pr279_marilynn_karp_ephemeraMarilynn Gelfman Karp Collection of Ephemera PR 279Margaret L. Donabedian, December, 2009. Revised to reflect additions, June, 2011 and June 2014.New-York Historical Society
170 Central Park WestNew York, NY 10024Telephone: (212) 873-3400URL:
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New-York Historical Society Marilynn Gelfman Karp Collection of Ephemera PR 279 6.25 Linear feet 1842-1985 1870-1955 Ephemera materials spanning the late 19th to mid 20th centuries, including trade cards, blotters, cigarette silks, product and dry good labels, greeting cards, postcards, and hairnet packages, among others. English . Provenance

Gift of Marilynn Gelfman Karp, 2009

Access

The collection is open to qualified researchers. Portions of the collection that have been photocopied or microfilmed will be brought to the researcher in that format; microfilm can be made available through Interlibrary Loan.

Photocopying

Photocopying undertaken by staff only. Limited to twenty exposures of stable, unbound material per day. See guidelines in Print Room for details.

Permission to reproduce or quote in publication

Application to use images from this collection for publication should be made in writing to the Department of Rights and Reproductions, The New-York Historical Society, 170 Central Park West, New York, NY 10024. Permission to reproduce or quote text from this collection in a publication must be requested from and granted in writing by the Library Director, The New-York Historical Society, 170 Central Park West, New York, NY 10024.

Citation

This collection should be cited as: Marilynn Gelfman Karp Collection of Ephemera, PR 279, Department of Prints, Photographs, and Architectural Collections, The New-York Historical Society.

Biographical Notes

Marilynn Gelfman Karp:

Marilynn Gelfman Karp was born in the Bronx, New York, in 1939. Her penchant for collecting began early in childhood, with the careful culling of objects from her everyday life, including things that came in the family mail (greeting cards, attractive postcards, circulars), from family life (milk bottle lids, cigar bands, cigar boxes, campaign buttons, advertising giveaways), things that were found in the street (odd bits of metal, rocks, phenomena with power), gleaned from the grocery store (wooden cheese boxes, fruit crate labels), purchased from or found around the local candy store (bubblegum cards, Dixie lids, soda bottle tops), or from Woolworth's (Jack O'Lanterns, marbles, dexterity games, skate keys), or things from the luncheonette (sugar packets, soda fountain cut-outs). Relatives occasionally gave her relevant objects (foreign coins from service in World War II, pipe tobacco tins, cocktail mixers, figural matches, license plate key chain tags). As she grew up, Karp spent her allowance on things that were important to her (Indian bubblegum cards, trading cards, Cracker Jacks for the prizes, cockamamies, radio premium rings and decoders) and packaging that was compelling (hairnet envelopes, decals).

A deep fascination and perceptive appreciation for the beauty and meaning in everyday objects has characterized her collecting ever since. Karp's passion for collecting is equally shared with her husband, contemporary art dealer Ivan C. Karp, who has been an integral appreciator and inspiration for Karp in the formation of her over 200 well-managed and archivally kept collections of ephemera. Stopping at every flea market, antique show, antique shop, collectibles show, and yard sale that looks interesting to her, she describes these venues as having one thing in common: "they are places of unconditional seeking and possessing. Each object has a story to tell, somewhat fleshing out a time."

Collecting on instinct, each object that Karp has chosen to own is recognized by her as "a material incident in which time and place coalesce in a palpably pungent way." Scanning the past, she considers the objects she encounters in their "much diminished range from when they were new," trying to prevent the "irreversible elimination" of what she feels are "significant and resounding things that inform us about the times in which they were made."

Karp's collecting activities have been additionally informed by her educational background and professional accomplishments in the visual arts. Receiving both a B.F.A. in Studio Art (1958) and an M.A. in Art History (1962) from Hunter College, she then went on to earn a Ph.D. in Physics and Aesthetics from New York University (1965), where she served as a Professor of Art at NYU's Steinhardt School, Department of Art and Art Professions for 42 years. Initially teaching basic 3D design and art history in Western culture, Karp's teaching activities later gravitated toward American art and architecture in the context of cultural history. In this capacity, she was actively involved with M.A. and M.F.A. graduating exhibition classes, and as an advisor, reader, and chair, for many doctoral dissertation committees in art, critical studies, and material culture.

During her years as a professor at NYU, Karp made important and far-reaching contributions to the study of material culture within the University's curriculum, designing and instituting the country's first Master's degree in Visual Arts Administration and Collecting, an M.A. Program in Folk Art (NYU in collaboration with the American Folk Art Museum, NY) and an M.A. program in Costume Studies (NYU in collaboration with the Metropolitan Museum of Art's Costume Institute).

Beyond her successful career in academia, Karp is a professional sculptor of international achievement, and is an American Academy of Arts and Letters Sculptor's Award recipient. Her collecting interests have helped to shape her creative work, which utilizes a variety of mixed media and found objects. Additionally, she has served as a Trustee and Board Member for a number of organizations devoted to historic preservation and art in public spaces, including the Preservation League of New York State, The Public Art Fund, and the Anonymous Arts Recovery Society.

In 2006, Karp chronicled her adventures in collecting with the publicationIn Flagrante Collecto, published by Harry N. Abrams, which celebrates the odd, arcane, quotidian collectible, as both an object of desire and of cultural anthropology. With the donation of this collection of ephemera to the New-York Historical Society, it is her belief and hope that the public-at-large will be afforded an important brush with material culture, and that museums in general will continue to preserve and serve up these objects to future audiences who will see them with the perspective and clarity that distance affords.

