Showing posts with label vintage postcards. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vintage postcards. Show all posts

Friday, November 2, 2012

Holiday Stitched Collages

The stitched holiday collages I've been creating combine a few of my favorite things:  vintage images, paper scraps, and stitched paper!
I made a couple of Thanksgiving-themed collages, and the rest are Christmas-focused.  These Thanksgiving postcards are from 1911!
(Now I just need a lesson on how to photograph art through glass!)

Many of the Christmas images came from the greeting cards I found in the albums at the Briggs auction recently
When I first got the greeting card collection, I wasn't sure how I was going to use them, but found the perfect destination for them in these collages!  Most of the cards are from 1936 to 1941.
It's always fun when things come together!
All but the last of these collages are 5"x7".
This last one is 4"x6".

I will have these collages for sale tonight at the Mom-Hosted Holiday Bazaar in Downingtown, PA!  I will give you a full report of the show later this weekend.

I wanted to share one other item I will have for sale at my table.  It is one of two collaged birdhouses, intended for indoor/decorative use.  I created it awhile ago, but made some additions and adjustments:
Wishing you a safe and creative weekend!

Thursday, April 19, 2012

Hitting the Jackpot, MY Style

This past Friday evening, I headed back to Briggs Auction with my mother, visiting for the weekend from Kentucky.  (Remember, I was there the previous weekend buying chickens and marbles with my husband!)  We were single-minded in our goal to walk out of there with postage stamps for our art-making, and we were NOT disappointed!
In the five years I've been going to this auction on-and-off, I have only brought home postage stamps on one other occasion.  I thought it might be too much to hope for that they would be offering stamps on the particular weekend my mother was coming with me.  But we truly hit the jackpot.
When we got home on Friday evening, we sat with glasses of wine, sorting through all the stamps.  If we saw something we wanted, we would hold it out to each other and say, "Can I have this one?  Can I have this one?"  The ones we didn't want, we put into piles to hand over to each other.  We had quite a system going.
My share of the postal haul abundantly fills two cigar boxes; my mom carried her share home in a gallon plastic bag to make it easier to take on the plane. 
In addition, I brought home a stamp collector's book.  He glued the stamps directly to the page so they cannot be removed.  However, as far as I'm concerned, the pages themselves are awesome art!
They present such an interesting view of history, often including countries that don't even exist anymore, or countries that were once colonial holdings.
Each stamp is a work of art.
Tucked in with the stamp album was an envelope holding several old stock certificates from 1884:
I think the items I bid on must have all come from the same estate, a man who used to be in the U.S. Navy.  In addition to the stamps, the lot included:
Postcards of San Francisco
A certificate declaring Charles Lee, Jr., as Honor Man at the U.S Naval Training Station in Bainbridge, Maryland, for the period of training completed May 16, 1946.
The certificate included a handwritten list of various names on the back.
Some extremely spooky photographs of the nuclear weapons tests in the Bikini Atoll
A naval training booklet and group photo, with smaller versions of the Bikini Atoll photos and a book entitled A BlueJackets' Manual for the US Navy from 1944.  Now I can be prepared for hammock inspection, using inflated trousers as a float to rescue myself in case of emergency, what to do in case I am taken prisoner by the enemy, and how to conduct myself during military drills!
Another training class photo from 1946

What an abundance of treasures!  What is your favorite?  And how would YOU put these findings to creative use?

Thursday, November 24, 2011

Vintage Thanksgiving Greetings

Wishing you and yours
a happy, healthy, creative
Thanksgiving!
[Photos of the vintage Thanksgiving postcards in my collection]