Cheap Christmas Cards

Is there a cheap way to send Christmas cards?
Rather than putting a 41 cent first class stamp on each one.
I have the cards already, just wondering if there is a cheaper method at the post office.
Emailing cards are rather impersonal. It takes only seconds to send an ecard. How about A Christmas Postcard? You can create them online and only costs $.26 each instead of $.41.
OR
How about create a short little video wishing everyone in your friends and family, Happy Holidays, etc, and send to everyone on your contact list? That’ll save you time and money! You can get real creative. They are already doing it on YouTube.
A Christmas Card from Cheap Robot
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Fred & Friends Freeze Handgun-Shaped Ice-Cube Tray $1.99 Fred & Friends Freeze! Handgun Ice Tray…. |
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Oversized Wine Glass Cork Holder $39.95 Turn cork clutter into a decorative display! Tall handsome and a treasure-trove of wine memories! Standing an impressive 20′ high this oversize glass holds hundreds of corks (not included) and sparks endless conversations. Also a fun place to keep candy tips change business cards and more. Fill it halfway with ice and use it as a chiller! Size: 20′H… |
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Rada Cutlery Serrated Pie Server, Made in USA The Serrated Pie Server allows you to cut and serve with the same utensil. The handle angle is ideal for sliding under a piece of pie so it will look great when it is served. It also works great for bundt cakes and circular cheese cakes – pizza too! 4 1/8 inch by 2 3/8 inch triangle face, overall 9 1/2 inches. Rada cutlery is made of surgical quality, high carbon stainless steel. Hollow-ground bla… |
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White Christmas $8.95 This semi-remake of Holiday Inn (the first movie in which Irving Berlin’s perennial, Oscar-winning holiday anthem was featured) doesn’t have much of a story, but what it does have is choice: Bing Crosby, Danny Kaye, Rosemary Clooney, an all-Irving Berlin song score, classy direction by Hollywood vet Michael Curtiz (Casablanca, The Adventures of Robin Hood), VistaVision (the very first feature ever… |
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Barney’s Christmas Star $6.90 Barney the purple dinosaur celebrates the holidays with his friends and while decorating the tree they notice that the only thing missing is the star for the top of the tree. While searching through Grandma’s attic they discover many treasures — little drummer boys antique typewriters — and they all celebrate and reenact “The Night Before Christmas” as a grand finale.System Requirements: Running… |
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A Christmas Card From Branson $12.98 This congenial and heartwarming Christmas special comes from one of America’s Yuletide capitals: Branson, Missouri. Nestled in Ozark mountain country and home to an annual, eclectic array of holiday-themed stage shows, Branson serves as a happy, wholesome backdrop for this program of music and good cheer. Jim Stafford, amiable country music star, serves as a quip-ready host to the likes of Jo… |
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Cars Gift Set (Combo Pack with DVD) [Blu-ray] $28.99 There’s an extra coat of hot wax on Pixar’s vibrant, NASCAR-influenced comedy about a world populated entirely by cars. Lightning McQueen (voiced by Owen Wilson) is the slick rookie taking the Piston Cup series by storm when the last race of the season (the film’s high-octane opening) ends in a three-way tie. On the way to the tie-breaker race in California, Lightning loses his way off Route 66 in… |
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Walt Disney Cartoon Classics – Starring Chip ‘N’ Dale [VHS] $12.99 Excellent Condition, UNOPEN, brand new VHS… |
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Snap-on 5 Piece Multi Tool Set $29.95 Snap-On 5 piece Multi Tool Set 13-in-1 Multi-Function Tool Locking Saw Slotted Screwdriver (small) Can Opener Single Cut File Double Cut File Slotted Screwdriver (large) Wire Cutter Long Nose Pliers Large Locking Knife Phillips Screwdriver Bottle Opener Slotted Screwdriver (Medium) Locking Serrated Blade Multi-Function Keychain with LED Light Key Ring Phillips Screwdriver Sma… |
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Best Gifts Under 25 Dollars 2011 – 13 Kago Bamboo Matchstick Asian Lantern Oriental Lamp – Honey $24.00 Unique bamboo matchstick cylinder design provides a distinctive Asian accent and radiates a soft, warm glow in any room, home or professional office. UL approved wiring, socket, and switch for 25 Watt base bulb. Part of our unmatched selection of Japanese & Chinese lanterns and lamps, from 1ft. to 6 ft. tall, in a vast array of colors and designs. We offer 3000+ Asian design furniture, wall art, s… |
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Evergreen And Gold Photo Christmas Cards(Pack of 115) $1.53 Evergreen And Gold Photo Christmas Cards With Envelopes. These wholesale bulk cheap discount Christmas Cars are priced right. |
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8 Count Christmas Cards(Pack of 36) $1 8 Count wholesale bulk cheap discount Christmas Cards with envelopes. 18 Assorted Styles In Printed Box With Lid. Cards are 4″ wide x 6″ high. Cards have a greeting inside, which is printed on the outside of each box. In 36 Piece Counter Display. Prepric |
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Christmas Stencil Cards $9.64 Christmas Stencil Cards |
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Quick & Clever Christmas Cards $17.99 Quick & Clever Christmas Cards |
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Christmas Cards & Tags $10.4 Christmas Cards & Tags |
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20 Christmas Cards to Color $9.64 20 Christmas Cards to Color |
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Cheap QWERTY phone,ipro i6 Dual Sim Cards Qwerty Keyboard Cheap Mobile Phones $38.56 cheap dual sim cards qwerty phone,Quad Band mobile,dual cards dual standby,Bluetooth1.2 ,FM,MP3,MP4,unlocked,sms |
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Acoustic Christmas Cards, Vol. 2 $14.69 Acoustic Christmas Cards, Vol. 2 |
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8 Count Christmas Cards(Pack of 48) $2.99 Christmas Cards. 8 Pack. |
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Personalized CARDS – This Christmas – 18 Christmas Boxed Cards $13.99 Share the wonderful, true meaning of Christmas with loved ones this year with these beautiful Christmas cards. Jesus IS the true light of the season! |
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Christmas Blessing Christmas Cards $14.99 “>Deluxe Christmas Cards by Thomas Kinkade, Painter of Light®.> >>Cover>: A Christmas Blessing> >>Inside:> May the Lord give you love that warms your heart, hope that lights your way, and joy that fills your home this day and through the years. With Special Thoughts of You.> >>Scripture:> ‘The Lord be with You! The Lord bless you! …’ Ruth 2:4 NIV> >Box of 18 cards and 19 gold foil lined envelopes.>” |
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Christmas Cards(Pack of 144) $2.79 Christmas Cards. You will get 24 different Christmas designs with 6 of each design when you order 144 cards. Each card and envelope is individually wrapped. The cards are pre-priced for retail sale between $1.99 and $2.79 each. One unit equals one car |
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Christmas $10.29 Look beyond the Christmas trees, carols, and cards with this gorgeous historical examination of Christmas both past and present Christmas trees and fairy lights, carols, Kings, and gifts. This is Christmas—or is it? Explaining the meaning o |
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Holiday Cello Packs By Image Arts(Pack of 72) $2.99 8 assorted holiday Christmas wishes cards, for holiday greetings.These wholesale bulk cheap discount Christmas cards are peggable. |
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Christmas Cards Assortment(Pack of 480) $2.5 This is a collection of best selling general theme Christmas Cards. There are Christmas/New Year cards, Christmas/Religious cards, Christmas/Juvenile. The assortment has 80 different cards packed 6 each, with envelopes, for a total of 480. Made in USA. |
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Personalized CARDS & ENVELOPES – This Christmas – 18 Christmas Boxed Cards $15.99 Share the wonderful, true meaning of Christmas with loved ones this year with these beautiful Christmas cards. Jesus IS the true light of the season! |
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The American Christmas Cards 1900-1960 $29.41 The power of Christmas derives from the appeal of its repeated rituals, the presumed antiquity of its traditions, and its ability to adapt to changing cultural conditions. Christmas cards seemed inevitable and ubiquitous, but in recent years the genre has |
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Crane & Co. Christmas Plaid Photomount Cards $254.49 Crane & Co. Christmas Plaid Photomount Cards |
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Crane & Co. Manger Scene Christmas Greeting Cards $142.99 Crane & Co. Manger Scene Christmas Greeting Cards |
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Crane & Co. Madonna and Child Christmas Greeting Cards $161.99 Crane & Co. Madonna and Child Christmas Greeting Cards |
