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

February 3, 2021

A Collection of 30 Unintentionally Hilarious Vintage Valentine’s Day Cards From the Early 20th Century

Just in time to send to your Valentine sweetheart, here’s a gallery of 30 offbeat, odd, perplexing, inappropriate, outlandish, bizarre, sexist, eccentric and far-out funny cards for YOU (with love)!

When the artists and writers were hunched over cranking out thousands and thousands of little innocent Valentine cards to be passed out among young classmates and sweethearts, we have no idea if they ever noticed that a few had a pretty obvious double entrée meanings.

Subject matter includes anger issues, from punching, stabbing, shooting your loved one to running them over with your car. And, there are a few that are funny on purpose (just for the heck of it)!





January 25, 2021

45 Amazing Canadian Propaganda Posters During World War I

The armistice of November 11, 1918, brought relief to the whole world. Never before had there been such a conflict. For a nation of eight million people Canada’s war effort was remarkable.

Canadian propaganda posters during World War I


More than 650,000 men and women from Canada and Newfoundland served — over 66,000 gave their lives and more than 172,000 were wounded. It was this immense sacrifice that lead to Canada’s separate signature on the Peace Treaty.

No longer viewed as just a colony of England, Canada had truly achieved nation status. This nationhood was purchased by the gallant men who stood fast at Ypres, stormed Regina Trench, climbed the heights of Vimy Ridge, captured Passchendaele, and entered Mons on November 11, 1918.

A collection from Toronto Public Library that shows amazing Canadian propaganda posters during World War I.

“Be Yours to Hold It High!” Buy Victory Bonds

“Faith, There's No Wan Could Be Bolder” - Come on Boys! Join the Irish Canadian Overseas Battalion Rangers

“If ye break faith, we shall not sleep” - Buy Victory Bonds

“We are saving you - You save Food”

48th Highlanders - 1200 Men Wanted at Once for the 134th Highlanders Overseas Battalion





January 22, 2021

VROOOOM! Batman Is Out to Get You on Valentine’s Day!

1966 was the debut of the massively popular Batman TV series. However, the show debuted so early in the year that there was no time to do any direct tie-ins with the show itself, so the licensed Valentine’s Day products were all just using art inspired by the comic book itself.

Here, you can see in the early days of Valentine’s Day cards for kids, they were still trying to look somewhat like a normal greeting card. It’s best to read the various cards in Adam West’s voice, making greetings like “You’re just my SPEED, Valentine!” “I’m out to get you, VALENTINE!” “I’m FALLING for you, Valentine!” and “Valentine, you really pack a WALLOP!” all the more hilarious.









Elephant Hotel: The Prime Example of Novelty Architecture

Novelty architecture, also called programmatic or mimetic architecture, is a type of architecture in which buildings and other structures are given unusual shapes for purposes such as advertising or to copy other famous buildings without any intention of being authentic.

Their size and novelty means that they often serve as landmarks. They are distinct from architectural follies, in that novelty architecture is essentially usable buildings in eccentric form whereas follies are non-usable, ornamental buildings often in eccentric form.

Utility buildings and “novelty structures” are the red headed step-children of architecture - Like the Elephant Hotel, a 10 room hotel built in 1885. Intended to be one of a menagerie of buildings in the Margate City project in Atlantic City, New Jersey.











January 20, 2021

From Women’s Suffrage to the Great Depression, 12 Wonderfully Weird Valentine’s Day Cards From the Early 20th Century

The first Valentine’s cards were sent in the 18th century. Initially these were handmade efforts, as pre-made cards were not yet available. Lovers would decorate paper with romantic symbols including flowers and love knots, often including puzzles and lines of poetry. Those who were less inspired could buy volumes that offered guidance on selecting the appropriate words and images to woo their lover. These cards were then slipped secretly under a door, or tied to a door-knocker.

The industrialization of Britain in the early 19th-century brought with it rapid advances in printing and manufacturing technologies. It became easier than ever to mass-produce Valentine’s cards, which soon became immensely popular. It is estimated that by the mid 1820s, some 200,000 Valentines were circulated in London alone. The introduction of the Uniform Penny Post in 1840 bolstered the popularity of Valentine’s cards yet further: reports suggest that by the late 1840s the amount of cards being circulated doubled, doubling once again in the next two decades.

Meanwhile, in the United States, the valentine first appeared in the letterboxes of lovers in 1847. Esther Howard of Massachusetts, whose father ran a stationer’s shop in Worcester, began to import cards from England after receiving one from a friend of her father. Esther’s efforts were a success.

