Showing posts with label Pets. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pets. Show all posts

Monday, April 4, 2022

Signs on Postcards at Zazzle

Signs on Postcards

As signs are pieces of art, we often find them on postcards

Businesses and government agencies identify themselves with signage. The best signs use thoughtfully created graphics as a companion to important details such as name, amenities, address.  Hopefully the materials used are crafted expertly to last indefinitely, enticing customers and bringing traffic for years. But sun, rain and wind will do their damage, and signs will fall into disrepair. When this happens, the most artistic and imaginative signs may still be appealing. That's why new signs and vintage signs alike make such great subjects for postcards.

Lighted signs are quite the attention getter, which is part of the reason neon signs are so popular. Here's the Spanish word for hello written out in a bold typography and mounted on a brick building. The lights lining the letters probably stay on all day and all night in order to get attention. On a postcard, the colorful lighted ensemble makes a nice cheery way to say hi. By the way, if you are looking for international postcards and birthday cards in many different languages, you can find them easily online. Here's a collection of Spanish gifts and cards you may like. 


French subway signs of another era are still beautiful to us today. This Paris Metro sign has lights which may only be used at night and on rainy days.   Pretty when lit and when dark, this French Metro sign in the Interwar style would make a nice addition to your collection of architecture or transportation postcards.



Collectors are still in love with Historic US Route 66 and all its vast remaining memorabilia. Known as the Will Rogers Highway and sometimes called the Main Street of America, the road designated by this iconic route number was in service for over half a century. Here's a postcard with a collection of vintage Route 66 Road Signs which still look interesting despite heavy wear and tear.  It's a lovely nostalgic piece of art you can send to your Post-crossing friends around the world. 



Some of those Route 66 road signs were on display in Sedona Arizona at an antique craft market a number of years ago, along with railroad signs, gasoline station signs and vintage Coke and Pepsi signs.  A photograph of a sign display at that event makes a cool option for collectors of sign postcards.



From Highway Postcards to Humorous Dogs and Cats on Postcards

How can we segue from the popular postcard topic of transportation, to the always trendy postcard topic of dogs? This card does the trick. An artist known as Painting Maniac of Santa Fe, New Mexico, painted a Bassett Hound. Poor sad looking guy seems to have been left behind in the desert by a fast escaping vintage auto. The driver of that Chevy Nomad will be back soon to pick up this cutie. (Right???) We can see a cactus on a neon sign in the twilight, advertising the Western Motel with its amenities of TV, AC and pet friendly status. Imagine a motel with television and air conditioning. In the heyday of Route 66, this was a rare treat.
 

My readers would not want me to mention dog postcards and leave out the cats of the world. I did not find any business sign postcards featuring cats, but I found this comical imaginative offering.   The rat on the beach  would be okay with the idea of a world without cats. So he holds up a hand drawn sign saying No Cats Beyond This Point!


The world seems different since I was a kid, when many people would have found a neon sign of an unclad lady shocking, risqué and even embarrassing.  Now we can turn on the TV and see bare breasts, bedroom scenes, and women sitting on a toilet pretty much any day of the week. I have no idea why it's always females on the commodes, but that's what TV and movie directors think we want to see, I guess: women sitting on toilets. I never think those scenes are the least bit artistic, but this pink neon lady sign is.

I saw one of these on the highway recently as I crossed the Delaware state line. Each state seems to have a welcome sign at every highway entrance to the state, some very attractive, with catchy color schemes. There are postcard collectors who want postcards from every state. Here's a great one to fill that slot for Maryland. These state sign postcards would also be good for Postcrossing, when you are sending a card to some distant land. Remember, on the POD of Zazzle you can take a photograph of your own state road sign, or your own state seal,  or any landmark from your state, and then upload it. Add some text and you have a great personalized one-of-a-kind postcard you can send to friends and family.

City Landmark Signs on Postcards

Cities and towns will have a few well known signs from businesses or buildings that have been around for years. Here's one from Durham NC. This place was a bread factory, then a car dealership, and now a well known music venue, Motorco Music Hall. As part of the transformation, this attention-getting sign was placed. Any Durham or North Carolina native would be glad to have this vintage looking sign on this postcard. What signs in your town would make a great postcard?

We need more cool sign postcards 

When I started my search for Zazzle postcards for this article, I thought I would find numerous signs on postcards, and would choose from multiple options for color, for line, for design, for nostalgia, for vintage.  But it was surprisingly difficult to find good examples of sign postcards at Zazzle. Signs on Zazzle postcards is one of those neglected niches Zazzle designers are always looking for.  Part of the problem is that most postcards on Zazzle are afterthoughts. They are created from a design that fits well on some other product, and may not look just right on a postcard. An image may have been intended for a t-shirt or a personalized coffee mug or a poster. Then the designer might half-heartedly add the image to  postcard as part of the automated batch quick create function. 

