Recently I have had several discussions with various
antiques, ephemera, and book dealers about changes in collecting interests.
Antiques dealers cite the loss of interest in Victoriana, carnival glass,
pressed glass, china, and many of the 1970s-80s “collectibles” that were issued
for “collectors.” Booksellers note flagging interest in Western Americana,
reference books that have been digitized online, and a slump in the collectible
children’s books market. The last generation’s nostalgia moves along with the
generations. It’s a constant trend, and a sharp seller will not only note what
is coming on, but will try to see what will be sought after in future.
As a dealer in ephemera – including postcards
-- I have, over the years, seen many changes in collecting interests
involving these little pasteboard
artifacts. 40 years ago there was an earnest group of collectors seeking
Pioneers (the earliest postal cards), “Gruss Aus” (greetings from) as well as late 19th
and early 20th Century artist-signed illustrated cards and cards on
specific topics and holidays. Christmas, New Year, and scarcer holiday cards
such as July 4th, President birthdays, Labor Day, Groundhog Day, and Halloween were popular. In
the 1940s, linen cards appeared and until the 1980s or so these were pretty
much despised. The 1950s saw chrome (color cards with shiny surfaces) replace
linen, and these are still mostly shunned.

There was little interest, coming into the 1970s era, in
Easter or Thanksgiving cards although some of the best-collected illustrators
designed many of them. I had a personal
interest in cards depicting poultry, and I bought a considerable number of
Easter and Thanksgiving cards during the time when they were sold for 25 cents,
or five for a dollar, or some few special ones were even a dollar or so. I
favored cards with chickens and other barnyard fowl, which led to rabbits and
hares and other offshoots, such as anthropomorphic versions of the same
subjects – animals dressed in human clothing, playing human games, driving
vehicles such as autos and trains. Another sidebar was animals pulling carts.
(These were for my personal collection, which I still retain.) Beware that
collecting postcards can lead to expanded interests!