Ivan Karp and OK Harris:

Ivan Karp was an art dealer, author, and American gallerist. Karp was considerably involved in the Photo Realist movement in 1969. He was co-director at the Leo Castelli Gallery between 1959 – 1969, during which time he was instrumental in launching the careers of many renowned pop artists, most notably Andy Warhol, Roy Lichtenstein, Robert Rauschenberg, Tom Wesselmann and John Chamberlain. In 1969 Karp decided to launch his own gallery, OK Harris, which was located on 465 West Broadway and survived from 1969 until June 2014. The establishment of OK Harris as the first gallery on West Broadway made a significant contribution to the development of the SoHo area's fine arts character. OK Harris exhibited contemporary art and photography, and on occasion mounted shows of antiques and collectibles. The gallery's aim was to show significant artwork without prejudice as to the style or materials employed, the sole criteria was innovation of concept and maturity of technique. Karp died on June 28, 2012 at the age of 86, in New York. OK Harris closed its doors in June 2014.

Scope and Content Notes

The Marilynn Gelfman Karp Collection of Ephemera consists of approximately 6.25 linear feet of materials spanning the late 19th to mid 20th centuries. The materials represent an eclectic variety of ephemera in various formats (mostly paper), of once ubiquitous items that were expected to have short-term uses in their time, including trade cards, blotters, cigarette silks, product and dry good labels, greeting cards, postcards, and hairnet packages, among others.

Related Materials

Marilynn Gelfman Karp has also donated additional ephemara objects that are cataloged and housed separately within the New-York Historical Society's Museum collection.

The Bella C. Landauer Collection of Business and Advertising Ephemera ca. 1700-present PR 031

Collection of mainly 19th and 20th century advertising ephemera. Formats in the collection include American trade cards, lottery tickets, handbills, labels, broadsides, calendars, billheads, price lists, advertising fans, and other materials of history and popular culture. Media range from rough woodcuts to chromolithographs.

Arrangement

The 17 series and corresponding subseries reflect Karp's own organization of the collection by format, and in some cases by subject.

Missing Title Series I. Greeting Cards, circa 1925-1945 Series II. Postcards, circa 1906-1955 Series III. Trade Cards, circa 1875-1915 Series IV. Blotters, circa 1890-1955 Series V. Cigarette Silks, circa 1900-1915 Series VI. Needle Books, circa 1870-1955 Series VII. Labels (paper and tin), circa 1875-1955 Series VIII. Pictorial Glassine Snack Bags, circa 1935-1955 Series IX. Hairnets in Packaging, circa 1920s-1967 Series X. Decals, circa 1930-1955 Series XI. World War II Ephemera (various formats), circa 1942-1945 Series XII. Miscellaneous Paper Items, undated Series XIII. Annual Linoleum Pattern Books, 1921-1952 Series XIV. Hairdressing Magazines, 1938-1950 Series XV. Sheet Music, 1842-1948 Series XVI. Photography, circa 1880s-1945 Series XVII. Prints and Drawings, 1930
References

Burns, S. B. (1990). Sleeping beauty: Memorial photography in America. Altadena, CA: Twelvetree Press.

Collecting antique tins. (n.d.). In Collectible Collectibles. Retrieved December 1, 2009, from http://www.collectablecollectables.com/articles.asp

Editorial chit-chat: A new style of net [Electronic version]. (1863, July). Peterson's Magazine, 44(1).

Gartrell, E. (n.d.). More about advertising ephemera and the advertising ephemera collection. In Emergence of Advertising in America: 1850-1920. Retrieved December 1, 2009, from http://library.duke.edu/digitalcollections/eaa/guide/ephemera/

Hagley Museum and Library. (n.d.). Leonard W. Walton printing and packaging collection. In Hagley Museum and Library. Retrieved December 1, 2009, from http://www.hagley.lib.de.us/library/collections/manuscripts/findingaids/Walton_ACC2430.pdf

Heyman, T. T. (1998). Posters American style. New York: National Museum of American Art, Smithsonian Institution.

"Hit Kit" spells post-war music [Electronic version]. (1944, February 19). The Billboard, 13, 17.

Karp, M. G. (2006). In flagrante collecto: Caught in the act of collecting. New York: Abrams.

Laughing Elephant. (n.d.). Luggage Labels. In The Savvy Traveller. Retrieved December 1, 2009, from http://www.thesavvytraveller.com/tools/laughing_elephant/1home.htm

Lester, K., & Oerke, B. V. (2004). Accessories of dress: An illustrated encyclopedia. Mineola, NY: Dover Publications. (Original work published 1940)

New York State Library. (n.d.). Wish you were here: The story of the golden age of picture postcards in the United States. In New York State Education Department. Retrieved December 1, 2009, from http://www.nysl.nysed.gov/msscfa/qc16510ess.htm

Rickards, M. (2000). The encyclopedia of ephemera: A guide to the fragmentary documents of everyday life for the collector, curator, and historian. New York: Routledge.

Rosenberry, M. C. (1944, April). The army music program. Music Educators Journal, 30(5), 18-19, 48-49. Retrieved from JSTOR.

Ruby, J. (1995). Secure the shadow: Death and photography in America. London: The MIT Press.

Sherrow, V. (2006). Encyclopedia of hair: A cultural history. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press.

Simmons, J. (2011). A brief history of decals. In Everything About Ceramic Decals. Retrieved June 2, 2011, from http://www.ceramicdecals.org/History_of_Decals.html

Smithsonian Institution. (n.d.). Greetings from the Smithsonian: A postcard history of the Smithsonian Institution. In Smithsonian Institution Archives. Retrieved December 1, 2009, from http://siarchives.si.edu/history/exhibits/postcard/chronology.htm

Snodgrass, M. E. (2004). Encyclopedia of kitchen history. New York: Fitzroy Dearborn.

