybridge, 1887.
  • The angel of death (a winged skeletal creature) drops some deadly substances into a river near a town; representing typhoid. Watercolour, 1912, after R. Cooper.
  • A young woman tending to a cut on her finger from which drops of blood fall. Line engraving by F. Basan, 17--, after N. Berchem (?).
  • Coal and coke works at Le Creusot, Saône-et-Loire: a railway siding with coal drops, railway trucks carrying coal, and colliery buildings. Wood engraving by H. Linton after J. Férat.
  • The King : in consideration of the rare and uncommon cures performed by Dr. Bateman's Pectoral Drops, on many thousands of his loving subjects who have been grievously afflicted with the rheumatism, stone and gravel, cholick, agues and fevers, coughs, colds, pains in the limbs, &c.
  • A naked woman holds a hat in front of her at arms length with both hands, drops it, kicks it then turns to look down at it. Collotype after Eadweard Muybridge, 1887.
  • A Parisian seamstress suffering from anaemia is pale and weary at her sewing machine and drops her scissors; advertising the medicine Fer Bravais for anaemia. Colour lithograph by A.-L. Willette, 1896.
  • To all such as are used (or hereafter may have occasion) to take Dr. Bateman's Pectoral Drops ... : for curing, and immediately giving relief in all fevers, agues, rheumatism, gout, stone, gravel, asthmas, colds, coughs, and pains in the breast, limbs, and joints ... / B. Okell, W. and Cluer Dicey.
  • Crystals of a DNA repair protein from Serratia marscescens bound to DNA. The crystals are grown in very small drops (approximatetly 1 microlitre) from very pure preparations so their structure can be determined by X-ray crystallography.
  • Crystals of a DNA repair protein from Serratia marscescens bound to DNA. The crystals are grown in very small drops (approximatetly 1 microlitre) from very pure preparations so their structure can be determined by X-ray crystallography.
  • A clothed woman holds a tennis racquet in her right hand and a ball in her left. As she drops the ball, she swings the racket back then forwards to hit the ball as it bounces. Collotype after Eadweard Muybridge, 1887.
  • Leprosy: wrist drop
  • Cosmos atrosanguineus 'Chocolate Drop'
  • Punch, 'A drop of London water'
  • Chloroform Drop Bottles. Manufacturer's catalogue, p. 330.
  • Japanese pumpkin (Cucurbita moschata): tear-drop shaped fruit. Watercolour.
  • Drop-in afternoon for women affected by HIV & AIDS.
  • Drop-in afternoon for women affected by HIV & AIDS.
  • A man pouring the last drop from his wine glass. Mezzotint, c. 1786.
  • A woman dropping her porcelain tea-cup in horror upon discovering the monstrous contents of a magnified drop of Thames water; revealing the impurity of London drinking water. Coloured etching by W. Heath, 1828.
  • A woman dropping her porcelain tea-cup in horror upon discovering the monstrous contents of a magnified drop of Thames water; revealing the impurity of London drinking water. Coloured etching by W. Heath, 1828.
  • A woman dropping her porcelain tea-cup in horror upon discovering the monstrous contents of a magnified drop of Thames water; revealing the impurity of London drinking water. Coloured etching by W. Heath, 1828.
  • A horrified old woman observing the monstrous contents of a drop of water through a microscope. Coloured transparency lithograph.
  • A horrified old woman observing the monstrous contents of a drop of water through a microscope. Coloured transparency lithograph.
  • A horrified old woman observing the monstrous contents of a drop of water through a microscope. Coloured transparency lithograph.
  • A woman lets her see-through dress drop to the ground and steps out of it, naked. Collotype after Eadweard Muybridge, 1887.