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Cheap Yarn Hobbies Greeting Cards Pk of 10 by CafePress $14 Life is too short to use cheap yarn. This fun and crafty design reads Life is too short to use cheap yarn. A fun design for knitters,crocheters and other yarn snobs. Hobbies Greeting Cards Pk of 10 Greeting cards are a great way to express yourself and to keep in touch with friends and family. A personal note on a beautiful card will make a lasting impression and a touching keepsake.Available in your choice of paper stock |
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Christmas Candy photo cards $93 Christmas Candy photo cards: Christmas peppermint candy, holiday red polka dots and green stripes come together to make this card a real treat. This design is perfect for Christmas baby announcements, holiday party invitations and open house invitations. |
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Christmas – Your Christmas – Money Card – 3 Cards $7.47 Pack of 3 premium cards and envelopes Wrap your gift of money or a gift card with the true meaning of Christmas with these premium Christian cards. |
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Christmas Tree Holiday Cards $2.99 This Christmas Tree Holiday Greeting Card features a merry and bright Christmas tree. Greeting Reads: may your Christmas be merry and bright. |
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Cheap-O Year-Round Greeting Cards Funny Greeting Cards Pk of 10 by CafePress $14 Hey You’re cheap So why not give like a cheap person? These greeting cards represent several major holidays on the front cover, and the inside is blank for endless message possibilities. ENDLESS Funny Greeting Cards Pk of 10 Greeting cards are a great way to express yourself and to keep in touch with friends and family. A personal note on a beautiful card will make a lasting impression and a touching keepsake.Available in your choice of paper stock |
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Christmas Presents Holiday Cards $2.99 Spread holiday cheer with this Christmas Presents Holiday Greeting Card. Inside greeting reads: Merry Christmas. |
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Christmas Christmas Greeting Cards Pk of 10 by CafePress $16 Christmas greeting cards: May peace be with us all this holiday season. Christmas Greeting Cards Pk of 10 Greeting cards are a great way to express yourself and to keep in touch with friends and family. A personal note on a beautiful card will make a lasting impression and a touching keepsake.Available in your choice of paper stock |
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Snowglobe Christmas Cards 10 Pack $9.75 Harley-Davidson Christmas cards each with a Happy Holidays message printed inside. Sold in a pack of 10 with envelopes. |
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Christmas Cards 10 Pack – Factory $9.75 Harley-Davidson Christmas cards each with a Happy Holidays message printed inside. Sold in a pack of 10 with envelopes. |
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Christmas Cards 10 Pack – Cabin $9.75 Harley-Davidson Christmas cards each with a Happy Holidays message printed inside. Sold in a pack of 10 with envelopes. |
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Christmas Cards 10 Pack – Diner $9.75 Harley-Davidson Christmas cards each with a Happy Holidays message printed inside. Sold in a pack of 10 with envelopes. |
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Christmas Cards 10 Pack – Assorted $9.75 Assorted Harley-Davidson Christmas cards each with a Happy Holidays message printed inside. Sold in a pack of 10 with envelopes. |
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Christmas Cards 10 Pack – Barn $9.75 Harley-Davidson Christmas cards each with a Happy Holidays message printed inside. Sold in a pack of 10 with envelopes. |
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Joy Christmas Cards $3.99 “>Share the true meaning of Christmas with the ones you love with this bestselling Christmas card.>>>>Cover:>>>Joy>>>>Inside:>>>In your heart and home,>in your Christmas too ->may the joy of Jesus>be a blessing to you!>>>>Scripture:>>>Now the God of hope fill you>with all joy and peace in believing…>Romans 15:13 KJV>>>>Product Details:>>> > >Folded card size: 3 3/8″W x 6″H> >16 cards, 17 envelopes> >Each card is printed on premium paper> >” |
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Cheap Hooker Catfish Guide Greeting Cards Package Hobbies Greeting Cards Pk of 10 by CafePress $14 Cheap Hooker Catfish Guide logo on various products.Get yours today Hobbies Greeting Cards Pk of 10 Greeting cards are a great way to express yourself and to keep in touch with friends and family. A personal note on a beautiful card will make a lasting impression and a touching keepsake.Available in your choice of paper stock |
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Christmas Cards with Display(Pack of 288) $2.79 Christmas Cards with Display. You will get 48 different Christmas designs with 6 of each design for a total of 288 cards. Each card and envelope are individually wrapped. You also will receive a cardboard display. The cards are pre-priced for retail s |
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The Heart of Christmas Boxed Cards $12.99 “>Share the heart of Christmas with friends and family with this beautiful, nostalgic card from DaySpring.> >>>Cover:>>>The Heart Of Christmas>The heart of Christmas is love—>the love Jesus gives us>to share with others…>the love that makes each of us>special to Him.> >>>Inside:>>>May the heart of Christmas—>the love of Jesus,>the joy of grace,>and the peace of God—>be yours today and always!> >Blessed Christmas> >>>Scripture:>>>I am come that they might have life,>and that they might have it more abundantly.>John 10:10 KJV> >>>Product Details:>>> > >Folded card size: 5 1/2″ x 7 3/4″> >18 cards, 19 foil-lined envelopes> >Card features red foil embossing.> >” |
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No Christmas Without Christ – 16 Christmas Boxed Cards $3.99 Share the true meaning of Christmas with the ones you love with this adorable Christmas card. |
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Christmas Greeting Cards W/ Envelopes(Pack of 48) $3.6 Christmas Greeting Cards W/ Envelopes 8 Pk , 2 Designs. |
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Square Christmas Cards 12Pcs(Pack of 48) $3.6 Square Christmas Cards 12Pcs 3.5″X3.5″ , 4 Designs. |
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Santa Hat Christmas Cards $2.99 Your friends and family are sure to love this Santa Hat Christmas Holiday Greeting Card. Reads: wishing you a very Merry Christmas |
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Personalized CARDS – Christmas Joy – 18 Christmas Boxed Cards $13.99 Capture the radiance of the season and share the true meaning of Christmas with this beautiful Christmas card. |
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Personalized CARDS & ENVELOPES – Christmas Joy – 18 Christmas Boxed Cards $15.99 Capture the radiance of the season and share the true meaning of Christmas with this beautiful Christmas card. |
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Christmas Christmas Greeting Cards Pk of 20 by CafePress $25 Christmas Card Christmas Greeting Cards Pk of 20 Greeting cards are a great way to express yourself and to keep in touch with friends and family. A personal note on a beautiful card will make a lasting impression and a touching keepsake.Available in your choice of paper stock |
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Wishing You A Bright Holiday – 16 Christmas Boxed Cards $3.99 Share these sweet, inspirational Christmas cards with family and friends this Christmas season! |
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Christmas Joy Boxed Cards $13.99 “>>>Cover:>>> >Christmas Joy> >For unto us a child is born, unto us a son is given: and the government shall be upon his shoulder; and his name shall be called, Wonderful, Counsellor, The mighty God, The everlasting Father, The Prince of Peace. – >Isaiah 9:6>> >>>Inside:>>> >And blessings for the New Year.> >>Product Details>>20 cards and envelopes>” |
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Glory to God Christmas Cards $14.99 “>>>Front:> Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace, good will toward men.>> >>>Inside:> May the wonders of His birth fill you with joy…thankfulness..,praise! Christmas Blessings - Luke2:14 KJV>> >>>Product Details>>>18 cards and 19 foiled line envelopes>>>” |
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A Vintage Victorian Christmas Holiday Cheer Greeting Card Set $18 Here at Philo Hooke Publishing we celebrate The Holidays with Victorian and Vintage Christmas Cards. Partly because of the beauty and sentiment but also it brings us back to simpler more peaceful times. The sending of commercially printed Christmas cards originated in London,1843. People exchanged handwritten holiday greetings, first in person, then via post. By 1922, homemade Christmas cards had become the bane of the U.S. postal system. The first Christmas card designed for sale was by London artist John Calcott Horsley. A respected illustrator of the day, Horsley was commissioned by Sir Henry Cole, who wanted a card he could proudly send to friends and acquaintances to wish them a Merry Christmas. Horsley produced a triptych. Each panels depicted a good deed; clothing the poor and feeding the hungry. The centerpiece featured a party of adults and children, with plentiful food and drink. The first Christmas cards inscription read: Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. Merry was then a spiritual word meaning blessed, Of the original one thousand cards printed, twelve exist today. Printed cards became the rage in England; then Germany. It required an additional thirty years for American. In 1875, Boston lithographer Louis Prang, a native of Germany, began publishing cards, and earned the title father of the American Christmas card. Prangs high-quality cards were costly, and they initially featured not such images as the Madonna and Child, a decorated tree, or even Santa Claus, but colored floral arrangements of roses, daisies, gardenias, geraniums, and apple blossoms. It was cheap penny Christmas postcards imported from Germany that remained in vogue until World War 1. Today more than two billion Cards are exchanged annually. These are individually printed using the very finest inks and paper. You will see and feel the Quality the instant you pick up and examine them. They are suitable for framing. |