T&J Collectibles. (2009). A brief history of ink blotters. In eBay Reviews & Guides. Retrieved December 1, 2009, from http://reviews.ebay.com/A-Brief-History-of-Ink-Blotters_W0QQugidZ10000000010357920

The history of vintage luggage (2001, November 30). In News-Antique. Retrieved December 1, 2009, from http://news-antique.com/?id=781960&keys=luggage-leather-crocodile

Twede, D., & Selke, S. E. (2005). Cartons, crates, and corrugated board: Handbook of paper and wood packaging technology. Lancaster, PA: DEStech Publications, Inc.

Vintage and collectible blotters. (2011, May). In Pendemonium Vintage Writing Collectibles. Retrieved June 7, 2011, from http://www.pendemonium.com/blotters.htm

Wallace, R. (1953, December 21). Please remit [Electronic version]. Life, 42-52.

Cigarette cards Ocean liners International travel House furnishings Hotels. Hatboxes World War, 1914-1918. Hardware Hairstyles Hairdressing Hair dyes Chewing gum Greeting cards Tonics (Medicinal preparations) Free material Linoleum Food -- United States. Telegraph World War, 1939-1945 -- Participation, American Dry-goods -- United States. Decoration and ornament -- Victorian style. Agriculture Household appliances Advertising -- United States. Agricultural machinery Baking Beauty, Personal Beverages -- United States. Cigarettes Cigars Clothing and dress -- United States. Collecting of accounts -- United States. Concessions (Amusements, etc.) Posters. Cosmetics Cruise lines Patent medicines -- United States. Patriotism Patriotism in advertising Penmanship Pins and needles Pinup art Housekeeping Popular music -- United States. Leisure Railroad travel Rationing -- United States. Sewing Snack food industry Theater -- United States. Tobacco -- United States. Tourism Transportation -- United States. Travel. Advertisements. Advertising blotters Calendars. Chromolithography. Postmortem photography Editorial cartoons. Photographs. Travel labels Advertising cards. Stickers Stationery Sheet music. Ration books. Propaganda. Postcards. Picture postcards. Pamphlets. Packaging Needle cases Military maps. Magazines (periodicals). Labels (identifying artifacts) Hairnets Glassine Ephemera. Envelopes Decals Karp, Marilynn Gelfman, 1939- Batchelor, Clarence Daniel, 1888-1977 United States. Army. Field Artillery United States. Army. Signal Corps Series I. Greeting Cards, circa 1925-1945 Historical note

More than any other category of ephemera, greeting cards from past years survive in great numbers, often having been used in scrapbooks, or saved as personal mementos. The greeting card or "message of good will" as a personal form of communication has a long history, but emerged commercially during the 19th century, concurrent with the rise of a new and prosperous leisured middle class, the advent of reliable, efficient postal service, and new forms of mechanization in printing methods that made the mass production of color printing affordable for the first time. In America, the first leading exponent of the greeting card was German lithographer Louis Prang (1824-1909) who is credited as being the first to introduce chromolithography to the production of greeting cards in America. By the early 20th century, the foundations for a full-fledged industry had been laid with the founding of Hallmark (today, the world's largest greeting card company) in 1910. Throughout the 20th century, the variety of card themes and sentiments would evolve dramatically, from traditional annual celebrations to the acknowledgement of almost every experience in everyday life.

Birthday -- Specific Agecirca 1925-194011Birthday -- Specific Relationshipcirca 1925-193512Birthday -- Generalcirca 1925-193513Wedding/Engagementcirca 1925-193514Babycirca 1925-194015Confirmationcirca 1930s16Graduation/Commencementcirca 1920s17Anniversarycirca 1925-193518Bon Voyagecirca 1925-193519Please Writecirca 1920s110Get Wellcirca 1925-1935111Thinking of You1926112Holidays -- Christmascirca 1915113Holidays -- Eastercirca 1940s114Holidays -- Valentinecirca 1920s-1940s115World War IIcirca 1940s116
Series II. Postcards, circa 1906-1955 Historical note

In the United States, the first mailable postcards appeared in 1873. These early "Postal Mailing Cards" were pre-stamped and government issued, until the Private Mailing Card Act of 1898 allowed for the independent production of postcards (called "Private Mailing Cards" until 1901, when the government first permitted privately-issued postcards to use the words "Post Card" on their reverse side). Until 1907, postcards had no "divided backs," as all messages for the addressee were allowed only on the face of the card--often in a designated message box. The advent of Chicago's World's Columbian Exposition in 1893, contributed to the immense popularity of "view cards" (or "picture postcards"), which sparked a postcard-collecting craze throughout the country, reaching its zenith in 1915. Following World War I, the postcard industry (previously dominated by German production) flourished in the United States, with millions of postcards produced, mailed, and collected annually. Today, postcards from the past continue to fascinate us, offering a compelling window into topographical and social history.

Arrangement note

The postcards in this series have been arranged thematically with subject titles assigned by the collector. Place Banner postcards are arranged alphabetically by city.

American Patriotism -- Generalcirca 1910-1976117American Patriotism -- American Flag Incantationsbefore 1920117aAmerican Patriotism -- World War Icirca 1914-1918218American Patriotism -- World War IIcirca 1940-1945219Humor -- World War IIcirca 1940-1945220Humor -- 1940's Girliecirca 1940s221Multiple Choicecirca 1930-1945222Victorian Sentimentscirca 1907-1915223Victorian Sentimentscirca 1907-1915224Victorian Sentimentscirca 1907-1915225Victorian Sentimentscirca 1907-1915226Victorian Sentimentscirca 1907-1915227Trolleyscirca 1913-1977228Trains1904-circa 1970s, bulk after 1960 329Trainscirca 1907-1980s, bulk after 1960330Trainscirca 1960s-1980s331Stations and Waiting Roomscirca 1910-1950, bulk 1940s332Planes and Shipscirca 1910s-1950s333Place Banners (U.S. Cities), A-Ecirca 1910s-1940s, bulk 1910s334Place Banners (U.S. Cities), E-Mcirca 1910-1920335Place Banners (U.S. Cities), M-Pcirca 1910s336Place Banners (U.S. Cities), S-Zcirca 1910s437Birthdaycirca 1910's-1940's18204Holidays (New Years and Valentine's Day)circa 1900's - 1920's18205Namescirca 1900's18206Foldoutcirca 1910's - 1920's18207Generalcirca 1900's18208
Series III. Trade and Trading Cards, circa 1875-1915, 1964Condition note

Many of the trade cards have been glued/pasted to their plastic sleeve; trade card sleeves need to be evaluated to see if they are archivally safe.

