Folk Art Postcard: "Say, the Big Black Rooster to the Little Brown Hen, ..."
$US 10.00

Folk Art Postcard: "Say, the Big Black Rooster to the Little Brown Hen, ..."

Original brown leather folk art postcard. Postmarked twice but date is partially obscured, circa 1907. The location of one of the postmarks is Portland, Oregon. 5 1/4 x 3 1/2." Title printed on the front. Tipped-in red stamp on back. Postcard is used. Postcard is very clean and intact. Slight age and surface wear. Parts of the stamp are missing. Handwriting on back is faded. A Very Good copy. This leather postcard shows a printed ditty on the front with an illustration of a rooster and a hen and her chicks. The rooster complains to the hen that she hasn't laid an egg in a while and she replies to him, "You don't Come Around as often as You 'Us'd ter.'" Leather postcards were first made in 1903. Most were made of deer hide and featured period humor of the day. Many featured text and illustrations that were etched into the surface via pyrography. Pyrography is an etching process that involves the use of a heated instrument such as a poker. After the etching process, color ink might have been applied to the leather. Some of the leather postcards included holes along their edges so they could be stitched together to form pillows and wall hangings. Leather postcards remained popular until about 1907 or 1909 when the United States Postal Service (USPS) banned them because they could not be processed in their sorting machines. The heyday of leather postcards ended about 1915 but circulation continued. For example, people found workarounds such as sending the leather postcards in envelopes. Later, the USPS updated their sorting machines so they could handle the leather material of the postcards. Although leather postcards never achieved the same level of popularity after 1915 as they did in their heyday, they can still occasionally be found in souvenir shops and the like to this day.. Postcard. Book Condition: Collectible-Very Good. Binding: No Binding

Stock number: 023161.

Bookseller's details and sales conditions: Barry Cassidy Rare Books

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