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A Vintage Victorian Christmas Holiday Cheer Note Card Set $18 Here at Philo Hooke Publishing we celebrate The Holidays with Victorian and Vintage Christmas Cards. Partly because of the beauty and sentiment but also it brings us back to simpler more peaceful times. The sending of commercially printed Christmas cards originated in London,1843. People exchanged handwritten holiday greetings, first in person, then via post. By 1922, homemade Christmas cards had become the bane of the U.S. postal system. The first Christmas card designed for sale was by London artist John Calcott Horsley. A respected illustrator of the day, Horsley was commissioned by Sir Henry Cole, who wanted a card he could proudly send to friends and acquaintances to wish them a Merry Christmas. Horsley produced a triptych. Each panels depicted a good deed; clothing the poor and feeding the hungry. The centerpiece featured a party of adults and children, with plentiful food and drink. The first Christmas cards inscription read: Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. Merry was then a spiritual word meaning blessed, Of the original one thousand cards printed, twelve exist today. Printed cards became the rage in England; then Germany. It required an additional thirty years for American. In 1875, Boston lithographer Louis Prang, a native of Germany, began publishing cards, and earned the title father of the American Christmas card. Prangs high-quality cards were costly, and they initially featured not such images as the Madonna and Child, a decorated tree, or even Santa Claus, but colored floral arrangements of roses, daisies, gardenias, geraniums, and apple blossoms. It was cheap penny Christmas postcards imported from Germany that remained in vogue until World War 1. Today more than two billion Cards are exchanged annually. These are individually printed using the very finest inks and paper. You will see and feel the Quality the instant you pick up and examine them. They are suitable for framing. |
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Abstract Christmas Vintage Victorian Block Print Greeting Card Set $18 Here at Philo Hooke Publishing we celebrate The Holidays with Victorian and Vintage Christmas Cards. Partly because of the beauty and sentiment but also it brings us back to simpler more peaceful times. The sending of commercially printed Christmas cards originated in London,1843. People exchanged handwritten holiday greetings, first in person, then via post. By 1922, homemade Christmas cards had become the bane of the U.S. postal system. The first Christmas card designed for sale was by London artist John Calcott Horsley. A respected illustrator of the day, Horsley was commissioned by Sir Henry Cole, who wanted a card he could proudly send to friends and acquaintances to wish them a Merry Christmas. Horsley produced a triptych. Each panels depicted a good deed; clothing the poor and feeding the hungry. The centerpiece featured a party of adults and children, with plentiful food and drink. The first Christmas cards inscription read: Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. Merry was then a spiritual word meaning blessed, Of the original one thousand cards printed, twelve exist today. Printed cards became the rage in England; then Germany. It required an additional thirty years for American. In 1875, Boston lithographer Louis Prang, a native of Germany, began publishing cards, and earned the title father of the American Christmas card. Prangs high-quality cards were costly, and they initially featured not such images as the Madonna and Child, a decorated tree, or even Santa Claus, but colored floral arrangements of roses, daisies, gardenias, geraniums, and apple blossoms. It was cheap penny Christmas postcards imported from Germany that remained in vogue until World War 1. Today more than two billion Cards are exchanged annually. These are individually printed using the very finest inks and paper. You will see and feel the Quality the instant you pick up and examine them. They are suitable for framing. |
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Abstract Christmas Vintage Victorian Block Print Note Card Set $18 Here at Philo Hooke Publishing we celebrate The Holidays with Victorian and Vintage Christmas Cards. Partly because of the beauty and sentiment but also it brings us back to simpler more peaceful times. The sending of commercially printed Christmas cards originated in London,1843. People exchanged handwritten holiday greetings, first in person, then via post. By 1922, homemade Christmas cards had become the bane of the U.S. postal system. The first Christmas card designed for sale was by London artist John Calcott Horsley. A respected illustrator of the day, Horsley was commissioned by Sir Henry Cole, who wanted a card he could proudly send to friends and acquaintances to wish them a Merry Christmas. Horsley produced a triptych. Each panels depicted a good deed; clothing the poor and feeding the hungry. The centerpiece featured a party of adults and children, with plentiful food and drink. The first Christmas cards inscription read: Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. Merry was then a spiritual word meaning blessed, Of the original one thousand cards printed, twelve exist today. Printed cards became the rage in England; then Germany. It required an additional thirty years for American. In 1875, Boston lithographer Louis Prang, a native of Germany, began publishing cards, and earned the title father of the American Christmas card. Prangs high-quality cards were costly, and they initially featured not such images as the Madonna and Child, a decorated tree, or even Santa Claus, but colored floral arrangements of roses, daisies, gardenias, geraniums, and apple blossoms. It was cheap penny Christmas postcards imported from Germany that remained in vogue until World War 1. Today more than two billion Cards are exchanged annually. These are individually printed using the very finest inks and paper. You will see and feel the Quality the instant you pick up and examine them. They are suitable for framing. |
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Angel Heralding in Christmas and New Year, a Victorian Vintage Holiday Greeting Cards Boxed Set $18 Philo Hooke Publishing celebrates The Holidays with Victorian and Vintage Christmas Cards. Partly because of the beauty and sentiment but also it brings us back to simpler more peaceful times. The sending of commercially printed Christmas cards originated in London,1843. People exchanged handwritten holiday greetings, first in person, then via post. By 1922, homemade Christmas cards had become the bane of the U.S. postal system. The first Christmas card designed for sale was by London artist John Calcott Horsley. A respected illustrator of the day, Horsley was commissioned by Sir Henry Cole, who wanted a card he could proudly send to friends and acquaintances to wish them a Merry Christmas. Horsley produced a triptych. Each panels depicted a good deed; clothing the poor and feeding the hungry. The centerpiece featured a party of adults and children, with plentiful food and drink. The first Christmas cards inscription read: Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. Merry was then a spiritual word meaning blessed, Of the original one thousand cards printed, twelve exist today. Printed cards became the rage in England; then Germany. It required an additional thirty years for American. In 1875, Boston lithographer Louis Prang, a native of Germany, began publishing cards, and earned the title father of the American Christmas card. Prangs high-quality cards were costly, and they initially featured not such images as the Madonna and Child, a decorated tree, or even Santa Claus, but colored floral arrangements of roses, daisies, gardenias, geraniums, and apple blossoms. It was cheap penny Christmas postcards imported from Germany that remained in vogue until World War 1. Today more than two billion Cards are exchanged annually. These are individually printed using the very finest inks and paper. You will see and feel the Quality the instant you pick up and examine them. They are suitable for framing. |