Today, around 190 million Valentine cards are sent every year in the U.S. alone. Few, though, will be as downright confounding and—dare we say—unromantic as this selection of curious vintage Valentines from the early 1900s.

1900 – Suffrage-era, die-cut Valentine card, depicting a small schoolboy bringing his teacher a valentine marked “Yes,” illustrating his support for her right to vote. His bespectacled teacher, wearing a “Votes for Women” sash, sits at a table with a ballot box, and draws a heart from a sack at her feet. Elsewhere on the card, it reads “If you believe—That women should vote— Just let your heart—Your verdict denote.”

1900 – Suffrage-era, die-cut Valentine card, depicting a small girl wearing a “Mother Hubbard” hat and holding a box-sign with the text “Votes For Women, Vote For Me For A Valentine.”

1900 – Suffrage-era, die-cut Valentine card, depicting a small, red-haired girl, wearing a pink dress and large hat with a blue plume, holding a document marked “ballot, ” and standing in the margins of a red bordered heart, with text at the rectangular base reading “I’m a suffragette and I don’t care who knows it”.

Illustration for a die-cut Valentine’s Day card featuring young children in court.

Illustration for a die-cut Valentine’s Day card featuring dressed male and female monkeys in love.





January 1, 2021

Pig a Happy New Year! 40 Strange and Funny New Year Pig Cards From the Early 20th Century

There are lots of theories about why pigs are a symbol of good luck, ranging from pigs being able to feed your family, to boars being the centre of a bulls eye, to losers being awarded a piglet as a consolation prize in the middle ages.


In a lot of Teutonic (old German) and Scandinavian traditions, pigs represent good luck and prosperity. That’s why you’ll see them with four leaf clovers and a lot of bags of gold or coins. The idea is basically wishing you a prosperous New Year.

Candy in shapes of pigs symbolizes wishes of prosperity and luck. Marzipan pigs are sold in the thousands every December in Northern Europe.

As the old Irish saying goes; “The pig is the gentleman who pays the rent”. In Norwegian the term “heldiggris” is very common, it literally translates to “lucky pig”. In Germany they say “Glücksschwein”, which translates to “lucky pig” too.

Pig decorations and illustrations on good luck and best wishes cards are common in Germany. This is especially true around New Year.










December 28, 2020

30 Amazing Vintage Gnome New Year’s Greeting Cards From Between the Late 19th and Early 20th Centuries

The New Year is a time to let go of our bad habits and make some sort of effort to improve ourselves. It’s a time of optimism, when the new year spreads out before us as a blank slate. Any unpleasantness from the past year can be left behind. So it’s not surprising that people used to send New Year’s greetings that were filled with symbols of good luck and promise.

There are also quite a few depictions of bearded humanoids. The cards with dwarves were typically created for Scandinavians. These magical diminutive creatures are symbols of luck. Other European countries incorporated their magical creatures (elves, gnomes and the like) into their New Year’s cards.

The gnome is a class of legendary creatures throughout Europe and, by cultural transfer, in the United States that has taken on many different meanings, but most generally refers to very small people, often men, that live in dark places, especially underground, in the depths of forests, or more recently in gardens. Most European ethnic groups have had some kind of gnome legends with local variations. Modern traditions portray gnomes as small, old men wearing pointed hats and living in forests and gardens.










December 15, 2020

Ludwig Hohlwein: The Munich Poster King

Born in Wiesbaden, Ludwig Hohlwein (1874–1949) was a German poster artist, a pioneer of the Sachplakat style. He trained and practiced as an architect in Munich until 1911, when he moved to Berlin and switched to poster design.

Posters designed by Ludwig Hohlwein


Hohlwein was born in the Rhine-Main region of Germany, though he and his work are associated with Munich and Bavaria in southern Germany. He travelled to the United States in the 1920s to conduct commercial work. A large portion of his work dates to 1912-1925.

Hohlwein was one of the best illustrators of early century. His style usually consists of sharply defined forms, bright colors, a good portion of humor and textured patterns.

By 1925, Hohlwein had already designed 3000 different advertisements. His work was also part of the art competitions at the 1932 Summer Olympics and the 1936 Summer Olympics.

Here below is a photo set of amazing posters designed by Ludwig Hohlwein from between the 1900s and 1920s.

Winter in Bayern, 1907

Hermann Scherrer sportswear, circa 1907

ODEON CAFÉ and BILLIARD ACADEMY, 1908

YELLOWSTONE-PARK, 1910

Coffee Hag, 1913





December 5, 2020



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