I Think It Great

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Divided back, unused postcard. Publisher unknown. Series 852. Made in the U.S.A. Circa 1918.

Price:  $10.00

Cute postcard circa 1918 (another example of this same postcard shows up elsewhere online with this date) showing a boy and girl, the smiling moon, and the caption,  “I think it great spoon by the light of the moon.”  This is signed by the artist Witt, and one of at least several of series 852 showing a similar theme. See the prior post for the other one (so far) that we have on this website. The fact that there is incorrect grammar in the caption is interesting. At least I presume it is incorrect. I don’t see any other phrases that start off this way. It looks like there wasn’t quite enough room to fit a correctly worded phrase next to the illustration, so the phrase needed to be altered slightly. The effect is rather unique I think, and adds to the charm. But who was this artist who signed his or her work under the single name Witt?

You’re Just My Style

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Divided back, unused with writing on the back. Publisher unknown. Series 852. Artist:  Witt. Circa 1918.

Price:  $10.00

There is no artist’s signature on this postcard but it seems to have been done by the person who signed his or her name Witt. The next post will show a similar card that does have the signature. This and the following are from series 852:  a series which is evidently regarding this couple with a cute caption and an animated moon in the background. There’s always a chance that more information will show up on this artist in the future, but for now it’s another for the mystery pile; and it’s also another from the Alice Ellison collection. The card was never sent, has an unused stamp, and the would-be sender wrote,  “Dear Uncle: –  I received your letter. This is fair”

Schnauzer By Rivst

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Divided back, artist-signed, unused postcard. No. 103 Pinscher (Schnauzer) Publisher:  Stehli Brothers. Printed in Switzerland. Date unknown, possibly circa 1940s  – 1950s.

Price:  $12.00

Artist-signed postcard of a Schnauzer from a work by I. Rivst or J. Rivst, who is known for his (or her?) artwork of dogs and horses. The first initial of the artist’s name is in question. Other examples can be found online, and in some the first initial looks more like a “J.” The publisher logo appears in the stamp box and is for Stehli Frères (Stehli Brothers) of Zurich, Switzerland. According to the website , Stehli Brothers were printers of art books, fine prints and high quality color photogravure postcards, and known for their artist-signed cards of views and animals. (Photogravure is a process where an image is produced from a photographic negative transferred to a metal plate and then etched in.) Stehli Brothers was purchased by Rosenstiel’s in 1995. Besides the typical corner wear, this card has some small marks of discoloration on each side, and a horizontal mark towards the top.

Source:  Metropolitan Postcard Club of New York City. Accessed 28 Jun 2014. [http://www.metropostcard.com/publisherss3.html]

I Ain’t Nobody’s Sweetheart Yet!

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Divided back, artist-signed, used postcard. Postmarked March 1921 from Fresno, California. Publisher:  Edward Gross Co., New York. Comic No. 25. “Smile Messengers.”

Availability status:  SOLD

Adorable cutie in white dress with pink polka dots and wearing a big pink bow in her hair. The caption is  “I ain’t nobody’s Sweetheart yet!”  This postcard, as the printing on the front states, is from a painting by C. H. Twelvetrees. For more information about the artist see the prior post.

The sender wrote,  “Dear Sis:  Your letter received today. Keep an eye on that job. I will come at once if there is any chance. If there was only two jobs why say I missed any thing. I wouldn’t have seen them any way. Has Alice moved yet? Calla[?] has been here all afternoon. I am going to spend all day Thurs. with her. Write again soon. Love from Bess.”

Card addressed to  “Miss Ella Ellison. 1314 F St., Sacramento, Calif.”  and is another from the Alice Ellison Collection.

Why Don’t You Come To Fresno

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Divided back, artist-signed, used postcard. Postmarked from Fresno, California May 22, 1917. Publisher S. Bergman. Series or number 1060.

Price:  $8.00.  Besides the usual wear, this card has some soil marks on the little girl’s face.