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Angel Heralding in Christmas and New Year, a Victorian Vintage Holiday Note Cards Boxed Set $18 Philo Hooke Publishing celebrates The Holidays with Victorian and Vintage Christmas Cards. Partly because of the beauty and sentiment but also it brings us back to simpler more peaceful times. The sending of commercially printed Christmas cards originated in London,1843. People exchanged handwritten holiday greetings, first in person, then via post. By 1922, homemade Christmas cards had become the bane of the U.S. postal system. The first Christmas card designed for sale was by London artist John Calcott Horsley. A respected illustrator of the day, Horsley was commissioned by Sir Henry Cole, who wanted a card he could proudly send to friends and acquaintances to wish them a Merry Christmas. Horsley produced a triptych. Each panels depicted a good deed; clothing the poor and feeding the hungry. The centerpiece featured a party of adults and children, with plentiful food and drink. The first Christmas cards inscription read: Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. Merry was then a spiritual word meaning blessed, Of the original one thousand cards printed, twelve exist today. Printed cards became the rage in England; then Germany. It required an additional thirty years for American. In 1875, Boston lithographer Louis Prang, a native of Germany, began publishing cards, and earned the title father of the American Christmas card. Prangs high-quality cards were costly, and they initially featured not such images as the Madonna and Child, a decorated tree, or even Santa Claus, but colored floral arrangements of roses, daisies, gardenias, geraniums, and apple blossoms. It was cheap penny Christmas postcards imported from Germany that remained in vogue until World War 1. Today more than two billion Cards are exchanged annually. These are individually printed using the very finest inks and paper. You will see and feel the Quality the instant you pick up and examine them. They are suitable for framing. |
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Assorted 2-Pack Holiday Greeting Cards(Case of 192) $190.08 Assorted 2-Pack Holiday Greeting Cards(Case of 192) |
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Assorted Victorian Santas Christmas Holiday Vintage Note Cards Boxed Set $18 Philo Hooke Publishing celebrates The Holidays with Victorian and Vintage Christmas Cards. Partly because of the beauty and sentiment but also it brings us back to simpler more peaceful times. The sending of commercially printed Christmas cards originated in London,1843. People exchanged handwritten holiday greetings, first in person, then via post. By 1922, homemade Christmas cards had become the bane of the U.S. postal system. The first Christmas card designed for sale was by London artist John Calcott Horsley. A respected illustrator of the day, Horsley was commissioned by Sir Henry Cole, who wanted a card he could proudly send to friends and acquaintances to wish them a Merry Christmas. Horsley produced a triptych. Each panels depicted a good deed; clothing the poor and feeding the hungry. The centerpiece featured a party of adults and children, with plentiful food and drink. The first Christmas cards inscription read: Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. Merry was then a spiritual word meaning blessed, Of the original one thousand cards printed, twelve exist today. Printed cards became the rage in England; then Germany. It required an additional thirty years for American. In 1875, Boston lithographer Louis Prang, a native of Germany, began publishing cards, and earned the title father of the American Christmas card. Prangs high-quality cards were costly, and they initially featured not such images as the Madonna and Child, a decorated tree, or even Santa Claus, but colored floral arrangements of roses, daisies, gardenias, geraniums, and apple blossoms. It was cheap penny Christmas postcards imported from Germany that remained in vogue until World War 1. Today more than two billion Cards are exchanged annually. These are individually printed using the very finest inks and paper. You will see and feel the Quality the instant you pick up and examine them. They are suitable for framing. |
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Assorted Vintage Santa’s Victorian Christmas Holiday Greeting Card Set $18 Here at Philo Hooke Publishing we celebrate The Holidays with Victorian and Vintage Christmas Cards. Partly because of the beauty and sentiment but also it brings us back to simpler more peaceful times. The sending of commercially printed Christmas cards originated in London,1843. People exchanged handwritten holiday greetings, first in person, then via post. By 1922, homemade Christmas cards had become the bane of the U.S. postal system. The first Christmas card designed for sale was by London artist John Calcott Horsley. A respected illustrator of the day, Horsley was commissioned by Sir Henry Cole, who wanted a card he could proudly send to friends and acquaintances to wish them a Merry Christmas. Horsley produced a triptych. Each panels depicted a good deed; clothing the poor and feeding the hungry. The centerpiece featured a party of adults and children, with plentiful food and drink. The first Christmas cards inscription read: Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. Merry was then a spiritual word meaning blessed, Of the original one thousand cards printed, twelve exist today. Printed cards became the rage in England; then Germany. It required an additional thirty years for American. In 1875, Boston lithographer Louis Prang, a native of Germany, began publishing cards, and earned the title father of the American Christmas card. Prangs high-quality cards were costly, and they initially featured not such images as the Madonna and Child, a decorated tree, or even Santa Claus, but colored floral arrangements of roses, daisies, gardenias, geraniums, and apple blossoms. It was cheap penny Christmas postcards imported from Germany that remained in vogue until World War 1. Today more than two billion Cards are exchanged annually. These are individually printed using the very finest inks and paper. You will see and feel the Quality the instant you pick up and examine them. They are suitable for framing. |
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Assorted Vintage Santa’s Victorian Christmas Holiday Note Card Set $18 Here at Philo Hooke Publishing we celebrate The Holidays with Victorian and Vintage Christmas Cards. Partly because of the beauty and sentiment but also it brings us back to simpler more peaceful times. The sending of commercially printed Christmas cards originated in London,1843. People exchanged handwritten holiday greetings, first in person, then via post. By 1922, homemade Christmas cards had become the bane of the U.S. postal system. The first Christmas card designed for sale was by London artist John Calcott Horsley. A respected illustrator of the day, Horsley was commissioned by Sir Henry Cole, who wanted a card he could proudly send to friends and acquaintances to wish them a Merry Christmas. Horsley produced a triptych. Each panels depicted a good deed; clothing the poor and feeding the hungry. The centerpiece featured a party of adults and children, with plentiful food and drink. The first Christmas cards inscription read: Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. Merry was then a spiritual word meaning blessed, Of the original one thousand cards printed, twelve exist today. Printed cards became the rage in England; then Germany. It required an additional thirty years for American. In 1875, Boston lithographer Louis Prang, a native of Germany, began publishing cards, and earned the title father of the American Christmas card. Prangs high-quality cards were costly, and they initially featured not such images as the Madonna and Child, a decorated tree, or even Santa Claus, but colored floral arrangements of roses, daisies, gardenias, geraniums, and apple blossoms. It was cheap penny Christmas postcards imported from Germany that remained in vogue until World War 1. Today more than two billion Cards are exchanged annually. These are individually printed using the very finest inks and paper. You will see and feel the Quality the instant you pick up and examine them. They are suitable for framing. |
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Assorted-2 Victorian Santas Christmas Holiday Vintage Greeting Cards Boxed Set $18 Philo Hooke Publishing celebrates The Holidays with Victorian and Vintage Christmas Cards. Partly because of the beauty and sentiment but also it brings us back to simpler more peaceful times. The sending of commercially printed Christmas cards originated in London,1843. People exchanged handwritten holiday greetings, first in person, then via post. By 1922, homemade Christmas cards had become the bane of the U.S. postal system. The first Christmas card designed for sale was by London artist John Calcott Horsley. A respected illustrator of the day, Horsley was commissioned by Sir Henry Cole, who wanted a card he could proudly send to friends and acquaintances to wish them a Merry Christmas. Horsley produced a triptych. Each panels depicted a good deed; clothing the poor and feeding the hungry. The centerpiece featured a party of adults and children, with plentiful food and drink. The first Christmas cards inscription read: Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. Merry was then a spiritual word meaning blessed, Of the original one thousand cards printed, twelve exist today. Printed cards became the rage in England; then Germany. It required an additional thirty years for American. In 1875, Boston lithographer Louis Prang, a native of Germany, began publishing cards, and earned the title father of the American Christmas card. Prangs high-quality cards were costly, and they initially featured not such images as the Madonna and Child, a decorated tree, or even Santa Claus, but colored floral arrangements of roses, daisies, gardenias, geraniums, and apple blossoms. It was cheap penny Christmas postcards imported from Germany that remained in vogue until World War 1. Today more than two billion Cards are exchanged annually. These are individually printed using the very finest inks and paper. You will see and feel the Quality the instant you pick up and examine them. They are suitable for framing. |
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Big Book of Greeting Cards Over 40 Step-By-Step Projects $0.63 Used – Individually made cards are increasingly popular in gift stores but they are expensive – handmade cards can be quick, cheap and simple. Packed with fabulous ideas, “The Big Book of Greetings Cards” is a must for anyone who is interested in making their own cards. There are 45 step-by-step projects with cards to suit every occasion – birthdays, Christmas, birth announcements, new home and wedding and party invitations. The cards are made using a wide variety of techniques – some modern, so |