Historical note

While the concept of advertising "trade cards" dates back to the 1700s, it was not until the latter part of the 19th century that the development of trade cards gained great popularity in the United States, due in large part to advancements in affordable color printing (chromolithography). In the 1870s, the lithographer and printer Louis Prang was influential in popularizing the idea of cheaply mass-producing such cards for the needs of the advertising trade. Sometimes inserted into packages, they served as an effective means of advertising goods and services (similar to today's business cards), and had the additional appeal of offering the consumer a collectable giveaway item. Trade cards were often produced in a numbered series of related images (such as the Sollers & Co. full set in this collection) that could be incorporated into artistic crafts and scrapbooks. By the beginning of the 20th century, the production of trade cards fell into gradual disuse with the increasing prevalence of advertising in magazines and newspapers.

This series also includes a complete set of John F. Kennedy trading cards, issued by Topps in 1964. The set includes 77 cards with a large black and white photo on the front and a short caption describing the image on the back. Images depict Kennedy as President and as family man, relaxing with his wife Jackie and kids Caroline and John.

Arrangement note

This series of trade cards was received from the collector in three-ring binders and later disbound and rehoused. Both the collector's category titles and order of binder contents have been maintained in the series list below.

Curescirca 1875-1910437Druggistscirca 1875-1915438Vaccinescirca 1875-1915439Publishers, Stationers, and Schoolscirca 1875-1915440Politicalcirca 1875-1915441Tobaccocirca 1875-1915442Gumcirca 1875-1915443Insurancecirca 1875-1915444Soapcirca 1875-1915445Laundry Products (includes starches and dye)circa 1875-1915446See Also

Laundry Products

Hair Dyes and Restorerscirca 1875-1915447Colognescirca 1875-1915448Cosmeticscirca 1875-1915449Foods circa 1875-1915450Clothiers / Dry Goodscirca 1875-1915451Shoescirca 1875-1915452Threadscirca 1875-1915453Various (includes 2 items of theater-related ephemera)circa 1875-1915454Farm Machinery circa 1875-1915455Fertilizers (includes seeds and nurseries)circa 1875-1915456Sewing Machinescirca 1875-1915557Steamship Lines (includes steamboats)circa 1875-1915558Stovescirca 1875-1915559Cleanerscirca 1875-1915560Hardwarecirca 1875-1915561Oil/Gluecirca 1875-1910562Furniture (includes pianos and organs)circa 1875-1915563Various (includes brick presses, sifters, pumps & fire engines, shotgun powder, vehicles)circa 1875-1915564Sollers & Co. Trade Cards (full set)circa 1880565Redeemable Baking Soda Trade Cardscirca 1875-1915566Historical Note

Arm & Hammer Baking Soda, founded in 1846, began inserting trade cards within their packaging in 1888 and remained a popular household collectable for five decades. Issued in 2 sizes (1 7/8" x 3" and 1 1/2" x 2 1/4"), they are especially notable for their sophisticated aesthetics and early promotion of wildlife conservation. Among those included in this collection, are examples from the earliest issued series "Beautiful Birds of America."

Blatz Chewing Gum "Screen Stars" (full set)circa 1920s567John F. Kennedy Trading Cards196418209
Series IV. Blotters, circa 1890-1955 Historical note

With the introduction of the first practical fountain pens during the 1880s, card blotters were a popular and practical novelty giveaway item by many businesses. Once as ubiquitous as today's business cards, advertising blotters stood ever-ready by the home phone, or on the desk, as a reminder of goods and services offered. Their designs (which often featured monthly calendars) ranged from the traditional promotion of retailers, banks, and insurance companies, to risque pinup art. By the 1950s, the increasing popularity of ballpoint pens led to a gradual end to this advertising trend.

Foodcirca 1890s-1940s568Products/Servicescirca 1890s-1940s569Products/Servicescirca 1890s-1940s570Products/Servicescirca 1890s-1940s571Products/Servicescirca 1890s-1940sPinup Girlscirca 1940s673Pinup Girlscirca 1940s-1950s674
Series V. Cigarette Silks, circa 1900-1915 Historical note

A variation of the cigarette card, cigarette silks served as promotional giveaways included in cigarette packaging of the early 20th century. Highly collectable in their time, they were printed in various thematic series (birds, butterflies, actresses, etc.) of 25 or more, instigating repeat purchases of the same brand. Cigarette silks had particular marketing appeal to women, who would often incorporate them into decorative household items, such as quilts, pillows, and table coverings.

Birdscirca 1900-1915675Chickenscirca 1910-1915676Actressescirca 1900-1915677Porcelain (Set of 15)circa 1900-1915678Variouscirca 1900-1915679
Series VI. Needle Books, circa 1870-1955 Historical note

Commercial needle books (or packets) began to be manufactured in the early 19th century, in the Redditch District of central England. By the mid 19th century, needle-making machinery had fully mechanized production, and needle book graphics became increasingly elaborate. Like trade cards, they served as portable forms of advertising for various goods and services, often emphasizing domestic and travel-related imagery.