In keeping with the prior post, here’s another one having to do with the city of Fresno, with the caption reading, “Why don’t you come to Fresno, Cal.”  This is one of many that was produced using this same theme, with the city and state in a flag or pennant, though the designs and publishers vary. This one happens to be an artist-signed postcard by Charles Twelvetrees of a painting or drawing of a cute little girl in a pink dotted dress and straw hat with blue bow. A copyright logo appears at the bottom left of the front of the card which is hard to read, but others online have identified the publisher as S. Bergman (indeed the last name is discernible after knowing what to look for.) The copyright here looks like 1917. The card is addressed to:   “Miss Henrietta Ellison, Sacramento. Calif. 1314  F st.”  

The sender writes (this is good):   “Dear Henry. Do you think you could come here – alone if Ma will let you or maby you dont wont[want] to come do you?  Dos.   yes. no. no  yes”  (Love the yes no no yes part.)  “Dos” is short for Dossie. This is one of many from our “Alice Ellison Collection.”

The artist:  Charles H. Twelvetrees was born in New York, about 1872 or 1873. A separate post will be up within the next couple of days on him, as there has been some confusion owing to what seems to be an incorrect middle initial of R, and whether his father was or was not also an artist. There are lots of online records to dig into for clarification, and we’ll get there in just a jiffy.

Timber – My Kingdom For A Tree

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“Timber – – My Kingdom For A Tree…..”

Comical postcard showing black and white drawing of a dog running through the desert, in desperate need of a tree. It looks like that might be the artist’s initials of “S. C.” at the bottom right. Although the back does not show a divider, this postcard seems to more vintage than antique. No duplicates of this card are showing up online, as of the date of this post…The expression “My kingdom for a …” is credited to Shakespeare from his line in Richard III:   “A horse, a horse! My kingdom for a horse!”

Unused postcard. Possibly artist-signed. Circa 1960s.

Price:  $10.00

Source:  http://www.enotes.com/shakespeare-quotes/horse-horse

Pansies

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Divided back, artist-signed postcard. Postmarked from Nebraska (probably Holbrook) September 7, 1910. Publisher:  Arthur Capper. Copyright 1909. Artist:  B. Bieletto.

Price:  $12.00

“If I dared to think you cared,

The thought would be divine;

And so I pray that you will say:

‘You will be mine!'”

A beautiful postcard with the nice verse above, on a country scene, showing pansies in the foreground, a river on the left, and a field with mountains in the background. The border and sky are done in gold-tone, and the artist’s signature appears at the bottom right. The artist’s last name is Bieletto. There is an Italian artist, Benedetto Busetto Bieletto, in Chicago. This is possibly the artist for this postcard. This possibility will be explored and put up in a near future post. The card is addressed to:  “Miss Lena Davis. Pomona Kanasa [Kansas]”  and J. W. has written,

“Sept 7 1910 Dear cousin. I rced your card sever day ago was kind surprise to here you had sold out what was the mater   did your folks like it there we are thursh [threshing] this week here i am up home this week i am well and hope yous get throw [through?] all right  J.W.C.”

One of ten (unless we come across more) postcards from J. W. Carter of Holbrook, Nebraska, that he sent to his cousin, Lena Davis. (There will be another category put up under Lena Davis later.) As we can see by the spelling, J. W., like many of his day, must not have had a terribly long formal education. It seems that he must have made his living as a farmer or stock hand. This is the first of a great set from J. W. In reading all ten postcards to cousin Lena, you get a sense that J. W. was a caring person. I like how he fills up the cards, and how their content shows a small slice of rural Nebraska life in the early 1900s.

This card was likely postmarked from Holbrook, Nebraska. Holbrook today is a small town in the southern area of the state; their website indicating the population at about 225. The town is about 250 miles west of Omaha, and about 300 miles east of Denver, Colorado. Holbrook was first known as “Burton’s Bend,” after Isaac Burton who opened up a log cabin trading post there in 1870. A post office was established in August of 1872, and the railroad came through in the late 1870s. The town’s name was changed in 1881, in honor of an official for the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad. These postcard dates range from 1910 -1914, and it is interesting to think that when J. W. Carter was writing these cards, the settlement was only just over 40 years old.

There is a James W. Carter listed in the 1910 Federal Census for Burton Bend, NE. This person was born in Illinois, about 1875; both parents were born in England; his marital status is divorced; his occupation is “Stock, Farm” and he is boarding with John A. Hudson and John’s wife Loeye[?] Also boarding with the Hudsons is a young woman, age about 16, Urlia[?] Fanholc[?] It’s interesting to note that we can see from this census, that although the name of the town may have been officially changed, it was still referred to by some as Burton’s Bend. It’s likely that this James W. Carter is the same person who has written these postcards.