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Big Book of Greeting Cards Over 40 Step-By-Step Projects $10.99 Used – Individually made cards are increasingly popular in gift stores but they are expensive – handmade cards can be quick, cheap and simple. Packed with fabulous ideas, “The Big Book of Greetings Cards” is a must for anyone who is interested in making their own cards. There are 45 step-by-step projects with cards to suit every occasion – birthdays, Christmas, birth announcements, new home and wedding and party invitations. The cards are made using a wide variety of techniques – some modern, so |
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Black And White Victorian Christmas Santa putting Toys in the Fireplace Stockings Vintage Holiday Greeting Cards Boxed Set $18 Philo Hooke Publishing celebrates The Holidays with Victorian and Vintage Christmas Cards. Partly because of the beauty and sentiment but also it brings us back to simpler more peaceful times. The sending of commercially printed Christmas cards originated in London,1843. People exchanged handwritten holiday greetings, first in person, then via post. By 1922, homemade Christmas cards had become the bane of the U.S. postal system. The first Christmas card designed for sale was by London artist John Calcott Horsley. A respected illustrator of the day, Horsley was commissioned by Sir Henry Cole, who wanted a card he could proudly send to friends and acquaintances to wish them a Merry Christmas. Horsley produced a triptych. Each panels depicted a good deed; clothing the poor and feeding the hungry. The centerpiece featured a party of adults and children, with plentiful food and drink. The first Christmas cards inscription read: Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. Merry was then a spiritual word meaning blessed, Of the original one thousand cards printed, twelve exist today. Printed cards became the rage in England; then Germany. It required an additional thirty years for American. In 1875, Boston lithographer Louis Prang, a native of Germany, began publishing cards, and earned the title father of the American Christmas card. Prangs high-quality cards were costly, and they initially featured not such images as the Madonna and Child, a decorated tree, or even Santa Claus, but colored floral arrangements of roses, daisies, gardenias, geraniums, and apple blossoms. It was cheap penny Christmas postcards imported from Germany that remained in vogue until World War 1. Today more than two billion Cards are exchanged annually. These are individually printed using the very finest inks and paper. You will see and feel the Quality the instant you pick up and examine them. They are suitable for framing. |
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Black And White Victorian Christmas Santa putting Toys in the Fireplace Stockings Vintage Holiday Note Cards Boxed Set $18 Philo Hooke Publishing celebrates The Holidays with Victorian and Vintage Christmas Cards. Partly because of the beauty and sentiment but also it brings us back to simpler more peaceful times. The sending of commercially printed Christmas cards originated in London,1843. People exchanged handwritten holiday greetings, first in person, then via post. By 1922, homemade Christmas cards had become the bane of the U.S. postal system. The first Christmas card designed for sale was by London artist John Calcott Horsley. A respected illustrator of the day, Horsley was commissioned by Sir Henry Cole, who wanted a card he could proudly send to friends and acquaintances to wish them a Merry Christmas. Horsley produced a triptych. Each panels depicted a good deed; clothing the poor and feeding the hungry. The centerpiece featured a party of adults and children, with plentiful food and drink. The first Christmas cards inscription read: Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. Merry was then a spiritual word meaning blessed, Of the original one thousand cards printed, twelve exist today. Printed cards became the rage in England; then Germany. It required an additional thirty years for American. In 1875, Boston lithographer Louis Prang, a native of Germany, began publishing cards, and earned the title father of the American Christmas card. Prangs high-quality cards were costly, and they initially featured not such images as the Madonna and Child, a decorated tree, or even Santa Claus, but colored floral arrangements of roses, daisies, gardenias, geraniums, and apple blossoms. It was cheap penny Christmas postcards imported from Germany that remained in vogue until World War 1. Today more than two billion Cards are exchanged annually. These are individually printed using the very finest inks and paper. You will see and feel the Quality the instant you pick up and examine them. They are suitable for framing. |
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Christmas Assorted Tree Ornaments(Case of 144) $142.56 Christmas Assorted Tree Ornaments(Case of 144) |
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Christmas Greeting Cards with 10 Song Misprint CD(Case of 100) $99 Christmas Greeting Cards with 10 Song Misprint CD(Case of 100) |
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Classic Vintage Christmas Boys Playing with Toy Soldiers Victorian Holiday Greeting Cards Boxed Set $18 Philo Hooke Publishing celebrates The Holidays with Victorian and Vintage Christmas Cards. Partly because of the beauty and sentiment but also it brings us back to simpler more peaceful times. The sending of commercially printed Christmas cards originated in London,1843. People exchanged handwritten holiday greetings, first in person, then via post. By 1922, homemade Christmas cards had become the bane of the U.S. postal system. The first Christmas card designed for sale was by London artist John Calcott Horsley. A respected illustrator of the day, Horsley was commissioned by Sir Henry Cole, who wanted a card he could proudly send to friends and acquaintances to wish them a Merry Christmas. Horsley produced a triptych. Each panels depicted a good deed; clothing the poor and feeding the hungry. The centerpiece featured a party of adults and children, with plentiful food and drink. The first Christmas cards inscription read: Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. Merry was then a spiritual word meaning blessed, Of the original one thousand cards printed, twelve exist today. Printed cards became the rage in England; then Germany. It required an additional thirty years for American. In 1875, Boston lithographer Louis Prang, a native of Germany, began publishing cards, and earned the title father of the American Christmas card. Prangs high-quality cards were costly, and they initially featured not such images as the Madonna and Child, a decorated tree, or even Santa Claus, but colored floral arrangements of roses, daisies, gardenias, geraniums, and apple blossoms. It was cheap penny Christmas postcards imported from Germany that remained in vogue until World War 1. Today more than two billion Cards are exchanged annually. These are individually printed using the very finest inks and paper. You will see and feel the Quality the instant you pick up and examine them. They are suitable for framing. |
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Classic Vintage Christmas Boys Playing with Toy Soldiers Victorian Holiday Note Cards Boxed Set $18 Philo Hooke Publishing celebrates The Holidays with Victorian and Vintage Christmas Cards. Partly because of the beauty and sentiment but also it brings us back to simpler more peaceful times. The sending of commercially printed Christmas cards originated in London,1843. People exchanged handwritten holiday greetings, first in person, then via post. By 1922, homemade Christmas cards had become the bane of the U.S. postal system. The first Christmas card designed for sale was by London artist John Calcott Horsley. A respected illustrator of the day, Horsley was commissioned by Sir Henry Cole, who wanted a card he could proudly send to friends and acquaintances to wish them a Merry Christmas. Horsley produced a triptych. Each panels depicted a good deed; clothing the poor and feeding the hungry. The centerpiece featured a party of adults and children, with plentiful food and drink. The first Christmas cards inscription read: Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. Merry was then a spiritual word meaning blessed, Of the original one thousand cards printed, twelve exist today. Printed cards became the rage in England; then Germany. It required an additional thirty years for American. In 1875, Boston lithographer Louis Prang, a native of Germany, began publishing cards, and earned the title father of the American Christmas card. Prangs high-quality cards were costly, and they initially featured not such images as the Madonna and Child, a decorated tree, or even Santa Claus, but colored floral arrangements of roses, daisies, gardenias, geraniums, and apple blossoms. It was cheap penny Christmas postcards imported from Germany that remained in vogue until World War 1. Today more than two billion Cards are exchanged annually. These are individually printed using the very finest inks and paper. You will see and feel the Quality the instant you pick up and examine them. They are suitable for framing. |