Needle Bookscirca 1870-1925680Needle Bookscirca 1910s-1950s683Needle Bookscirca 1920s-1950s681Needle Bookscirca 1920s-1950s682
Series VII. Labels (paper and tin), circa 1875-1955 Historical note

Product Labels: While the practice of utilizing printed labels is as old as printing itself, modern package design did not begin to evolve until after the Civil War when advancements in printing, paper production and chromolithography made the affordable mass production of elaborate and colorful designs possible. By 1900, chromolithography would reach its zenith, prompting some to call the latter half of the 19th century the period of "chromo-civilization." Included here are various examples of how printed labels were utilized for packaging, identification, and instructive purposes, displaying a fascinating compendium of design styles and influences reflective of their eras.

Hatbox Labels: The modern hatbox (a derivative of the Victorian bandbox) was a frequent item found among the possessions of both men and women well into the mid 20th century, when the wearing of hats was customary for all occasions. As a valued accessory, it was a standard practice for hats to be sold with hatboxes for their protection. These boxes (commonly made of sturdy pasteboard and decorative paper), came adorned with an elegant label displaying the name of the manufacturer or department store where purchased, along with a convenient carrying strap. In this way, the box transcended its practicality by serving as a portable form of status and advertising for both the owner and the retailer. Perhaps because of their usefulness as physical containers, attractive packaging, and the sentiment attached to them as objects of value, many hatboxes have survived among families over several generations and continue to be utilized and collected for a variety of purposes.

Luggage Labels: Luggage labels, with their elegant graphics featuring exotic locals, luxury modes of transportation, and grand hotels, bear witness to the "Golden Age of Travel," a period which spanned the late 19th century to the outbreak of World War II. Affixed to luggage by railroad companies, steamships, hotels, and resorts, they provided the practical means of identifying luggage destination, but also served as romantic advertisements for the destinations themselves. For the traveler, such labels were a sign of personality, taste and status, and over the course of years, their accumulation provided an autobiographical history of places visited, hotels stayed in, and transportation used. A remnant of past places and times, they beautifully evoke the spirit of this bygone era.

Please Remit: The economic prosperity of the 1950s, spurred by the growth of commercial advertising and the introduction of the modern credit card, gave way to unprecedented consumer optimism and spending, as more and more Americans embraced the ease and convenience of "putting it on plastic" as a way to pay for purchases. For many collection agencies, a useful aid in collecting debts was the "Please Remit" notice, inserted into billing envelopes as a way to cajole payments from debtors after two or three months of unpaid bills. Today these "friendly reminders" provide a nostalgic look at the mores and manners of an earlier time.

Historical NoteWhile the practice of utilizing printed labels is as old as printing itself, modern package design did not begin to evolve until after the Civil War when advancements in printing, paper production and chromolithography made the affordable mass production of elaborate and colorful designs possible. By 1900, chromolithography would reach its zenith, prompting some to call the latter half of the nineteenth century the period of "chromo-civilization." Included here are various examples of how printed labels were utilized for packaging, identification, and instructive purposes, displaying a fascinating compendium of design styles and influences reflective of their eras.
Product Labels -- Groomingcirca 1900-1935784Product Labels -- Food and Beverage; Household (includes booklet of baking labels)circa 1900s-1940s785Product Labels -- Olive Oil (printed tin)circa 1875-1955786Product Labels -- RXcirca 1920s-1950s787Hatbox Labelscirca 1900s-1950s788789790See The Pyramids (luggage labels)circa 1900s-1940s791Wire It (telegraph poster stamps, labels and postcards)circa 1930s-1950s792Please Remitundated793
Series VIII. Pictorial Glassine Snack Bags, circa 1935-1955 Historical note

Glassine paper, a smooth and semitransparent glazed, greaseproof and leak resistant product, was developed in 1905 and soon became adapted as an ideal packaging material for fast foods and snacks. In 1908, the Milwaukee Printing Company developed a method of printing on glassine paper, and these printed bags and wrappers (often with lively typeface and engaging graphics) became a standard feature at American concession stands, for such fare as hamburgers, peanuts, and ice cream bars.

Pictorial Glassine Snack Bagscirca 1930s-1950s794
Series IX. Hairnets in Packaging, circa 1920s-1967Historical Note

Hairnets (once known as "cauls," or "snoods") have been used in various forms since ancient times, serving both utilitarian and decorative purposes. While initially constructed of materials such as silk and ribbon, the first commercial reference to hairnets made of human hair appeared in July, 1863, as an editorial feature in Peterson's Magazine (Vol. XLIV, No. 1). By 1914, the hairnet was a common hair accessory for women, and over the ensuing years became increasingly promoted for use in the nursing and food service professions. The emancipated bobbed hairstyles of the 1920s brought a temporary decline in the use of hairnets. Their popularity was revived by World War II, a period which saw the return of longer hairstyles and the entrance of women into the industrial workforce. Further refinements to hairnet manufacturing included the introduction of Du Pont's multifilament nylon yarn in 1940, offering unprecedented resiliency and wear.

Hairnets in Packagingcirca 1910s-1960s795Hairnets in Packagingcirca 1940s-1960s796
Series X. Decals, circa 1930-1955 Historical note

The invention of transfer decals, attributed to the French engraver Simon François Ravenet (a process he coined "decalquer" or "to copy by tracing"), originated in England in the mid 18th century, initially as a method by which to transfer decorative designs to pottery using engraved copper plates and tissue paper. Over the course of the 19th century, a variety of advancements in technology such as lithography, the paper making machine, and the invention of duplex paper, made the affordable mass production of decals possible. The introduction of silk screen printing in the early 20th century allowed a top-coat or cover-coat of lacquer to be added to the decal design (so-called water-mount decals) which could be transferred when wet.

Introduced to the United States by approximately 1865, the demand for decals reached its zenith in the 1870s resulting in what came to be called "decalcomania." Decals remain popular today offering an inexpensive way to decorate and enhance a variety of objects and surfaces.

