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Valentine Cards II |
Valentines are
thought to be the first greeting cards ever
sent; the paper valentine dates from the
16th century. By the 17th century, handmade
cards were oversized and elaborate, while
store-bought ones were smaller and costly.
But printers were already beginning to
produce a limited number of cards with
verses and sketches. The real revolution
came in the early 19th century with a
reduction in postal rates. This helped to
establish the custom of sending anonymous
messages or cards to those one admired.
Valentine greetings have been popular since
the Middle Ages, a time when prospective
lovers said or sang their romantic verses.
Written valentines began to appear after
1400. Paper valentines originated in the
1500s, being exchanged in Europe and being
given in place of valentine gifts and oral
or musical valentine greetings. They were
particularly popular in England. The first
written valentine (formerly known as
"poetical or amorous addresses") is
traditionally attributed to the imprisoned
Charles, Duke of Orleans, in 1415. While
confined in the Tower of
London after the Battle of Agincourt, the
young Duke reportedly passed his time by
writing romantic verses for his wife in
France. Approximately sixty of the Duke's
poems remain and can be seen among the royal
papers in the British Museum. They are
credited with being the first modern day
valentines.
By the Sixteenth Century, written valentines
were commonplace and by the Seventeenth
Century, it was a widespread tradition in
England and other Western countries for
friends and sweethearts to exchange gifts
and notes on February 14. During the early
1700s, Charles II of Sweden brought the
Persian poetical art known as the "language
of flowers" to Europe and throughout the
Eighteenth Century, floral dictionaries were
published, permitting the exchange of
romantic secrets via a lily or lilac, for
example, culminating in entire conversations
taking place within a bouquet of flowers.
The more popular the flower, the more
traditions and meaning were associated with
it. The red rose, for instance, believed to
be the favored flower of Venus, Roman
Goddess of Love, became universally accepted
to represent romantic love. Thus, the custom
of giving red roses on Valentine's Day
quickly gained popularity.
Some time after 1723, the popularity of
valentine cards in America began to grow
with the import from England of valentine
"writers." A "writer" was a booklet
comprised of a vast array of verses and
messages, which could be copied onto
gilt-edged paper or other type of decorative
sheet. One popular "writer" contained not
only "be my valentine" types of verses for
the men to send to their sweethearts, but
also acceptances or "answers" which the
ladies could then return.
Late Eighteenth Century and Early Nineteenth
Century valentines were often religious in
nature and it is possible that the "Sacred
Heart" often depicted on these cards
eventually became the "Valentine Heart" with
the customarily accompanying Angel
eventually becoming "Cupid." It is believed
that the earlier versions of these religious
valentines may have been made by nuns who
would cut-out the paper lace with scissors.
It is thought the process probably took many
days since the cards had every appearance of
being machine-made.
One popular style of early American card
from 1840 to approximately 1860 was the
"Daguerreotype," a photographic process
using old-time tintype in the center of a
card surrounded by an ornamental wreath.
Another was the "Mirror Valentine," which
contained a small mirror placed in the
center to reflect the face of the recipient.
However, the sending of valentine greetings
in America did not become a true tradition
until around the time of the Civil War
(1861-1865) when valentine cards often
depicted sweethearts parting, or a tent with
flaps that opened to reveal a soldier. These
were known as "windows." In peacetime, the
"window" would be a church door opening to
reveal a bridge and groom.
Another Civil War valentine novelty was for
the card to have a place for the sender to
include a lock of hair. By the early 1800s,
valentines began to be assembled in
factories. Such early manufactured
valentines were rather simplistic, composed
of black-and-white pictures painted by the
factory workers. Fancy valentines comprised
of real lace and ribbons were introduced in
the mid-1800s. Paper lace began to be
introduced to the cards later in the 1800s;
these valentines also contained delicate and
artistic messages with pictures of
turtledoves, love knots in gold or silver,
bows and arrow, Cupids and bleeding hearts.
During the Victorian Era and its printing
advances, Valentine cards became even more
popular and the modern postal service of the
age implemented the "penny post," which made
it easier to mail written valentines. (Prior
to that time, postage was so expensive that
most cards were hand-delivered and usually
left on doorsteps.) Known as "penny
postcards" (because they were mailed with a
one-penny postage stamp), these valentine
greetings were very popular from around 1890
to 1917.
During this time, it was also considered
"proper" to collect and display collections
of postcards and trade cards in the
Victorian and Edwardian parlor. Friends and
guests would be invited to sit for hours,
leafing through albums while they visited.
This custom gained so much popularity that
photographers, studios, printers and
business continually strived for new and
exciting subjects to satisfy a public which
was anxious for innovative items in order to
impress their acquaintances. To make their
cards stand out, people often sought for
real photographic postcards. As opposed to
mass-produced lithographs, these were actual
photographs made with a postcard-printed
back. The photography studios frequently
employed women to hand-tint and color the
black-and-white images. Some of the best of
these cards came from Germany...famous for
its detailed and colorful lithography.
Popular subjects included women, children,
flowers and couples, posed and arranged in
an effort to portray the idealized virtues
of the Era. Indeed, it was in England that
the first commercial-type valentine was
produced on embossed paper, later perforated
to make a lace-type design. Some of these
cards contained tiny mirrors with the
message: "Look at my Beloved," while others
were called "Cobweb Valentines" because the
center could be lifted by a tassel to reveal
a cobweb effect of paper and underneath, a
picture of a couple or a romantic message.
Although pre-Victorian valentines virtually
unavailable today, but cards have survived
over a century due chiefly to the fact, that
they began to be mass-produced around 1850.
