Thursday, April 30, 2026
Boston Library Society, 1888
This is such a neat piece of ephemera! I found it while searching through old books online. This is one of those cases where I forgot to write down where I got it from (oops!), so I can only credit HathiTrust's vast resources. Check out that potential late fee of a whopping 1 cent!
I learned from a little searching that the Boston Library Society was a subscription library founded in 1792. It had many notable members until it merged with the Boston Athenæum in 1939.
Being from Boston and loving libraries, this is an extra-special find to me. I hope other book nerds and ephemera lovers will appreciate it, too!
Sunday, April 26, 2026
Sewing Machines, 1905
This model is called the "Elsa Sewing Machine", a "Hand machine on [an] iron base." It looks so handy and portable, but I bet the iron made it heavy!
Saturday, April 25, 2026
French Label Pages, circa 1900s
Friday, April 24, 2026
Children Illustrations by Mary Ellen Edwards, 1892
Can't you just feel the excitement of these two little girls, reaching excitedly for passing butterflies, seeming as if they're trying to call them over, like they would if they saw a friend across the road.
But the baby is my favorite, sitting contentedly nearby, captivated by the flowers surrounding her.The amazingly talented Mary Ellen Edwards illustrated the images here for Frederic Edward Weatherly's Among the Daisies, published in 1892.
Thursday, April 23, 2026
Children Gardening, 1899
I tried - and failed - to find the "E.J.H." that is signed on this illustration. This will have to be one of those images where we need to enjoy the work without knowing the name of the talent behind it. (But...oh, I'd love to know!)
This one came from "Bertha's Garden and Other Stories", published in 1899.
Tuesday, April 21, 2026
Fashion Collage Pages, 1883
This is one of those cases where cropping each image and presenting them separately would have taken something away - these pages needed to stay together! Though I will admit, it's that neat typography that's my favorite!
Oy, corsets and these dastardly uncomfortable-looking shoes? Nope, I would have made a horrible Victorian-era woman!
I also shared these pages (and maybe a couple more!) on Ko-fi, if you're interested in hopping over there. The download is free (everything I share over there is!) and they are all in the public domain.
But I also had two PNG images to add, as well, while we're on the topic of footwear. One shoe and one boot. These have a transparent background.
Sunday, April 19, 2026
Ruth Mary Hallock Childhood Illustrations, 1904
Saturday, April 18, 2026
Carrying Baby to Bed, 1888
These images are all in the public domain and free to use however you wish. Click on either image (or both!) to get the largest size.
Wednesday, April 15, 2026
Victorian children by John C. Staples
Monday, April 13, 2026
Haliburton First Reader Illustrations, 1912
Wednesday, April 8, 2026
Vintage Seed Catalog Covers Printable
I'm no expert, but I'm just going to put this out there - vintage seed catalogs are gorgeous! Even if you ignore the flowers completely, they have the most beautiful typography. I'm newly obsessed with them.
So I was delighted to find that the Smithsonian has a large collection of these covers, online and ready to view!Sunday, April 5, 2026
Children sledding in winter, 1912
Friday, April 3, 2026
Girls Crafting with Dolls Trade Card, circa late 1800s
Wednesday, April 1, 2026
Metropolitan Mother Goose children's book, 1920
This is a whimsically illustrated book, printed by the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, with retellings of traditional Mother Goose rhymes by Elizabeth C. Watson. These had a more optimistic tone than the originals. For example, Old Mother Hubbard looked in her cupboard and found "wholesome and good" food for her children, while Jack and Jill went up the hill, but they came down again safely with water for the whole town. (That must have been one heavy bucket!)
In the top image, the Old Woman who Lived in a Shoe is a doting mother who gives her children plenty of food and a cozy place to sleep. I much prefer this version over the one where she "whips them all soundly" before bedtime! Although the last line here, "The needed no pills, they all slept so sound," does make one do a double-take.










