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Santa Bringing Dolls and Toys for Boys and Girls, Vintage Greeting Cards Boxed Set $18 Philo Hooke Publishing celebrates The Holidays with Victorian and Vintage Christmas Cards. Partly because of the beauty and sentiment but also it brings us back to simpler more peaceful times. The sending of commercially printed Christmas cards originated in London,1843. People exchanged handwritten holiday greetings, first in person, then via post. By 1922, homemade Christmas cards had become the bane of the U.S. postal system. The first Christmas card designed for sale was by London artist John Calcott Horsley. A respected illustrator of the day, Horsley was commissioned by Sir Henry Cole, who wanted a card he could proudly send to friends and acquaintances to wish them a Merry Christmas. Horsley produced a triptych. Each panels depicted a good deed; clothing the poor and feeding the hungry. The centerpiece featured a party of adults and children, with plentiful food and drink. The first Christmas cards inscription read: Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. Merry was then a spiritual word meaning blessed, Of the original one thousand cards printed, twelve exist today. Printed cards became the rage in England; then Germany. It required an additional thirty years for American. In 1875, Boston lithographer Louis Prang, a native of Germany, began publishing cards, and earned the title father of the American Christmas card. Prangs high-quality cards were costly, and they initially featured not such images as the Madonna and Child, a decorated tree, or even Santa Claus, but colored floral arrangements of roses, daisies, gardenias, geraniums, and apple blossoms. It was cheap penny Christmas postcards imported from Germany that remained in vogue until World War 1. Today more than two billion Cards are exchanged annually. These are individually printed using the very finest inks and paper. You will see and feel the Quality the instant you pick up and examine them. They are suitable for framing. |
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Santa Bringing Dolls and Toys for Boys and Girls, Vintage Note Cards Boxed Set $18 Philo Hooke Publishing celebrates The Holidays with Victorian and Vintage Christmas Cards. Partly because of the beauty and sentiment but also it brings us back to simpler more peaceful times. The sending of commercially printed Christmas cards originated in London,1843. People exchanged handwritten holiday greetings, first in person, then via post. By 1922, homemade Christmas cards had become the bane of the U.S. postal system. The first Christmas card designed for sale was by London artist John Calcott Horsley. A respected illustrator of the day, Horsley was commissioned by Sir Henry Cole, who wanted a card he could proudly send to friends and acquaintances to wish them a Merry Christmas. Horsley produced a triptych. Each panels depicted a good deed; clothing the poor and feeding the hungry. The centerpiece featured a party of adults and children, with plentiful food and drink. The first Christmas cards inscription read: Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. Merry was then a spiritual word meaning blessed, Of the original one thousand cards printed, twelve exist today. Printed cards became the rage in England; then Germany. It required an additional thirty years for American. In 1875, Boston lithographer Louis Prang, a native of Germany, began publishing cards, and earned the title father of the American Christmas card. Prangs high-quality cards were costly, and they initially featured not such images as the Madonna and Child, a decorated tree, or even Santa Claus, but colored floral arrangements of roses, daisies, gardenias, geraniums, and apple blossoms. It was cheap penny Christmas postcards imported from Germany that remained in vogue until World War 1. Today more than two billion Cards are exchanged annually. These are individually printed using the very finest inks and paper. You will see and feel the Quality the instant you pick up and examine them. They are suitable for framing. |
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Santa and Reindeer on Your Roof Vintage Victorian Christmas Holiday Greeting Card Boxed Set $18 Philo Hooke Publishing celebrates The Holidays with Victorian and Vintage Christmas Cards. Partly because of the beauty and sentiment but also it brings us back to simpler more peaceful times. The sending of commercially printed Christmas cards originated in London,1843. People exchanged handwritten holiday greetings, first in person, then via post. By 1922, homemade Christmas cards had become the bane of the U.S. postal system. The first Christmas card designed for sale was by London artist John Calcott Horsley. A respected illustrator of the day, Horsley was commissioned by Sir Henry Cole, who wanted a card he could proudly send to friends and acquaintances to wish them a Merry Christmas. Horsley produced a triptych. Each panels depicted a good deed; clothing the poor and feeding the hungry. The centerpiece featured a party of adults and children, with plentiful food and drink. The first Christmas cards inscription read: Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. Merry was then a spiritual word meaning blessed, Of the original one thousand cards printed, twelve exist today. Printed cards became the rage in England; then Germany. It required an additional thirty years for American. In 1875, Boston lithographer Louis Prang, a native of Germany, began publishing cards, and earned the title father of the American Christmas card. Prangs high-quality cards were costly, and they initially featured not such images as the Madonna and Child, a decorated tree, or even Santa Claus, but colored floral arrangements of roses, daisies, gardenias, geraniums, and apple blossoms. It was cheap penny Christmas postcards imported from Germany that remained in vogue until World War 1. Today more than two billion Cards are exchanged annually. These are individually printed using the very finest inks and paper. You will see and feel the Quality the instant you pick up and examine them. They are suitable for framing. |
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Santa and Reindeer on Your Roof Vintage Victorian Christmas Holiday Note Card Boxed Set $18 Philo Hooke Publishing celebrates The Holidays with Victorian and Vintage Christmas Cards. Partly because of the beauty and sentiment but also it brings us back to simpler more peaceful times. The sending of commercially printed Christmas cards originated in London,1843. People exchanged handwritten holiday greetings, first in person, then via post. By 1922, homemade Christmas cards had become the bane of the U.S. postal system. The first Christmas card designed for sale was by London artist John Calcott Horsley. A respected illustrator of the day, Horsley was commissioned by Sir Henry Cole, who wanted a card he could proudly send to friends and acquaintances to wish them a Merry Christmas. Horsley produced a triptych. Each panels depicted a good deed; clothing the poor and feeding the hungry. The centerpiece featured a party of adults and children, with plentiful food and drink. The first Christmas cards inscription read: Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. Merry was then a spiritual word meaning blessed, Of the original one thousand cards printed, twelve exist today. Printed cards became the rage in England; then Germany. It required an additional thirty years for American. In 1875, Boston lithographer Louis Prang, a native of Germany, began publishing cards, and earned the title father of the American Christmas card. Prangs high-quality cards were costly, and they initially featured not such images as the Madonna and Child, a decorated tree, or even Santa Claus, but colored floral arrangements of roses, daisies, gardenias, geraniums, and apple blossoms. It was cheap penny Christmas postcards imported from Germany that remained in vogue until World War 1. Today more than two billion Cards are exchanged annually. These are individually printed using the very finest inks and paper. You will see and feel the Quality the instant you pick up and examine them. They are suitable for framing. |
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South Of The Border Vintage Christmas Holiday Note Card Set $18 Here at Philo Hooke Publishing we celebrate The Holidays with Victorian and Vintage Christmas Cards. Partly because of the beauty and sentiment but also it brings us back to simpler more peaceful times. The sending of commercially printed Christmas cards originated in London,1843. People exchanged handwritten holiday greetings, first in person, then via post. By 1922, homemade Christmas cards had become the bane of the U.S. postal system. The first Christmas card designed for sale was by London artist John Calcott Horsley. A respected illustrator of the day, Horsley was commissioned by Sir Henry Cole, who wanted a card he could proudly send to friends and acquaintances to wish them a Merry Christmas. Horsley produced a triptych. Each panels depicted a good deed; clothing the poor and feeding the hungry. The centerpiece featured a party of adults and children, with plentiful food and drink. The first Christmas cards inscription read: Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. Merry was then a spiritual word meaning blessed, Of the original one thousand cards printed, twelve exist today. Printed cards became the rage in England; then Germany. It required an additional thirty years for American. In 1875, Boston lithographer Louis Prang, a native of Germany, began publishing cards, and earned the title father of the American Christmas card. Prangs high-quality cards were costly, and they initially featured not such images as the Madonna and Child, a decorated tree, or even Santa Claus, but colored floral arrangements of roses, daisies, gardenias, geraniums, and apple blossoms. It was cheap penny Christmas postcards imported from Germany that remained in vogue until World War 1. Today more than two billion Cards are exchanged annually. These are individually printed using the very finest inks and paper. You will see and feel the Quality the instant you pick up and examine them. They are suitable for framing. |