Star Cal -- Favorite Starscirca 1930-1955897Children/Nurserycirca 1930-1955898Seashorecirca 1930-1955899Mermaids and Swanscirca 1930-19558100Birdscirca 1930-19558101Flamingoscirca 1930-19558102Flowers and Fruitcirca 1930-19558103Dishescirca 1930-19558104Serverscirca 1930-19558105Pinup Artcirca 1930-19558106Hollandcirca 1930-19558107Mexicocirca 1930-19558108Travel Souvenirscirca 1930-19558109Signscirca 1940-19558110Variouscirca 1930-19558111Glassine Decal Packagingcirca 1930-19558112Cockamamies and skin-transfers [tattoos]circa 1940's - 1950's18210Impko miniature decalscirca 1950's - 1960's2018A216
Series XI. World War II Ephemera (various formats), circa 1942-1945See also

Greeting Cards, Postcards, and Sheet Music

Historical note

Ration Books and OPA Points: In August, 1941, President D. Roosevelt created the Office of Price Administration (OPA) in order to regulate both the purchase and cost of consumer goods during a period of severely limited imports and wartime shortages. By the spring of 1942, the first of 4 series of War Ration Books and stamps or "points" were issued to each American family. The program served as a way to promote the "fair share of certain goods made short by war," and carefully control the amount of foods, necessities, and luxuries any one person could buy. For the average citizen, such daily sacrifice represented a challenging but essential and patriotic contribution to the American war effort.

Army Navy Hit Kit Songs: In 1941, a Sub-Committee on Music was established by the Joint Army and Navy Committee on Welfare and Recreation to advise the Army, Navy, and Marine Corps on matters relating to musical activities and entertainment for servicemen both in and outside military camps and reservations from 1941-1946. A popular part of this program began in 1943 with the monthly issuing of pamphlet-size songbooks called "Army Navy Hit Kits" containing the lyrics and music of popular songs of the period, including both "Hit Parade" and patriotic-themed songs. Important morale boosters during the war years, Hit Kit pamphlets, issued by the War Department's Special Services Division, were available only to military personnel and not for sale to the general public.

U.S. War Department Photographs: 47 linen-backed captioned training photographs (from a pre-World War II US War Department Federal Binder) by US Army Signal Corps of US Field Artillery Pack Units (4th, 97th, 98th and 99th Battalions), showing training for combat at US Bases in 1941-1942.

Smilin' Jack Bubblegum Cards: Full, uncut set of 128 Smilin' Jack bubblegum cards with "Buy War Bonds & Stamps for Victory" on verso. This set is based on the 1943 movie serial, and the aviation comic strip (also 1943).

Posters: During World War II, American government officials successfully harnessed the use of propaganda through the poster medium in an effort to mobilize the nation towards a united and urgent support for the war effort and American victory. A major function of the Office of War Information (OWI), created in 1942, was responsibility for controlling the content and imagery of war posters, and ensuring their monthly distribution and promotion across the nation. Drawing from the powerful and persuasive stylistic conventions of the advertising industry, American home front posters embraced American consciousness with themes that emphasized the nature of the enemy, the nature of the allies, the need to work, fight, and sacrifice, and the need to protect the principles of American freedom.

See also: Greeting Cards, Postcards, Sheet Music, and Posters

Ration Books and OPA Points: In August, 1941, President D. Roosevelt created the Office Price Administration (O.P.A.) in order to regulate both the purchase and cost of consumer goods during a period of severely limited imports and wartime shortages. By the spring of 1942, the first of 4 series of War Ration Books and stamps or "points" were issued to each American family. The program served as a way to promote the "fair share of certain goods made short by war," and carefully control the amount of foods, necessities, and luxuries any one person could buy. For the average citizen, such daily sacrifice represented a challenging but essential and patriotic contribution to the American war effort.

Army Navy Hit Kit Songs: In 1941, a Sub-committee on Music was established by the Joint Army and Navy Committee on Welfare and Recreation to advise the Army, Navy, and Marine Corps on matters relating to musical activities and entertainment for servicemen both in and outside military camps and reservations from 1941-1946. A popular part of this program began in 1943 with the monthly issuing of pamphlet-size songbooks called "Army Hit Kits" containing the lyrics and music of popular songs of the period, including both "Hit Parade" and patriotic-themed songs. Important moral boosters during the war years, Hit Kit pamphlets, issued by the War Department's Special Services Division, were available only to military personnel and not for sale to the general public.

Photographs: 47 linen-backed captioned training photographs (from a pre-WWII US War Department Federal Binder), by US Army Signal Corps of US Field Artillery Pack Units (4th, 97th, 98th and 99th Battalions), showing training for combat at US Bases in 1941-1942.

Smilin' Jack Bubblegum Cards: Full, uncut set of 121 Smilin' Jack bubble gum cards, Buy War Bonds & Stamps for Victory, based on the 1943 movie serial, and the aviation comic strip (also 1943).

Ration Books And OPA Pointscirca 1940s8113Victory Stationarycirca 1940s8114Army Navy Hit Kit Songs 19448115Wartime Mapscirca 1940s8116Weapons for Victory Flyerscirca 1940s8117Smilin' Jack Bubblegum Cards (full set)1943Flat File117aWorld War II - Variouscirca 1940s8118U.S. War Department Photographs1941-19428119U.S. War Department Photographs1941-19428120U.S. War Department Photographs1941-19428121U.S. War Department Photographs1941-19429122Post World War II (American market) -- American Japanese Holiday Coloring and Talking Book circa 1950s-1960s9123Posters1942-1943Flat File197Field manual for first aid; War Injuries pamphlets1943-194419211Fighting Yanks Around the World by Thomas Penfield1943-194419212Low on the War, A Cartoon Commentary of the Years 1939-1941194119213
Series XII. Miscellaneous Paper Items, undatedCigar Pouch [depicts woman dumping chamber bowl out of window onto gentleman below]circa 188019215Lost Pet Noticesundated9124Series XIII. Annual Linoleum Pattern Books, 1921-1952Historical note

