World's Most Curious Ephemera

"QUANTUM SHOT" #366
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Pieces of Paper that Intrigue & Inspire

It's hard to put a value on certain printed artifacts of our culture, the flotsam and jetsam that we encounter every day and sometimes even hate with a passion (like tickets, receipts, statements, etc).

For all we know, what's considered passe and banal today can achieve highest collectible value tomorrow. It's hard to gauge the sensibilities, or even trends, of our successors. They might disregard old books and postcards, but go squirrely nuts about old grocery receipts, or product bar codes (perhaps containing secret code plans for fledging worldwide revolution by some sinister AI...)

Japanese Electronics Catalog, 1971:



We like to flip through the pages of vintage ephemera and fancy scrapbooking, possibly measuring how much we've changed ourselves and how much our own world grew different from that of our ancestors. For this very reason, I believe, the sites and collection that preserve such seemingly little-valued printed material deserve respect - and may score big when the tide of society and culture changes.

Miniature television set, 1940 (?)




The World of Old Paper

Marty Weil from an excellent blog Ephemera explores the "world of old paper" and regularly comes up with items worth a second look.
Here are a few, admitted into his "hit parade" of World's Coolest Ephemera:

1921 Multiple Choice Correspondence Card

The ladies (or "dazed" guys) who found it hard to correspond with their love interests in the midst of the intense vacation, could use this handy tool to make up their mind - if they feel "OKEH", or not.
(click to enlarge)


(image credit: Rachel)


1950s Parisian strip club flyer

This flyer also has another side, which, "if shown in full glory, might be too salacious for ephemera regulars."


(Submitted by Sarah Norris)


World War II hand-held fan (with the Pledge of Allegiance)

For a wartime lady, a fold-out fan to disperse the gun smoke and achieve some elegance - all the torpedoes be damned.


(Submitted by Owen Tew)


Porno Movie Waiver from 1969
(click to enlarge)

You could not enter the theater to see some weird "Infrasexum" movie, if you did not sign this form (which asks for your address, too!) -


(Submitted by T. Mike Childs)

If you read the fine print, this flyer also has the audacity to declare that by signing it you throw your full support to the adult industry, their production and distribution of such films in your community - a moral waiver, as well as a political one - all for a single pen stroke and a price of one admission.


One Good Turn Deserves Another

From the collection of Malcolm Warrington comes this culinary reversal of roles:

Mice preparing to eat a cat:



Turkeys preparing to roast a chef:



We heartily recommend Ephemera as a one-stop destination for all things printed and vintage, and will continue to feature some of the coolest stuff appearing there. Marty Weil says: "I'm on a mission to explore the world of old paper, but truly, I am are exploring the world through old paper. Meaning, I'm on a journey to both showcase interesting ephemera and the small histories suggested by these remarkable and wonderful pieces of raw, unedited history, and at the same time, bringing my own personal experiences to bear on the topic at hand".


The World's Rarest Signature

According to Luxist.com this honor goes to the autograph of William Shakespeare:



Every occasion of this signature, if found, will go for a cool $3 million.


Barf Bags (Air Sickness Bags) Collection

Steve Silberberg has been collecting barf bags for more than 25 years (see interview with him at Ephemera), and has some politically correct/incorrect items -



Hilary Clinton and George W. Bush barf bags present a hard choice for those politically indecisive in a moment of barfing weakness.


Medicine Atlas not for the faint of heart

Courtesy of National Library of Medicine comes this freaky, but strangely fascinating Medicine Atlas from Germany in the early 17th century:




(images credit: NLofM)

Human anatomy too disturbing for you?
Feast your eyes on Basilius (Basil) Besler's (1561–1629) Wunderkammern (Cabinet of Curiosities) - read more here
(click to enlarge)





You can see McDonalds' hamburger in the middle of this page:






Gorgeous French Postcards from "La Belle Epoch":

Especially good find for the coming Valentine, the Tallulah website offers extensive collection of French vintage art and photos, many of "Love & Romance" variety (some might be nsfw):



Winged ladies -



Among the especially rare postcards are the so-called "satirical metamorphic" images:
Portraits of famous political figures made up of nude women and romancing couples!



Read an interview with Tallulah's web master here


Other amazing printed bits & pieces

UFO Turkmenistan stamp (?!)




Ivy Pete & his Limbo-maniacs record sleeve cover:




Some of the old pulp art was simply beyond thrilling:








Hmmm.... vintage ad for Springmaid Fabrics. Kill two birds with one stone:


(via found in mom's basement)


Early Vegas postcards site is a treasure-trove of sorts:


(image credit: Erik Wunstell)

Early Detroit:




and Early Disneyland (see here)








(image credit: davelandweb)


Vintage motels cards collection :




Computer: "How it Works" - book from 1971 on-line here
(check out the SMALL digital computer, designed for a businessman)



However, computer-related "ephemera" deserves its own article.

In conclusion, I am going to give you a link to Flickr Vintage Postcard Pool - one can spend days there...

CONTINUE TO NEXT PART! ->

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Category: Weird,Vintage
Related Posts: Ladies & Robots, Most Unusual Books

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