-40%

Centennial American Tea Company Antique Victorian Period Trade Card VTC Litho

$ 6.6

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
  • Restocking Fee: No
  • Condition: As shown in image(s) and described in the listing.
  • Type of Advertising: VTC
  • Modified Item: No
  • Theme: Coffee & Tea
  • Item must be returned within: 30 Days
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • Date of Creation: 1880-1889
  • Color: Multi-color
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Brand: Centennial American Tea Company

    Description

    ITEM
    :
    Up for sale is this nice Victorian Trade Card VTC, for Centennial American Tea Company, 49 Vesey Street, New York and marked as card No. 399. Measures about 5 1/2 by 7 5/8 inches, some paper and glue marks on the back from being removed from a scrapbook, small corner creases, a few small tears on the bottom edge.
    SHIPPING
    : All buyers agree to pay calculated shipping charges. We will gladly combine shipments to help save you postage. We ask that PAYPAL payments are also paid in ONE transfer. Payment is expected in 21-days. Thank you! NOTE: Some images are enlarged to show clarity and details.
    HISTORY:
    Victorian trade cards are illustrated business advertising cards from the 19th Century. Typically printed in multiple colors, these cards were freely distributed to promote goods and services through images and messages designed to be so informative, so clever, or so attractive that consumers would have a hard time throwing the ad away. The quality of Victorian trade card illustrations can range from crude black and white comic sketches to the breathtakingly beautiful life-like chromolithographs printed using 12 or more colors of ink. Generally speaking, Victorian trade cards are approximately 3 x 5 inches, and most date between 1876 and 1901.  Cards from that period with only printed text and no illustrations are usually considered “Business Cards,” or handbills if printed on thin paper and larger than a postcard. Collectors often use the term “trade card” loosely, allowing the genre to include advertising items not strictly “cards” in the usual sense.  For example, while MOST Victorian trade cards are similar to undersized postcards in size and shape, some trade cards can be as tiny as 1 x 2 inches, or as large as 5 x 9 inches.  (Larger cards were more often used as “Display Cards” or “Counter Cards,” so they fall into the category of cardboard dealer signs, as opposed to the mass-produced free trade cards for consumers).