Not all Zazzle uploaders take the time to review each product to be sure the image fits nicely. That's why you will see  many Zazzle postcards which are small images on a white field, and you will see many more in which important elements like pets' paws  or angels' heads or the top of a lighthouse or the Eiffel Tower are cropped off.  No one wants to buy that.  So if you are a Zazzle designer with a camera, provide better options to your customer. Go out and grab a few nice squared up shots of cool local signs. Punch up the photo a little and upload it as a postcard. Take a look at my page about what makes for a good postcard and have fun Zazzling!

Some of the postcards on this blog are designed by me, and others are not. Iff Zazzle should send me a penny or two when someone buys a product I have carefully chosen to display on this blog, the price stays the same. The card costs nothing extra. For the reader, my quest to find and post some nice cards in which you might be interested, adds no expense.



Sunday, March 20, 2022

Angels on Postcards

Angels Appear

A wide array of angels appears on postcards because people love angels and find them comforting. They are commonly found because postcard creators have so many sources to choose from. Card makers may resurrect angel images from ancient books, they may paint angels or draw them,  or make an etching of a host of angels. We've all seen plenty of  depictions of adorable cherubic angels;  these can appear on Christmas cards, birthday cards, and postcards as well. Angel art on postcards and in other forms is sometimes gifted to hospitals, hospices and nursing homes in hopes that the afflicted will find solace. 
Stained glass windows in churches will often feature angels in a variety of scenes. And of course there's the old standby of  beautiful angels carved in stone. These heavenly angels are often found in church gardens, home gardens,  and in graveyards.  From the ninth century, when monks hid away in isolated towers to illuminate the Book of Kells,  and even well before that, right up to today, artists have devoted their creativity and their time to creating art with angels as their inspiration. And now in the POD era, artists and designers are constantly unearthing or creating more angel art to apply to a Print On Demand products such as a t-shirt, a greeting card, or a postcard. As there are so many angel postcards, they are not hard to find, but the sheer size and variety of the offerings is overwhelming, so I have selected a few favorite angel postcards to share with you here.

St. Michael the Archangel Postcard

We start with an antique lithograph of Saint Michael the Archangel, who is not a saint at all, but rather an angel, and the leader of all angels, being above all the others in rank. He has four duties, one of which is to combat Satan. It would be nice if sending this postcard right now could help in the fight against evil.



By the way, always check the description area of the Zazzle page if you want to know more about the design on the product. At the time of this writing, and depending on the device through which you are accessing Zazzle, you may find the creator's design description somewhere under the product picture in an area called About this Design. This is not to be confused with the info entitled About this Product. In that area, you can learn about the product--what type of material a shirt is made of, for example, or in the case of postcards, the size of the card, the weight of the paper used and details about the printing process. 

If you want to know more about what is going to be printed ON the product, you want to see the info about the design, therefore, you check the About this Design section. Here you can perhaps read about where the art comes from, who made it, why. You might learn about the colors used, or how to change the border, or any number of other interesting tidbits, to the extent that the creator has decided to share this type of info. 

Some, but not all, Zazzle creators add useful information in the About this Design section. In the case of this handsome St. Michael postcard, we learn that the illustration comes out of a 1911 book called Red Letter Saints: Being a Series of Biographies of those Saints for which Proper Collects, Epistles and Gospels.  This particular Zazzle creator also offers some ideas as to how to alter the postcard design to be more to our liking. Maybe you would like a blue starry background rather than the yellow background shown. You can do that on Zazzle! You can change many designs slightly or completely. (Rarely you will find a design which the creator has locked down, in which case you will not see a button which invites you to edit the design).  This creator even goes so far as to share the hex codes used in the lithographs found throughout the book she referenced. (These codes can be used for precise replication of a shade or a color.) Sometimes the creator has added very little info, but it's always worth looking, because the more you know about the product you are considering, the happier you will be with your postcard purchase.


Yellow Angel Postcard 

This lovely yellow angel is offered on Zazzle by a charity with the mission of providing inspirational art for mental health wellness. You can read more in the informative creator message, once again found in the About this Design area, where the creator tells us she has made angels in a number of colors and suggests that you pick your personal guardian angel color. By searching in the shop, we may find some other options we would like. These days quite a few people are probably turning to the idea of a personal guardian angel.

If Zazzle should send me a penny or two when someone buys something I have carefully chosen to display on this blog, the price stays the same. The card costs nothing extra. For the reader, my quest to find and post some nice cards in which you might be interested, adds nothing to the cost.


