home

History of Christmas Cards

georgebuday.jpg

For my weekly post on decorative arts, I thought I’d write about material culture and the history of card writing and of Christmas cards in particular, since I finished sending mine (shown here) just last week! I’m interested in the study of “material culture” since it explores the relationship between artifacts and society. Christmas cards are certainly a cultural artifact, reflecting our collective interests, decorative tastes, social aspirations and beliefs.

This post was prompted by coming across George Buday’s The History of Christmas Cards when I popped in to Heights Books this afternoon. It is my favorite bookstore, the place I go when Tim’s out of town, when I’m lonely, killing time, or looking to get lost in the world of ideas. It was here that I discovered Japanese gardening at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden, that interior decorating (something I had previously held in some contempt) could be about making were you live home, and fed my obsession with stamps.

christmas card.jpg

Firstchristmascard.jpg

The “first” christmas card was designed by John Callcott Horsley, an English designer, in the 1840s.

A quick comparison of my Christmas card to the one of the first commercial cards made in England in the 1840s shows both similarities (a non-religious image and greeting) and differences (my card is much more abstract, whereas the earlier card shows images of Dickensian poverty, my card is personalized, and printed by hand). More on material culture at a later date!

2 Responses to “History of Christmas Cards”

  1. Josie
    January 18th, 2007 23:17
    1

    I love your Christmas card! I got so many generic cards this year - all those photos of perfect babies and smiling families are nice but all the same! Your card is so cheery and clever!

  2. JT
    January 19th, 2007 00:13
    2

    The Heights bookstore is totally great - I always find something I never expected there.

Leave a Reply

This entry was posted on Monday, January 15th, 2007 at 12:00 pm and is filed under Design History. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

Last 10 Posts

  • If you can’t buy it, blog it!
  • When Simple is Best
  • Dinner in the garden, please
  • Good Morning Garden
  • Vintage Find: Japanese Design Manuals
  • Delicious Kitchen
  • Pink Bedroom Delight
  • Inspiration in Vintage Books
  • Wild is Wonderful
  • Inspiration: Mantelscapes
  • = More Links! =