-40%
Segovia El Acueducto 1907 COLLOTYPE PC by Fototipia de Hauser & Menet UNUSED
$ 1.82
- Description
- Size Guide
Description
Welcome to Bobbie Skye’s Variety Shoppe!Curator of Ephemera
ebay Seller Extraordinaire
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Determining the value for vintage post cards is a subjective process.
As a deltiologist, I do my best to put a fair value on items at a bargain price!
I do careful research before listing an item in order to determine an honest price.
I determine the value of vintage post cards by
the age, the rarity, the condition, the publisher, and the interest of the postcard’s subject.
Buy with confidence!
Money back guarantee if item is not as described!
Take a trip down memory lane with the magic of a
vintage postcard
!
The postcard photos and images serve as a
historical record of the past
.
Evoking memories
of time past and of how things used to be.
A truly historical look at our roots from a different time and age.
Postcards are also great
for your scrap book or for school projects!
Vintage
1910 Early Divided Back Era Postcard
Collotype
Printing Process
Published & Printed by:
Fototipia de Hauser & Menet (1885-1927)
Madrid, Spain
Oscar Hauser Muller
Adolfo Menet Kurstiner
FEATURES:
Segovia: El Acueducto
The Aqueduct of Segovia
The Aqueduct of Segovia, Spain, was built during the second half of the 1st century A.D. under the rule of the Roman Empire and supplied water from the Frío River to the city into the 20th century.
DETAILS:
Size:
Standard 5 ½ x 3 ½ (14cm x 9cm)
Print Date:
1910
Postcard Era:
Early Divided Back Era (1907-1914)
Printing Process:
Collotype
Collotype
Printing Process
Collotype was used to produce more black & white postcards than any other technique.
A collotype is comprised of an ink image on paper support. The image is produced on a printing press from a glass plate with a layer of light-sensitive dichromatic gelatin. A negative is exposed on the plate, and areas of the gelatin layer that received more light are "tanned" and harden, allowing them to hold more ink than untanned areas. Surface finishes are typically matte (unvarnished). Collotype was used to produce more black & white postcards than any other technique.
Surface finishes vary from matte to glossy, but they are typically matte (unvarnished).
CONDITION:
GOOD
UNUSED (Not Posted)
Yellowing on back side from age.
A few specks on back side.
NO tears, creases, stains, smudges, pinholes or mold.
Published by
Fototipia de Hauser & Menet (1885-1927)
Madrid, Spain
Oscar Hauser Muller
Adolfo Menet Kurstiner
These Swiss photographers are often accredited of producing the first picture postcards in Spain. During the beginning of the 20th century many of their photographic images were reproduced as collotype view-cards, some of which were hand colored. Postcard booklets of art reproductions were also made. They also published many books illustrated with their photos.
POSTCARD ERA
Early Divided Back Era (1907-1914)
Postcards with a divided back were permitted in the U.S. beginning on March 1, 1907.
(Britain had already pioneered this in 1902.)
The address was to be written on the right side; the left side was for writing messages.
Many millions of cards were published in this era -- it was the golden age of postcards.
Up to this point, most postcards were printed in Germany, which was far ahead of the United States in the use of lithographic processes.
With the advent of World War I, the supply of postcards for American consumption switched from Germany to England and the United States itself.
Thank you for your interest in this listing!
Bobbie Skye.
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I usually ship same or next day!
All items shipped via USPS First Class Mail
I SHIP ALL Post cards, magazines, lithographs, cabinet portraits and posters
in
protective acid free sleeves
.
Thanks for stopping by!
Bobbie Skye
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