Cute Angels on a Holiday Postcard

Here we have cute and holiday all wrapped up in one super sweet postcard, showing three adorable cherubic angels singing us a religious Christmas carol. This adorable card also happens to be an example of a Zazzle product which does not offer much in the way of description. It's cute and Christmassy and that's about all we know. Any time you want to know more about the image or the design of a Zazzle postcard, you can contact the creator and just ask. Following a few links should get you to a place where you see the name of the creator and a message button.  

 


Pets as Angels on a Postcard

Would any of my blog posts be complete without a look at how a dog or a cat can be worked into just about any subject area, at any time, for any reason? Here, pugs invade the Renaissance. Maybe you recognize these satirical dogs as being quite similar to an ultra famous detail of a painting by one of the top painters of the period. Click through either the pug card or the related card below it, or both, and read the descriptions to find out more. 

 

It's often said that there is no such thing as a new idea in art, and that artists are constantly taking inspiration from wherever they can find it. Iconic art from the sixteenth century offers plenty of ideas and opportunity.




Vintage Angels on a Postcard

Another unending supply of inspiration for postcard creators comes from the greeting card artists of earlier eras. Modern day artists find examples among the massive treasure trove of vintage cards. They might use the design as is, or touch it up some, or slice up the greeting card art and mix and match pieces of it in new ways using a basket from one card, a greeting from another, perhaps superimposing these on a vintage figure from a totally different card.  I am guessing this Loving Greeting card with a little curly-haired winged angel and a basket of pink roses is pretty much the same as when originally printed, which may have been around the turn of the century.  I am not even sure which holiday this would be for. It might be more of an all occasion postcard. 

Remember how I keep telling you that at Zazzle, you can change designs up to make a product more to your taste? I have done that here. The original card was set against a nice blue background, but I decided to try a brown background. And then I wasn't exactly sure about that, so I tried a lighter brown. You can buy the card with either background or with the original blue or you can use white, black or any other color for your background. Whatever change you make, you are still supporting the creator who posted the card.

If Zazzle should send me a penny or two when someone buys something I have carefully chosen to display on this blog, the price stays the same, even in a case where I have altered the postcard design. The card costs nothing extra. For the reader, my quest to find and post some nice cards in which you might be interested, adds nothing to the cost.


This is a more religious vintage card based on what the creator tells us is a painting of two angels with blue and white cloaks holding a gold cord and ringing a bell in the sky. Beyond that, we have little to go on. I changed the card up a little to see what I could do with the border.

 


Stone Angels on a Postcard

Some of the postcards on Zazzle are photographic creations, such as this photograph of a colonial era church on Maryland's Eastern Shore at Wye Mills. I photographed the church, keeping the church graveyard in the foreground and at the same time,  photographed a number of the headstones and sculptures found on site. Later, in what we photographers call post, I enlarged the angel you see here, which was just a small sculpture placed on one of the graves.  Then I added her to the photo, making her look like she is watching over the church and all who worship there--and in my mind, watching over everyone. I am not religious, but even I know that we could use a big dose of this kind of help right about now. This card is available at Zazzle, by clicking through. And you can also buy a blue and yellow version of the same postcard.




In addition to changing the design on a postcard, you can also take almost any design you see on Zazzle and transfer it to a different product, especially a postcard. This is because a postcard is a small item, therefore most images found on Zazzle will be large enough to print nicely on a postcard. (All my readers want to support the artists who makes POD sites possible, so rest assured, once again, that the creator still gets credit for sale even when you transfer the art to some other product on Zazzle. Zazzle has coding in place to make sure this happens.)

The aspect will not always match, meaning the length and width arrangement of an image that fits on a certain kind of greeting card may not work on with the length and width of the postcard. In this case, I loved this stone angel so much that I took it from the greeting card it was meant for and used it on the postcard. In order to make the image fit nicely, I added a border. To make sure the border would be complementary to the picture,  I picked up a color from inside the image and created the border using that color.


Hopefully you will enjoy the vast variety of postcards available on Zazzle, appreciating them all the more now that you know a little bit about how to navigate to find some more information. Have fun making changes of your own to the postcards you like. Most importantly I hope this blog post about angels finds you well and secure during troubled times.

Tuesday, February 22, 2022

Vintage Cat Postcards

Vintage Cats on Postcards

Cats in the Profile can Bring Cats on Cards

On postcard sharing sites, it's often a custom to write a little profile indicating what you are interested in. When someone is given your address and gets ready to mail you a postcard, they might just work quite hard to find a card that would fit your particular interests. I am guessing cats and vintage are particularly common in postcard sharing profiles, so I have collected a few high quality vintage cat design postcards here. Maybe it will give postcard collectors and postcard senders some ideas!

Vintage, or Like-Vintage? 

