The Roots of The Business Card, It's Older Than You Think!

Friday, July 9, 2010

Goethe visiting cardImage via Wikipedia=>  Goethe Visiting Card
"The Roots of The Business Card, It's Older Than You Think!" Well it's Older than I thought it was, and I have been collecting and reading about Vintage Ephemera for years, then I Stumbled Upon this Article

Few people realize that the business card has its roots all the way back to the 16th Century in Europe (and the 15th Century in China).
In Renssance Europe, the servants of aristocrats would present “visiting cards” to the servants of other aristocrats, the first step in any formal social interaction between the wealthy and powerful.
historycards_theexpert_350x205In Victorian England, the “calling card” was absolutely essential in polite society. When calling on someone, even a close friend, the visitor provided a card printed with their name. People collected these cards as a way of keeping track of friends who visited, so they would know to whom they were socially required to pay a return visit. It was also a way of screening out unwanted visitors — once presented with a card, the host could simply refuse to admit the person, without having to deal with them face-to-face. (When the telephone was first introduced in England, there was an uproar because now anyone could talk to you without providing a card, or without following any of      the other countless rules. click here to read the entire article 

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From the 19th Century: dress goodsglue manufacturercarte de visite of John Wilkes Booth.


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Victorian trade card; “scrap” calling card (the embossed section lifts to reveal the name); fully decorated, ethnically-insensitive calling card.



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