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The Big Book of Greetings Cards $10.99 New – Individually made cards are increasingly popular in gift stores but they can be expensive. Making your own cards at home is a quick, cheap and simple alternative. This title contains 45 step-by-step projects with cards to suit every occasion – bithdays, Christmas, birth announcements, wedding invitations, new home and party invitations. The cards are made using a wide variety of techniques – some modern, some traditional and all from readily available art materials and papers, as well as i |
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The big book of greeting cards: over 40 step-by-step projects $5.63 New – Individually made cards are increasingly popular in gift stores but they are expensive – handmade cards can be quick, cheap and simple. Packed with fabulous ideas, “The Big Book of Greetings Cards” is a must for anyone who is interested in making their own cards. There are 45 step-by-step projects with cards to suit every occasion – birthdays, Christmas, birth announcements, new home and wedding and party invitations. The cards are made using a wide variety of techniques – some modern, som |
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The big book of greeting cards: over 40 step-by-step projects $18.87 New – Individually made cards are increasingly popular in gift stores but they are expensive – handmade cards can be quick, cheap and simple. Packed with fabulous ideas, “The Big Book of Greetings Cards” is a must for anyone who is interested in making their own cards. There are 45 step-by-step projects with cards to suit every occasion – birthdays, Christmas, birth announcements, new home and wedding and party invitations. The cards are made using a wide variety of techniques – some modern, som |
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Traditional Santa Hanging Stockings By The Fireplace Hearth Christmas Eve Vintage Holiday Note Cards Boxed Set $18 Philo Hooke Publishing celebrates The Holidays with Victorian and Vintage Christmas Cards. Partly because of the beauty and sentiment but also it brings us back to simpler more peaceful times. The sending of commercially printed Christmas cards originated in London,1843. People exchanged handwritten holiday greetings, first in person, then via post. By 1922, homemade Christmas cards had become the bane of the U.S. postal system. The first Christmas card designed for sale was by London artist John Calcott Horsley. A respected illustrator of the day, Horsley was commissioned by Sir Henry Cole, who wanted a card he could proudly send to friends and acquaintances to wish them a Merry Christmas. Horsley produced a triptych. Each panels depicted a good deed; clothing the poor and feeding the hungry. The centerpiece featured a party of adults and children, with plentiful food and drink. The first Christmas cards inscription read: Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. Merry was then a spiritual word meaning blessed, Of the original one thousand cards printed, twelve exist today. Printed cards became the rage in England; then Germany. It required an additional thirty years for American. In 1875, Boston lithographer Louis Prang, a native of Germany, began publishing cards, and earned the title father of the American Christmas card. Prangs high-quality cards were costly, and they initially featured not such images as the Madonna and Child, a decorated tree, or even Santa Claus, but colored floral arrangements of roses, daisies, gardenias, geraniums, and apple blossoms. It was cheap penny Christmas postcards imported from Germany that remained in vogue until World War 1. Today more than two billion Cards are exchanged annually. These are individually printed using the very finest inks and paper. You will see and feel the Quality the instant you pick up and examine them. They are suitable for framing. |
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Traditional Vintage Santa With Christmas Gift And Best Wishes Holiday Greeting Card Set $18 Here at Philo Hooke Publishing we celebrate The Holidays with Victorian and Vintage Christmas Cards. Partly because of the beauty and sentiment but also it brings us back to simpler more peaceful times. The sending of commercially printed Christmas cards originated in London,1843. People exchanged handwritten holiday greetings, first in person, then via post. By 1922, homemade Christmas cards had become the bane of the U.S. postal system. The first Christmas card designed for sale was by London artist John Calcott Horsley. A respected illustrator of the day, Horsley was commissioned by Sir Henry Cole, who wanted a card he could proudly send to friends and acquaintances to wish them a Merry Christmas. Horsley produced a triptych. Each panels depicted a good deed; clothing the poor and feeding the hungry. The centerpiece featured a party of adults and children, with plentiful food and drink. The first Christmas cards inscription read: Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. Merry was then a spiritual word meaning blessed, Of the original one thousand cards printed, twelve exist today. Printed cards became the rage in England; then Germany. It required an additional thirty years for American. In 1875, Boston lithographer Louis Prang, a native of Germany, began publishing cards, and earned the title father of the American Christmas card. Prangs high-quality cards were costly, and they initially featured not such images as the Madonna and Child, a decorated tree, or even Santa Claus, but colored floral arrangements of roses, daisies, gardenias, geraniums, and apple blossoms. It was cheap penny Christmas postcards imported from Germany that remained in vogue until World War 1. Today more than two billion Cards are exchanged annually. These are individually printed using the very finest inks and paper. You will see and feel the Quality the instant you pick up and examine them. They are suitable for framing. |
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Victorian Angel Helping Saint Nick Deliver Christmas Presents Vintage Holiday Note Cards Boxed Set $18 Philo Hooke Publishing celebrates The Holidays with Victorian and Vintage Christmas Cards. Partly because of the beauty and sentiment but also it brings us back to simpler more peaceful times. The sending of commercially printed Christmas cards originated in London,1843. People exchanged handwritten holiday greetings, first in person, then via post. By 1922, homemade Christmas cards had become the bane of the U.S. postal system. The first Christmas card designed for sale was by London artist John Calcott Horsley. A respected illustrator of the day, Horsley was commissioned by Sir Henry Cole, who wanted a card he could proudly send to friends and acquaintances to wish them a Merry Christmas. Horsley produced a triptych. Each panels depicted a good deed; clothing the poor and feeding the hungry. The centerpiece featured a party of adults and children, with plentiful food and drink. The first Christmas cards inscription read: Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. Merry was then a spiritual word meaning blessed, Of the original one thousand cards printed, twelve exist today. Printed cards became the rage in England; then Germany. It required an additional thirty years for American. In 1875, Boston lithographer Louis Prang, a native of Germany, began publishing cards, and earned the title father of the American Christmas card. Prangs high-quality cards were costly, and they initially featured not such images as the Madonna and Child, a decorated tree, or even Santa Claus, but colored floral arrangements of roses, daisies, gardenias, geraniums, and apple blossoms. It was cheap penny Christmas postcards imported from Germany that remained in vogue until World War 1. Today more than two billion Cards are exchanged annually. These are individually printed using the very finest inks and paper. You will see and feel the Quality the instant you pick up and examine them. They are suitable for framing. |
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Victorian Children Decorating a Christmas Tree with Candles and Apples Vintage Greeting Cards Boxed Set $18 Philo Hooke Publishing celebrates The Holidays with Victorian and Vintage Christmas Cards. Partly because of the beauty and sentiment but also it brings us back to simpler more peaceful times. The sending of commercially printed Christmas cards originated in London,1843. People exchanged handwritten holiday greetings, first in person, then via post. By 1922, homemade Christmas cards had become the bane of the U.S. postal system. The first Christmas card designed for sale was by London artist John Calcott Horsley. A respected illustrator of the day, Horsley was commissioned by Sir Henry Cole, who wanted a card he could proudly send to friends and acquaintances to wish them a Merry Christmas. Horsley produced a triptych. Each panels depicted a good deed; clothing the poor and feeding the hungry. The centerpiece featured a party of adults and children, with plentiful food and drink. The first Christmas cards inscription read: Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. Merry was then a spiritual word meaning blessed, Of the original one thousand cards printed, twelve exist today. Printed cards became the rage in England; then Germany. It required an additional thirty years for American. In 1875, Boston lithographer Louis Prang, a native of Germany, began publishing cards, and earned the title father of the American Christmas card. Prangs high-quality cards were costly, and they initially featured not such images as the Madonna and Child, a decorated tree, or even Santa Claus, but colored floral arrangements of roses, daisies, gardenias, geraniums, and apple blossoms. It was cheap penny Christmas postcards imported from Germany that remained in vogue until World War 1. Today more than two billion Cards are exchanged annually. These are individually printed using the very finest inks and paper. You will see and feel the Quality the instant you pick up and examine them. They are suitable for framing. |