The invention of linoleum, a name coined from the Latin words "linum" (flax) and "oleum" (oil), was patented in England in 1860 by Frederik Walton, a rubber manufacturer, who founded the first linoleum company in 1864. By the end of the decade, linoleum was introduced to the United States, with the first US-based production beginning in 1874. Affordable, attractive, and resilient, as well as naturally bactericidal, flame and scratch-resistant, linoleum became a favorite surface material in American homes and hospitals, offering vibrant colors and myriad of creative patterns that included imitation marble, stone, mosaics, and faux carpeting designs. Lighter gauge linoleum was also created for use on walls, including Lincrusta (Lincrusta-Walton), Linowall (Armstrong), and Sealex Wall-Covering and Congowall (Congoleum).

By the 1930s, Armstrong was the largest manufacturer of linoleum in the America, offering consumers hundreds of patterns from which to choose. Linoleum manufacturers published "pattern books" to advertise their designs, and offered homemakers free booklets with illustrated advice for incorporating linoleum into their interior decorating schemes.

In the years following World War II, the introduction of cheaper PVC (vinyl) flooring brought the use of linoleum into sharp decline. Today, patterned linoleum is enjoying renewed popularity as a "green" recyclable flooring alternative that is environmentally friendly and biodegradable.

Armstrong1923-19289125Armstrong1921-19309126Armstrong1930-19319127Armstrong19369128Armstrong19379129Armstrong194410130Armstrong194910131Armstrong195210132Armstrong195310133Certain-teed192810134Sloane192810135Sloane195210136Congoleum Nairn1924-194310137Pabco1941-194911138Bird1941-194611139Floor and Wall Coverings: Prepared Especially for Home Study195211140Photographs of Window Displayscirca 1920s11141Armstrong- Linoleum Frame11.A
Series XIV. Magazines, 1938-1960Subseries XIV.1: Hairdressing Magazines, 1938-1950Modern Beauty Shop1938 December 11142Modern Beauty Shop1939 January (Sections I & II)11143Modern Beauty Shop1939 May (Section II)11144Modern Beauty Shop1939 June11145Modern Beauty Shop1939 October11146Modern Beauty Shop1939 December11147Modern Beauty Shop1940 April12148Modern Beauty Shop1940 July12149Modern Beauty Shop1940 August12150Modern Beauty Shop1940 November12151Modern Beauty Shop1941 November12152Modern Beauty Shop1942 December12153Modern Beauty Shop1943 January (Section I)12154Modern Beauty Shop1943 December12155Modern Beauty Shop1945 December12156Modern Beauty Shop1946 January12157Modern Beauty Shop1946 April12158Modern Beauty Shop1946 December12159Modern Beauty Shop1947 January 12160The American Hairdresser1939 June12161The American Hairdresser1939 December12162The American Hairdresser1940 December13163The American Hairdresser1941 December13164The American Hairdresser1942 December13165The American Hairdresser1946 January13166The American Hairdresser1946 December13167The American Hairdresser1948 December13168The American Hairdresser1949 December13169The American Hairdresser1950 January13170Subseries XIV.2: Nudist magazines, 1947-1960Sunshine & Health1947 May, 1959 April, 1960 December19214Sunbathing for Health1948 June, 1951 July19214Natural Herald1950 December - 1951 March, 195319214Health & Efficiency195119214Nudisme et Beaute1951 September - October19214Tidlosa195719214Sun and Health1960 April19214Nudism explained! undated19214Series XV. Sheet Music, 1842-1948 Historical note

The sheet music found in this collection spans over a century, from 1842-1948. Today, sheet music is a particularly valuable form of ephemera, with its text and pictorial covers offering keen insight into contemporary pastimes and the societal and racial attitudes of their eras. In the 1840s, such pictorial covers were characterized by simple black and white designs often incorporating ornamental scrollwork and simple lettering, and were commonly reproduced with woodcuts, steel engraving, and lithography. Advances in color printing technology (chromolithography) by the end of the 19th century brought about an increased focus on illustrated covers, which became a successful vehicle for commercial artists. As the Industrial Revolution gave rise to prosperity and the growth of the middle classes, Americans found themselves with increased time for leisure activities, which included the home piano as a popular form of entertainment. In America, the production and popularity of sheet music would reach its heyday in the late 19th century, with the rise of Tin Pan Alley and the American music publishing industry. Over the ensuing decades, demand for sheet music would gradually lessen in importance with the introduction of the phonograph and radio, and the advent of the record industry.

Arrangement note

The thematic groups in the series list below were previously arranged by the collector, with category titles assigned by N-YHS. The remaining sheet music in the collection has been arranged by decade.

New York1896-193514171African-American1860-191814172Patriotic1898-194114173Patriotic1898-194114174Patriotic1898-194114175Patriotic1898-194114176Various subjects1800s15177Various subjects1900-190915178Various subjects1900-190915179Various subjects1900-190915180Various subjects1900-190915181Various subjects1900-190915182Various subjects1900-190915183Various subjects1900-190915184Various subjects1910-191916185Various subjects1910-191916186Various subjects1910-191916187Various subjects1910-191916188Various subjects1921-192516189Various subjects1926-192916190Various subjects1932-193416191Various subjects1935-193916192Various subjects1940-194816193
Series XVI. Photography, circa 1880s-1945circa 1880s-1945See also

World War II Ephemera (various formats)

Historic note

Postmortem Photography: More than any other form of pictorial representation, photography is inextricably tied to remembrance and its invention forever changed the way we relate with and document our world. Following closely on the heels of photography's introduction was the practice of postmortem photography, which, after 1841, spread across America becoming prevalent in both urban and rural areas, and remained culturally embraced well into the early 20th century. From 1840-1880, the majority of postmortem images were taken within the private home, where the body was posed naturalistically. While sometimes depicted as if alive and awake, very often the deceased were shown as if to be sleeping peacefully rather than dead, an illusion that gently denies death, while at the same time serving to beautify, soften, and romanticize it. By the latter 19th century, with the rise of the funeral and embalming industries, straightforward full length "casket photographs" became very popular, focusing less on the individual, and more on the social aspect of the funeral event or funeral parlor setting (where the corpse was often upstaged by profuse floral arrangements).

