Category Archives: Collectibles

Merry Deco Christmas Card!

Visions of the past

Nothing says you care more during this season than spreading your love and thoughts via a Deco Christmas card. But first, a brief history.

Sir Henry Cole, a civil servant in the United Kingdom in 1843 helped set-up the new ‘Public Record Office’ (now called the Post Office). The concept of the Christmas card was a bid on how to get this new service used more by ordinary people.

His first card was a collaboration between he and his artist friend, John Horsley. Their creation was a tri-panel card that sold for 1 shilling (about 8 cents) and was met with mixed reviews. The outer panels featured people caring for the poor. The central picture depicted a family having a Christmas feast. What was so controversial? The center panel featured children drinking wine!

Although started in 1840, only very rich people could afford to send anything in the post. Because the new railways being built, could carry much more post and could go faster than the horse and carriage, the introduction of the new “Penny Stamp” made sending mail affordable to the masses. Cards became even more popular in the UK when they could be posted in an unsealed envelope for half the price of an ordinary letter.

 

By 1860 and with improved printing methods, Christmas cards became much more popular and were produced in large quantities. In 1870 the cost of sending a post card and Christmas card dropped to half a penny. Now affordable, even more people were able to send cards.

Meanwhile, across the pond in the United States, Christmas Cards started to make an appearance in the late 1840. They were very expensive and most people couldn’t afford them.

Enter Louis Prang in 1875. Originally from Germany he was a printer who had worked on early cards in the UK. He started mass producing cards so more people could afford to buy them. In 1915, John C. Hall and two of his brothers created a small company you may have heard of called Hallmark Cards. As you may have guessed, they are one of the largest greeting card companies in the world (though their cards don’t cost 8 cents!).

In the 1910s and 1920s, home made cards became popular. (Remember those homemade invites from my party series?) Often in unusual shapes and with delicate trims such as foil and ribbon, they were usually too delicate to send through the post and were given by hand.

Deco Christmas Cards would also commemorate significant world events.

Amelia Earhart’s 1928 transcontinental flight.

As for the mass produced cards, unlike Halloween, they got the majority of them right…but then again!

 I hope you enjoyed this post.  Sending wishes to you and yours for a wonderful Christmas and New Year!

Chris & Anthony  (The Freakin’, Tiquen’ Guys)

If you enjoyed this look at Art Deco Christmas Cards you might also enjoy these earlier Holiday posts:

A Deco Valentine’s Day Party!

Time for a Deco-ween Party!

Do you know the Muffin Man?

Well, good for you! This post is not about the Muffin Man that lives on Drury Lane. It is about the Pretzel Man!

 

If you read our prior post about the Kensington Giftware line, then you know the Great Depression of 1929 influenced many companies to reimagine their products in creative ways to survive. Chase Co., primarily known for plumbing fittings, was no exception. Reinventing itself, Chase Co. quickly and wisely diversified making household items from available plumbing stock by collaborating with fashionable designers such as Lurelle Guild, Harry Laylon, Russell Wright and Walter Von Nessen. Using their designs, Chase Co. produced  both beautiful and useful items for every occasion. In some cases, the items were just for fun!

 

The signing of the Cullen-Harrison Act into law on March 22, 1933 by President Franklin Roosevelt, legalized beer and wine with low alcohol content. Ratification of the Twenty-first Amendment on December 5, 1933 repealed the Eighteenth Amendment. The end of prohibition influenced the development of bar-ware on a massive scale by many companies and directly lead to the whimsical Pretzel Man.

 

From the fertile mind of Lurelle Guild, he was depicted in 1933 advertisements and was part of the 1934-1936 Chase catalog in a polished copper finish with a brass spike. A New York Herald Tribune article from June 25, 1933 described this fellow as “frivolous” – meant in the kindest way, of course! The cost? $1.00. Although featured in polished chrome in the ad shown above (and at an advertised cost of $1.75), he did not make an appearance in the Chase Co. catalog with this finish until 1935. Very little information is available about this fellow beyond the obvious.

In copper, he would fall into the “hard to find” range at a cost of $100-$120. The chrome would be in the “difficult to find” range and you can expect to pay $180-$200. In either version, it is incomplete without the spike. As seen above, I am fortunate to own a copper one, with it’s spike, found for half the estimated value.  He is approximately 9 inches wide and 16 inches tall.  More than half the height is the spike.  A word of caution, the spike is very long and can be dangerous.  Be sure to use with caution.

 

Several of the copper version are currently available on popular auction sites. One is complete and a reasonable $110.00 asking price. Another one is for sale at a whopping $495 and missing the spike!

 

I hope you enjoyed this brief post about a fun deco collectible. (And thanks to my “hand models” – Susanna, Jonathan and Anthony.)

Chris and Anthony (The Freakin’, Tiquen’ Guys)

If you enjoyed spending time with the Pretzelman you might enjoy these earlier         Driving For Deco Posts –

Cocktails for Two . . . or More

Napier Cocktail Shaker – Weekend Find

Kensington, Deco Aluminum Giftware