Some Zazzlers will post products with a great description and others will just post cool art for us to enjoy and leave us guessing as to origins. This particular cat is tagged as vintage, but we have no further information. It's entitled Cat and Letter; letters make up part of the illustration but we have no information as to when the cat was drawn, nor by whom and maybe we can get a clue as to the provenance of the writing by looking, but maybe not. This vintage cat postcard may simply be a cat postcard with a distressed and vintage look. I love it!

If Zazzle should send me a penny or two when someone buys something I have carefully chosen to display on this blog, the price stays the same. The card costs nothing extra. For the reader, my quest to find and post some nice cards in which you might be interested, adds nothing to the cost.


Memory Lane

When I was a kid, paper dolls were still a thing. I am in love with  this adorable Halloween paper doll postcard, which is attributed to Grace Drayton as part of her Dolly Dingle paper doll oevre. The Zazzler has done some work to update this adorable piece which she calls retro. Drayton was working early in the twentieth century, so we may be talking super-retro here, as this particular cute little cherubic-faced Halloween Witch may date as far back as 1910. We don't know what kind of updating has been done. Many Zazzlers will find designs which have fallen out of copyright and will clean them up a little and use them to make mugs, postcards, shirts and more. Others will take pieces of the designs and create something entirely new for a POD (print on demand) poster or greeting card or  even maybe a keychain. I am not sure what is the case here. Has this design been used as-is? Or has it been cut up and rearranged?  Perhaps a fan of Drayton and her Campbell Soup advertising work will chime in and let us know a little more about this sweet little girl with her witch hat and dress and her scary pumpkin and sweet little lucky black cat. I didn't love the way this illustration fit on the card, so I added a color coordinated border, because that kind of permutation is easily done on Zazzle's design tool. Speaking of the design tool, I checked out the illustration using the design to ascertain that the art will look good when printed, and it seems it will. But I'm not so sure about the text. It does not seem super sharp. As always with POD sites, Caveat Emptor! Check everything out carefully before you add something to your cart.

Art Nouveau

This Julie de Graag cat is definitely vintage, dating from 1918. De Graag was a part of the Art Nouveau movement, working at the turn of the 19th Century. After growing up in The Hague, she studied at the Royal Academy of Fine Arts and became a celebrated draftsman, graphic artist and painter. Her refined graphic work and sharp lined engravings are still celebrated to this day. As such, her vintage cat postcard seen here would be a lovely treat for any collector who loves vintage cats, or Dutch art. You may also find postcard site participants who appreciate certain colors. Orange and Black lovers will want this card.
Sometimes you are not sure if it's vintage. All you know is that it looks good! Is this cat on the moon a historical find?  Or is it a drawing made to look vintage? I am having trouble finding more information about this Black Cat on the Moon Postcard so I can't say for sure. All I know is that this is a popular design and is for sale on many of the popular POD sites, appears on Pinterest in quite a few versions, some with artist signature and some without. This design is already probably well known to anyone hoping to find a novel vintage cat postcard on my little blog post, lol. So I probably should be showing something else in this spot.   But this is a super sweet blue and yellow postcard with an adorable little star, and a Yellow Man In the Moon upon which is seated our Black Cat. This card is sure to be treasured by any cat lover who finds it in his mailbox one day even if they have already seen this illustration somewhere in internet land.


Repurposing Old Books

We'll  finish up with this lovely vintage cat postcard repurposed by Artist and Zazzler Shelli Fitzpatrick. After finding the image of the beautiful red headed child, in an antique story book, Fitzpatrick cleaned the image up, colorized it, added a border and affixed a cat lover's quote. The child is petting a cute black kitten with a ribbon around its neck. Another nice treat for a cat-loving postcrosser who is eagerly waiting for a postcard to come from parts unknown and bring delight to the mailbox.

Monday, February 7, 2022

Easter is Coming

Collectors are already gathering Easter postcards

Here's one with a dog

Maybe it's a pug, maybe it's a bulldog. They are not related, but dog postcard collectors will know the difference. Anyway, this cute and pouty little pet is ready for Easter with a big collection of Easter Eggs in a colorful basket and he's all set for you to take a  closer look. Sometimes you just want a fun little holiday postcard to send to friends. And when some of your fellow collector friends live half way across the world, it pays to start early!

Share this Original Art postcard with a postcard pal with a pet

This postcard would be ideal for anyone who loves quirky whimsical art. You can even frame postcards for a nice little decorating vignette in your mudroom. Which is where you will be suiting up your doggy for his next walk.

If Zazzle should send me a penny or two when someone buys something I have carefully chosen to display on this blog, the price stays the same. The card costs nothing extra. For the reader, my quest to find and post some nice cards you might want adds nothing to the cost.

State Birds on Postcards

Red Cardinal, Illinois State Bird Pretty red cardinal by Original Artist WindyDesign against a burlap background, c. 2022. I say circa, beca...