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Showing posts with label cards & postcards. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cards & postcards. Show all posts

September 15, 2020

45 Amazing Visiting Cards Capture Portraits of American Men During the Civil War

The carte de visite, or visiting card, a photographic format about the size of a modern baseball card, dominated the American scene coincident with the Civil War.

American Men during the Civil War

Invented in France and imported to the United States via Great Britain about 1860, it immediately became all the rage in big cities and small towns across the country.

In 1863, Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes declared, “Card portraits, as everybody knows, have become the social currency, the ‘green-backs’ of civilization.”

Cartes began a gradual decline in popularity in 1866 after the introduction of the larger cabinet card format. The card photograph continued in production as late as 1920.

These amazing visiting cards from Ronald S. Coddington that show portraits of American men during the Civil War.

A good smoke and a loyal puppy

A hunter and his dog

A New York Tribune journalist after his escape from a confederate POW camp

A Survivor of the Revolution

A very, very old man





September 10, 2020

35 Amazing Postcards Document Maritime Life of France Around 1900

Maritime history is the broad overarching subject that includes fishing, whaling, international maritime law, naval history, the history of ships, ship design, shipbuilding, the history of navigation, the history of the various maritime-related sciences (oceanography, cartography, hydrography, etc.).

Maritime life of France around 1900

Maritime history also includes sea exploration, maritime economics and trade, shipping, yachting, seaside resorts, the history of lighthouses and aids to navigation, maritime themes in literature, maritime themes in art, the social history of sailors and passengers and sea-related communities.

Here below is a set of amazing postcards from Claude LACOURARIE that show maritime life of France around 1900.

Audience. Arrival of the tide

Audience. Arrival of the tide

Audierne. The seaweed harvest

Camaret-sur-Mer. Caulking boat fishing

Camaret-sur-Mer. Fishing boats at anchor





July 1, 2020

The 19th Century Drag King: 30 Amazing Real Photographic Postcards of Vesta Tilley Performing in Drag in the Early 1900s

As a child, Vesta Tilley toured the music halls in a solo singing and dancing act. Finding she expressed herself better as a boy, she adopted male attire and, with songs such as “Burlington Bertie,” became the most successful male impersonator in the business. During the war she gave performances to promote recruitment and raise funds for wounded soldiers. Her songs, including “Jolly Good Luck To The Girl Who Loves A Soldier” and “The Army Of Today’s All Right,” encouraged so many men to enlist that she was called “England's Greatest Recruiting Sergeant.”


Matilda Alice Powles (May 13, 1864 – September 16, 1952), was a popular English music hall performer. She adopted the stage name Vesta Tilley and became one of the most famous male impersonators of her era. Her career lasted from 1869 until 1920. Starting in provincial theaters with her father as manager, she performed her first season in London in 1874. She typically performed as a dandy or fop, also playing other roles. She found additional success as a principal boy in pantomime.

By the 1890s, Tilley was England’s highest earning woman. She was also a star in the vaudeville circuit in the United States, touring a total of six times. She married Walter de Frece, a theatre impresario who became her new manager and songwriter. At a Royal Command Performance in 1912, she scandalized Queen Mary because she was wearing trousers. During the First World War she was known as “England’s greatest recruiting sergeant” since she sang patriotic songs dressed in khaki fatigues like a soldier and promoted enlistment drives.

Becoming Lady de Frece in 1919, she decided to retire and made a year-long farewell tour from which all profits went to children’s hospitals. Her last ever performance was in 1920 at the Coliseum Theatre, London. She then supported her husband when he became a Member of Parliament and later retired with him to Monte Carlo. She died in 1952 on a visit to London and is buried at Putney Vale Cemetery. Her life story was commemorated in the 1957 film After the Ball.










June 29, 2020

43 Vintage Posters Promoting Americans During the Great Depression and WWII

A set of interesting photos from Britt Fuller that show vintage posters from the Works Progress Administration which was an agency of President Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal.

Vintage posters promoting Americans during the Great Depression and WWII

WPA artists designed and produced these posters to promote New Deal initiatives during the Great Depression and continued to produce posters during WWII to contribute to the war effort.

A WPA poster promoting New Deal Art programs, circa 1937

A Works Progress Administration Poster for statewide Library Project, 1937

Make It Safe: A safety poster created by the Works Progress Administration, circa 1938

Poster for Federal Music Project announcing free instruction in music, 1938

Poster for Federal Theatre Project presentation of “Myra Kinch and Group” in a concert of modern dance at the Hollywood Playhouse, showing a dancer flinging her skirt wide, 1938





May 23, 2020

20 Vintage Posters of Rock ’N Roll and R&B Concerts in the 1950s and ’60s

Rock and roll (often written as rock ’n roll) is a genre of popular music that originated and evolved in the United States during the late 1940s and early 1950s from musical styles such as gospel, jump blues, jazz, boogie woogie, rhythm and blues, and country music.

