Postcards of a nation embracing a new democratic technology
The ubiquity of photography and social media today makes it hard to
imagine a time when it was not possible for ordinary people to take
their own pictures and send them with short messages over long
distances. But it was revolutionary when the Eastman Kodak Company, in
1903, unveiled a new postcard camera that produced a postcard-size
negative that could print directly onto a blank card. Suddenly almost
anyone, amateurs and entrepreneurial photographers alike, could take a
picture--of neighbors at home and at work, local celebrations,
newsworthy disasters, sightseeing trips--and turn it into a postcard.
This book captures this moment in the history of communications--from
around 1900 to 1930--through a generous selection of what came to be
known as "real photo postcards" from the extensive Leonard A. Lauder
Postcard Archive. As the formality of earlier photography falls away,
these postcards remind us that the past was occupied by people with
distinct and individual stories, dramatic, humorous, puzzling and
surprising.