Featured on PDR in the collection Wear Celluloid Collars and Cuffs (ca.1870)

A charming set of 19th-century American trade cards, advertising — via the medium of a frog and gnome-like character — collars and cuffs made of a waterproof linen (celluloid). After the Civil War there was a huge boom in advertising throughout the United States. The new widespread network of railroads which covered the land enabled the mass production of industrial and consumer goods on a scale never seen before and with this rise in goods came also a need to rise above the competition via eye-catching adverts. Advertising spread to a huge variety of media, including catalogues, broadsides, newspapers and sets of advertising cards like those featured here, miniature posters, about the size of a postcard, which were handed out as souvenirs at major expositions.

Date

ca.1870

From

Wear Celluloid Collar and Cuffs


Underlying Rights

No Known Restrictions

Digital Rights

No Additional Rights

  • No associated rights statement on Internet Archive. However, source confirmed by email no additional rights.
  • We offer this info as guidance only

Image Size

800 x 511 Higher res available?

 Download Image