Today these images serve as culturally bound artifacts that provide a trace of the sociocultural importance that such image making had for their producers and users. Photographs of a deceased loved one functioned as icons, substitutes, and reminders of loss. Most importantly, they captured memory by recording for posterity a lasting image of the deceased.

Salamagundi Club, NYC, May 5, 1945: Mounted black and white photograph of the 75th Anniversary Special Exhibition Dinner of the Salamagundi Club, which includes 55 well-known New York artists and their works hanging on the background walls. The Salamagundi Club (also known as the Salamagundi Art Club) was founded in 1871 and still remains active today with (as of 2009) over 800 members.

Gansevoort and West Washington Markets, NYC, 1903: Embossed, mounted black and white photograph of the Gansevoort and West Washington Markets, showing a multitude of vendors, wagons, goods, and commercial oyster bars.

NYC: Salamagundi Club1945Flat File194NYC: Gansevoort and West Washington Markets1903Flat File194Postmortem Photographscirca 1880-1920Flat File195
Series XVII. Prints and Drawings, 19301930New York Post Cartoon by Clarence Batchelor (3-color final drawing)1930Flat File196Series XVIII. Miscellaneous publications relating to New York City16Magazine- New York Latest Collections: spring and summer 192716194Interborough Rapid Transit: The Subway in New York16195Series XIX. Ivan Karp- OK HarrisScope and Contents

This series consists of a range of flyers and advertisment postcards outlining upcoming exhibitions at OK Harris, and a variety of prints and posters exhibited at O.K. Harris from the establishment of the gallery in 1969 to its close in 2014.

Subseries XIX.1 OK Harris flyersOK Harris flyers1970-197413170.AOK Harris exhibition flyers1975-197913170.BOK Harris flyers1986, 1988, 198913170.CSubseries XIX.2 OK Harris advertisement postcards Arrangement

The dates of these advertisement postcards range from 1969, when OK Harris was founded, until its close in 2014. These files have been arranged chronologically and are separated by dividers. As a result of the requirements, some files have been removed from box 17 and are stored in document sized folders held box 13.

OK Harris Advertisement Postcards1969-20142017OK Harris Advertisement Postcards1969-197313170.DOK Harris Advertisement Postcards1974-197713170.EOK Harris Advertisement Postcards1977-201213170.F
Subseries XIX.3. O.K. Harris exhibition prints and postersScope and Contents

Consists of a variety of prints and posters that were exhibited and relate to exhibits held at O.K. Harris.

Radical Realism I (6 prints)Flat File198Scope and Contents

Includes 6 signed and numbered lithographed prints from the exhibition Radical Realism I presented to O.K. Harris by the Mother Lode Editions and Hundred Acres Gallery. The names of the artists and their prints are as follows: John Clem Clarke, Bacchanal; Richard Estes, Cafeteria; Ralph Goings, Paul's Corner; Richard McClean, Native Dancer; Malcolm Morley, Rhine Chataeu; and John Salt, Arrested Vehicle in Red Seats.

Baeder, John (3 prints)Flat File199Scope and Contents

Includes 3 prints by John Baeder. The names of these prints are as follows: Big Boy Bop (1985) signed; Scotts's Brige Diner (1975); Lan Ting NYC signed.

Bechtle, Robert (1 print)Flat File199Scope and Contents

Includes 1 signed untitled print by John Baeder

Cone, Davis (3 prints) Flat File200Scope and Contents

Includes 3 signed prints by Davis Cone. The names of these prints are as follows: Criterion Center (1988); Greenwich; and Orleans

Kacere, John (3 prints)Flat File200Scope and Contents

Includes 3 prints by John Kacere. The names of these prints are as follows: White Satin Rear View (1973), signed; Greta (1982); Greta (1982), poster.

Goings, Ralph (6 prints)Flat File201Scope and Contents

Includes 6 prints by Ralph Goings. The names of these prints are as follows: Still Life With Creamer (1985); Hot Sauce, signed; Ralph's Diner; Cream Pie; Kentucky Fried Chicken, signed; and Catsup.

McClean, Richard (2 prints) Flat File202Scope and Contents

Includes 2 prints by Richard McClean. The names of these prints are as follows: Spring Doe; Man Holding Reins of White Horse.

Salt, John (4 prints)Flat File202Scope and Contents

Includes 4 prints by Davis Cone. The names of these prints are as follows: Blue Car/Red Car Upper Right; White Pontiac, signed; Blue Car Interior, signed; and Galerie Delta Rotterdam (1981), poster.

Variety of posters relating to O.K. Harris exhibitionsFlat File203Scope and Contents

Includes a variety of posters and prints from various exhibitions. The names of the artist and their prints are as follows: Oscar Lakeman; Greg Constantine (1987), poster; Ivan C. Karp, photographs from the 40s and 50s, poster; Ivan C, Karp, The Face of Contemporary Art: A Celebration of 40 Years of Fine Arts Dealership, poster; John Fawcett, Walt Disney's Comics and Stories, signed; John Fawcett, Drawings and Comic Books, signed; Keung Szeto (1988), Hong Kong Institute for Promotion of Chinese Culture, poster; H.N. Han, signed; Jonathan Janson, Oz (1990); Duane Hanson, Randers Kunstmuseum: Amerikanske Realister, poster.