However, the majority of early Victorian
valentines were customarily made by hand
from honeycombed tissue, watercolors, paper
puffs, colored inks, embossed paper hearts
and exquisite lace. These were truly
beautifully created small works of art,
often adorned with silk or satin (in
addition) to lace, flowers or feathers and
even gold leaf. Such fragile honeycomb
designs remained the vogue until around
1909. Some of the most unusual valentines
were fashioned by lonely sailors during this
time...unique cards sporting seashells of
various sizes employed to create hearts,
flowers and other designs, or to cover
heart-shaped boxes. Sailors also sent what
were known as "Busk Valentines", rounded
long sticks fashioned from ivory or wood,
somewhat resembling a tongue depressor but
approximately five time longer. Upon these
sticks, the sailor would carve hearts and
other loving designs. The sailor's
sweetheart inside her corset wore the "Busk
Valentine". It was not unusual for a
manufactured valentine of this era to cost
as much as a month's earnings, particularly
the "proposal valentines" who were very
popular and might contain the depiction of a
church or a ring. In keeping with Victorian
etiquette, it was considered improper for a
lady to send a valentine greeting to a man.
During the mid-Nineteenth Century, the
traditional valentine was designed for a
brief period of time to assume the form of
money. Known as "love notes," these cards
were eventually banned due to their uncanny
likeness to authentic currency. It was
around this time that valentines also
gradually became rather less artistic and
more overly ornamental. During the "Gay
Nineties," for example, the cards were
adorned with garish spun glass,
mother-of-pearl, imitation gems or silk
fringe. Evidence of the less attractive and
what might be considered "cheap-looking"
valentine is seen in the "vinegar
valentine." A greeting which ranged in
sentiment from the caustic to the comical,
the "vinegar valentine" was created by John
McLaughlin, a New York printer. It was
produced on cheap paper, decorated with
crude colors and might contain as message
such as:
"Miss Grey hairs and wrinkles don't look
quite so cold.
Don't let it surprise you to find yourself
old.
The old family record with truth on its
page,
Tells a horrible fact about your present
age.
Your Pa or your Ma may have said you look
young,
Some 20 years since but now you're among
The 'old maids' of this world, without
chance for a beau,
For Cupid's grown gray since he cut you, you
know."
As can be seen, the "vinegar valentine"
poked fun at old maids and teachers (among
others). Comic designs of the 1870s by the
American cartoonist Charles Howard were
known as "penny dreadfuls," a somewhat
appropriate title since they sold for a
penny and the designs really were quite
"dreadful" in nature. Both "vinegar
valentines" and "penny dreadfuls" came under
close social, religious and postal service
scrutiny. The practice also led to a
somewhat obscene number of valentines being
produced which caused several countries to
ban the practice of exchanging cards through
the mail for a period of time. For example,
in Chicago, late in the Nineteenth Century,
the Post Office rejected some 25,000 cards
on the grounds that they were "not fit" be
carried through the United States Mail.
Commercial valentines were first made during
the 1800s with Kate Greenway (1846-1901), a
British artist, being one of the leading
makers of such greetings. Greenway
valentines are well-known for drawings of
little children and the varied shades of
blues and greens that she favored.
In 1840, Esther A. Howland, a student at
Mount Holyoke College, mass-produced the
first American commercial Valentines.
Howland's father, a stationer in Worcester,
Massachusetts, imported valentine cards
annually from England. However, Howland
decided to create her own valentine
messages. Around 1830, she began to import
lace, fine papers and other supplies for the
creation of her cards. Employing several
assistants and her brothers (thus becoming
one of the first individuals to ever use an
assembly line), Howland marketed her
"Worcester" valentines with a
distinguishable little red "H" on the back.
The first year in business brought Howland
an unexpected $5,000.00 in sales (a princely
sum at that time) and her cards (some of
which sold for $50.00 each) eliminated the
laborious task of making homemade
valentines. Larger companies followed her
lead almost immediately.
During the 1840s, the first "mechanical"
valentines were introduced. By pulling a
tab, a figure or object on the card could be
made to move. Some even had elaborate and
dramatic pop-outs or various other
three-dimensional features. The end of the
1800s was making valentines made entirely by
machine. During the early 1900s, a card
company called Norcross began to produce
valentines and the Hallmark Company owns a
collection of rare antique varieties, which
it will occasionally put on display. The
advent of the Twentieth Century truly
brought a change in the valentine card
industry from the heavy sentimentality of
earlier days to what can probably be best
described as a "light touch."
In themselves, valentines are closely
related to Austrian and German love tokens,
which were produced until around 1820.
Exquisitely made, these little items were
fashioned and colored totally by hand. Not
necessarily given on Valentine's Day, they
were nevertheless adorned with hearts and
images of sweethearts. Many had a
transparent net background embossed with
gold trimmings. Today, a valentine card is
usually accompanied by the more elaborate
gifts of candy, flowers and perfume.
Nevertheless, Valentine's Day Cards remain
extremely popular and are manufactured on an
enormous scale...cards may be purchased for
sweethearts, spouses, children, parents,
teachers and even pets. The United States
Post Office in Loveland, Colorado, USA,
creates a special and one-of-a-kind
cancellation stamp every year in order to
celebrate Valentine's Day and the romantic
name of Loveland, Colorado. The Post Office
is now averaging greater than 300,000
Valentines emailed annually including 104
foreign countries and all 50 United States.
The cancellation stamp sample shown here is
from 1995.
Today, about 1 billion Valentine's Day cards
are sent each year. The holiday ranks second
(after Christmas) for the number of cards
sent. According to the latest US Census data
(which is from 2000), Americans spend about
$277 million on cards each more>>
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