Rock ’n roll and R&R concert posters in the 1950s and 1960s

While elements of what was to become rock and roll can be heard in blues records from the 1920s and in country records of the 1930s, the genre did not acquire its name until 1954.

The term “rhythm and blues” (abbreviated as R&B) has undergone a number of shifts in meaning. In the early 1950s, it was frequently applied to blues records. Starting in the mid-1950s, after this style of music contributed to the development of rock and roll, the term "R&B" became used to refer to music styles that developed from and incorporated electric blues, as well as gospel and soul music.

In the 1960s, several British rock bands such as the Rolling Stones, the Who and the Animals were referred to and promoted as being R&B bands; posters for the Who’s residency at the Marquee Club in 1964 contained the slogan, “Maximum R&B”. Their mix of rock and roll and R&B is now known as “British rhythm and blues”.

Here below is an amazing set of vintage posters that shows rock ’n roll and R&B concerts in the 1950s and 1960s.

American Legion Hall (Chattanooga, Tennessee), July 4, 1951

Memorial Auditorium (Chattanooga, Tennessee), September 27, 1955

Memorial Auditorium (Chattanooga, Tennessee), August 8, 1957

Memorial Auditorium (Chattanooga, Tennessee), March 18, 1957

Municipal Auditorium (Kansas City, Missouri), November 10, 1957





April 9, 2020

1940s Postcards Show Mount Rushmore Memorial Before and After

Mount Rushmore, Black Hills, South Dakota, before and after completion of the Memorial. The Monument was started in July 1927, by Gutzon Borglum, who died in March of 1941. Work was completed by his son, Lincoln Borglum.









April 8, 2020

A Collection of 40 Hilarious Kitsch People Postcards

Kitsch family pictures, colorful couples from between the 1960s and 1980s. Folklore postcard poses of people just a bit too glamorous to be true.

The first picture postcards were published about 120-130 years ago. Soon the first art postcard were issued. Since the transition from art fo “kitsch” is flowing soon the first postcards with kitsch motives appeared.


According to BBC, in the attacks on the old ways of doing things one word in particular came into currency. That word was “kitsch”. Once introduced, the word stuck. Whatever you do, it mustn’t be kitsch. This became the first precept of the modernist artist in every medium. In a famous essay published in 1939, the American critic Clement Greenberg told his readers that there are only two possibilities available to the artist now. Either you belong to the avant-garde, challenging the old ways of figurative painting, or you produce kitsch. And the fear of kitsch is one reason for the compulsory offensiveness of so much art produced today. It doesn't matter that your work is obscene, shocking, disturbing - as long as it isn't kitsch.

Nobody quite knows where the word “kitsch” came from, though it was current in Germany and Austria at the end of the 19th Century. Nobody knows quite how to define the word either. But we all recognize kitsch when we come across it. The Barbie doll, Walt Disney's Bambi, Santa Claus in the supermarket, Bing Crosby singing White Christmas, pictures of poodles with ribbons in their hair. At Christmas we are surrounded by kitsch - worn out cliches, which have lost their innocence without achieving wisdom. Children who believe in Santa Claus invest real emotions in a fiction. We who have ceased to believe have only fake emotions to offer. But the faking is pleasant. It feels good to pretend, and when we all join in, it is almost as though we were not pretending at all.










March 19, 2020

25 Fascinating Postcards Show the Castaways at Miami Beach, Florida in the 1960s

A set of fascinating postcards that shows the Castaways, the America's most funderful resort motel on Ocean at 163rd St., Miami Beach, Florida in the 1960s.

‘Unique’ Shinto Temple Dining Room at the Castaways, Miami Beach, Florida

10 Acres of Oceanfront Relaxation on the Ocean at 163rd St., Miami Beach, Florida

10 Acres of Oceanfront Relaxation on the Ocean at 163rd St., Miami Beach, Florida

At the Cocktail Lounge of the Castaways, Miami Beach, Florida

Castaways Motel, located in the Collins Ave. motel row, on the Atlantic Ocean at Miami Beach, Florida





March 1, 2020

45 Classic Postcards Show Inside Cocktail Lounges of the U.S in the 1950s and ’60s

A set of classic postcards from old night clubs and cocktail lounges of the United States in the 1950s and 1960s.

Missouri. Holiday Inn Red Slipper Cocktail Lounge, Springfield

California. Fairmont Hotel, San Francisco

California. Fairmont Hotel, San Francisco

California. Fairmont Hotel, San Francisco

California. Hotel Mark Hopkins, San Francisco







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