Description:  This Vintage Victorian Trade Card for "Lautz Bros. & Co. Marseilles White Laundry Soap" has a colored picture of a girl wearing a white apron and a boy handing her a potted rose bush. At the bottom of card it says "Unequaled for washing flannels." On back of card is a place to right a grocery list with the cost. Someone did right a list for 1 eggs .24 cents and 6 sugars for 45 cents for a total of 69 cents. 

Brief History of Trade Cards by Ben Crane

Over a century ago, during the Victorian era, one of the favorite pastimes was collecting small, illustrated advertising cards that we now call trade cards. These trade cards evolved from cards of the late 1700s used by tradesmen to advertise their services. Although examples from the early 1800s exist, it was not until the spread of color lithography in the 1870s that trade cards became plentiful. By the 1880s, trade cards had become a major way of advertising America's products and services, and a trip to the store usually brought back some of these attractive, brightly-colored cards to be pasted into a scrapbook. Some of the products most heavily advertised by trade cards were in the categories of: medicine, food, tobacco, clothing, household, sewing, stoves, and farm. The popularity of trade cards peaked around 1890, and then almost completely faded by the early 1900s when other forms of advertising in color, such as magazines, became more cost effective. Although trade card collecting began over 100 years ago, today's strong interest in trade cards began relatively recently. Trade cards that were bought for ten cents thirty years ago frequently bring ten dollars or more in today's market--and some have even sold for over a thousand dollars.

 Measures 2-3/4" W x 4-1/4" H. .

Condition: Corners and edges are worn.

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06/2015

Nancy