Sources:  http://www.holbrook-ne.com/

Year: 1910; Census Place: Burton Bend, Furnas, Nebraska; Roll: T624_846; Page: 6A; Enumeration District: 0078; FHL microfilm: 1374859. Ancestry.com. 1910 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2006

Easter Blessings

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Divided back, artist-signed, embossed, used postcard. Postmarked from Marysville, California on March 27, 1929. Artist:  Margaret Evans Price. Publisher:  Stecher Lithographic Company, Rochester, New York. Copyrighted design. Series 502 A.

Availability status:  SOLD  

Another beautiful Easter postcard, this one in a church-type setting with a leaded-glass window and white background behind a charmingly dressed young woman with a sweet expression. She wears a dotted old-fashioned hoop skirt (or one with many petticoats?) and a velvet-looking blue jacket with black collar. Note the wide sleeves at the wrist that show off the ruffled blouse cuffs, and the corsage pinned to the jacket. Her black bonnet is trimmed with a band of flowers, she is reading Bible verse we presume, and is surrounded by various potted flowers.  “Easter Blessings”  is the caption below, the card is embossed and has a border of light purple. Easy to miss are the artist’s initials M.E.P. that are next to one of the plants on the left.

M.E.P. was Margaret Evans Price (1888-1973) American artist, author, illustrator, muralist, toy designer, known primarily for the many children’s books she wrote, illustrated or collaborated on. For more information on the artist see the excellent website in the source below.

This is another of many in The Alice Ellison (Mrs. J. M. Ellison) Collection. The name was misspelled or written in haste here as “Ellersun” and appears to be signed,  “E. B___?, Virginia and Mack.”

Source:  Margaret Evans Price. http://www.meibohmfinearts.com/artists.aspx. (accessed February 14, 2024).

Where Did I Put That Powder Puff?

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“Where did I put that powder puff?”

Another adorable bunny; a reproduction of an original work by Noel Hubert Hopking, a British artist (active 1921 – 1940) known for his beautiful illustrations of animals and birds. A book by children’s author Enid Blyton (1897 – 1968) entitled Enid Blyton’s Nature Lovers Book, contains sixteen engraved illustrations by Hopking. This book can be found for sale online, and quite a number of other Hopking illustrations can be found online or referenced at auction houses, etc.

The Medici Society was founded in 1908. The company logo shown here was their earlier logo; their website states they recently changed logos, but does not state when exactly. The date for this postcard might be from the 1940s through the 1960s. I’ve not yet seen any clarification for the date this card would have been produced, nor the date the original work was created. If found, this post will be updated then.

Divided back, artist-signed, unused postcard. Publisher:  The Medici Society, Ltd., London. Art Publishers by Appointment to the late King George V., Copyright. Engraved and printed in Great Britain. Pk. 137.  Circa possibly 1940s – 1960s.

Price:  $5.00

Sources:  http://www.medici.co.uk/index.html

http://www.artprice.com/artist/93997/noel-hubert-hopking

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enid_Blyton

Birdies By A. Wagner

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Charming, artist-signed, vintage postcard of a painting by A. Wagner showing a couple of  colorful songbirds sitting on a tree branch with pink blossoms. In the vicinity is a meandering path through a meadow leading toward what looks to be a forest off in the hazy distance. As of the date of this posting, research regarding all the particulars appearing on the back of the card, isn’t bringing up a whole lot. Another postcard was found on eBay by this same artist, with the same publisher logo, (V & Co?) printing and importer info, and with said date for that postcard to be approximately from the 1920s. So, that is a possible time-frame for this one, but we will definitely be on the lookout for any others. In any case, this is a great card, and here’s a bit of springtime for all of you this year, in the Midwest and the East, that have been hit with yet another big snowfall.

Divided back, unused postcard. Publisher unknown. Series or Number 262/2. Printed in Switzerland. Imported by Europa Import Co., New York, NY. Date possibly circa 1920s.

Price:  $15.00