
Have you considered complementing your doll collection with picture postcards? There are thousands of designs available, and as they take up so little room, you won't get guilt feelings each time you buy another.
Picture postcards became popular in the 1890s, reaching their peak in the early 1900s, up to the end of the first world war, but even today, millions of cards are sent each year. In the days before telephones were commonplace, a postcard was the ideal medium for sending a quick message, and in Britain it was possible to post a card in the morning inviting a friend to tea the same day, and they would receive the message in plenty of time. Today, of course, it can take several days for a card to reach its destination, and so the cakes would turn stale and the tea grow cold and stewed before the invitation reached your friend.
Dolls made an excellent prop for a child to hold, or even as a decoration to enhance a vase of flowers, and they featured quite extensively. They were used to increase the appeal of images of puppies, kittens, babies and beautiful young women, and also appeared in drawings and cartoons. A doll was a perfect subject for a child's birthday card, and, in an era which was unashamed of showing sentimental feelings, dolls appeared alongside poems and ballads which are usually too sugary for today's sophisticated tastes. All these, of course, are gems for today's collector of doll-related postcards. One particularly popular theme is a praying child, kneeling at the side of the bed, with her (or sometimes his) dolls arranged neatly alongside, all 'praying' too. This image occasionally appears with a verse:
Many of the cards are photographs, usually sepia in tone, and, as well as being attractive, are particularly important to doll collectors because they make it possible to identify the doll depicted; something which can't generally be done with any degree of certainty in a drawing. Extra interest can be added to a display when a doll is seated next to a postcard depicting the same kind of doll, especially if you dress your example in similar style to the doll shown on the card.
Postcards can also be used as provenance - if the cards are dated, postmarked or stamped, it means that the doll shown on the front can be authenticated - it could be earlier than the date on the card, but will never be later. For example, if you had been told that a certain type of doll was not issued until 1927, but you come across a postcard featuring that doll and bearing a stamp franked with a postmark of two years before, you can be certain that the doll must have been made in 1925 at the latest - and maybe before. Cards add to our knowledge as well as providing a slice of social history; when telephones became more popular during the 1930s and 40s, they featured alongside dolls, as did motorcars, radios and televisions. A slightly different, but important, genre, are those postcards sold at doll museums and exhibitions which are basically straight depictions of dolls without flowery trimmings, pretty children, kittens or roses. These are useful as identification aids.
It is amusing to see the oh-so-casual way which children treat their dolls on the cards, especially when you realise that the doll depicted is now classed as a collector's item, not a toy! It puts doll-collecting in perspective, a reminder that all these dolls, even the rarest and loveliest, were once toys. As the majority of dolls at the time were made from breakable bisque, or maybe composition, it’s surprising that so many have survived to enchant collectors today. Of course, often the dolls shown in the photos didn't belong to the child, they were photographer's props, but even so, the children seem to have been allowed to play with them quite naturally so that the photographer could get the photo he wanted.
Whether you store your them in a shoebox, keep them in in albums or display them alongside your dolls, postcards help to bring your doll collection to life by giving them a human touch. |