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Victorian Children Decorating a Christmas Tree with Candles and Apples Vintage Note Cards Boxed Set $18 Philo Hooke Publishing celebrates The Holidays with Victorian and Vintage Christmas Cards. Partly because of the beauty and sentiment but also it brings us back to simpler more peaceful times. The sending of commercially printed Christmas cards originated in London,1843. People exchanged handwritten holiday greetings, first in person, then via post. By 1922, homemade Christmas cards had become the bane of the U.S. postal system. The first Christmas card designed for sale was by London artist John Calcott Horsley. A respected illustrator of the day, Horsley was commissioned by Sir Henry Cole, who wanted a card he could proudly send to friends and acquaintances to wish them a Merry Christmas. Horsley produced a triptych. Each panels depicted a good deed; clothing the poor and feeding the hungry. The centerpiece featured a party of adults and children, with plentiful food and drink. The first Christmas cards inscription read: Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. Merry was then a spiritual word meaning blessed, Of the original one thousand cards printed, twelve exist today. Printed cards became the rage in England; then Germany. It required an additional thirty years for American. In 1875, Boston lithographer Louis Prang, a native of Germany, began publishing cards, and earned the title father of the American Christmas card. Prangs high-quality cards were costly, and they initially featured not such images as the Madonna and Child, a decorated tree, or even Santa Claus, but colored floral arrangements of roses, daisies, gardenias, geraniums, and apple blossoms. It was cheap penny Christmas postcards imported from Germany that remained in vogue until World War 1. Today more than two billion Cards are exchanged annually. These are individually printed using the very finest inks and paper. You will see and feel the Quality the instant you pick up and examine them. They are suitable for framing. |
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Victorian Christmas Children Sending Santa Wishes up Fireplace Flue Vintage Note Cards Boxed Set $18 Philo Hooke Publishing celebrates The Holidays with Victorian and Vintage Christmas Cards. Partly because of the beauty and sentiment but also it brings us back to simpler more peaceful times. The sending of commercially printed Christmas cards originated in London,1843. People exchanged handwritten holiday greetings, first in person, then via post. By 1922, homemade Christmas cards had become the bane of the U.S. postal system. The first Christmas card designed for sale was by London artist John Calcott Horsley. A respected illustrator of the day, Horsley was commissioned by Sir Henry Cole, who wanted a card he could proudly send to friends and acquaintances to wish them a Merry Christmas. Horsley produced a triptych. Each panels depicted a good deed; clothing the poor and feeding the hungry. The centerpiece featured a party of adults and children, with plentiful food and drink. The first Christmas cards inscription read: Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. Merry was then a spiritual word meaning blessed, Of the original one thousand cards printed, twelve exist today. Printed cards became the rage in England; then Germany. It required an additional thirty years for American. In 1875, Boston lithographer Louis Prang, a native of Germany, began publishing cards, and earned the title father of the American Christmas card. Prangs high-quality cards were costly, and they initially featured not such images as the Madonna and Child, a decorated tree, or even Santa Claus, but colored floral arrangements of roses, daisies, gardenias, geraniums, and apple blossoms. It was cheap penny Christmas postcards imported from Germany that remained in vogue until World War 1. Today more than two billion Cards are exchanged annually. These are individually printed using the very finest inks and paper. You will see and feel the Quality the instant you pick up and examine them. They are suitable for framing. |
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Victorian Christmas Tree Trimming Holiday Party Vintage Greeting Cards Boxed Set $18 Philo Hooke Publishing celebrates The Holidays with Victorian and Vintage Christmas Cards. Partly because of the beauty and sentiment but also it brings us back to simpler more peaceful times. The sending of commercially printed Christmas cards originated in London,1843. People exchanged handwritten holiday greetings, first in person, then via post. By 1922, homemade Christmas cards had become the bane of the U.S. postal system. The first Christmas card designed for sale was by London artist John Calcott Horsley. A respected illustrator of the day, Horsley was commissioned by Sir Henry Cole, who wanted a card he could proudly send to friends and acquaintances to wish them a Merry Christmas. Horsley produced a triptych. Each panels depicted a good deed; clothing the poor and feeding the hungry. The centerpiece featured a party of adults and children, with plentiful food and drink. The first Christmas cards inscription read: Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. Merry was then a spiritual word meaning blessed, Of the original one thousand cards printed, twelve exist today. Printed cards became the rage in England; then Germany. It required an additional thirty years for American. In 1875, Boston lithographer Louis Prang, a native of Germany, began publishing cards, and earned the title father of the American Christmas card. Prangs high-quality cards were costly, and they initially featured not such images as the Madonna and Child, a decorated tree, or even Santa Claus, but colored floral arrangements of roses, daisies, gardenias, geraniums, and apple blossoms. It was cheap penny Christmas postcards imported from Germany that remained in vogue until World War 1. Today more than two billion Cards are exchanged annually. These are individually printed using the very finest inks and paper. You will see and feel the Quality the instant you pick up and examine them. They are suitable for framing. |
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Victorian Girl with Christmas Bough full of Holiday Spirit Vintage Note Card Boxed Set $18 Philo Hooke Publishing celebrates The Holidays with Victorian and Vintage Christmas Cards. Partly because of the beauty and sentiment but also it brings us back to simpler more peaceful times. The sending of commercially printed Christmas cards originated in London,1843. People exchanged handwritten holiday greetings, first in person, then via post. By 1922, homemade Christmas cards had become the bane of the U.S. postal system. The first Christmas card designed for sale was by London artist John Calcott Horsley. A respected illustrator of the day, Horsley was commissioned by Sir Henry Cole, who wanted a card he could proudly send to friends and acquaintances to wish them a Merry Christmas. Horsley produced a triptych. Each panels depicted a good deed; clothing the poor and feeding the hungry. The centerpiece featured a party of adults and children, with plentiful food and drink. The first Christmas cards inscription read: Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. Merry was then a spiritual word meaning blessed, Of the original one thousand cards printed, twelve exist today. Printed cards became the rage in England; then Germany. It required an additional thirty years for American. In 1875, Boston lithographer Louis Prang, a native of Germany, began publishing cards, and earned the title father of the American Christmas card. Prangs high-quality cards were costly, and they initially featured not such images as the Madonna and Child, a decorated tree, or even Santa Claus, but colored floral arrangements of roses, daisies, gardenias, geraniums, and apple blossoms. It was cheap penny Christmas postcards imported from Germany that remained in vogue until World War 1. Today more than two billion Cards are exchanged annually. These are individually printed using the very finest inks and paper. You will see and feel the Quality the instant you pick up and examine them. They are suitable for framing. |
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Victorian Santa Christmas Eve Present Delivery, Vintage Holiday Greeting Cards Boxed Set $18 Philo Hooke Publishing celebrates The Holidays with Victorian and Vintage Christmas Cards. Partly because of the beauty and sentiment but also it brings us back to simpler more peaceful times. The sending of commercially printed Christmas cards originated in London,1843. People exchanged handwritten holiday greetings, first in person, then via post. By 1922, homemade Christmas cards had become the bane of the U.S. postal system. The first Christmas card designed for sale was by London artist John Calcott Horsley. A respected illustrator of the day, Horsley was commissioned by Sir Henry Cole, who wanted a card he could proudly send to friends and acquaintances to wish them a Merry Christmas. Horsley produced a triptych. Each panels depicted a good deed; clothing the poor and feeding the hungry. The centerpiece featured a party of adults and children, with plentiful food and drink. The first Christmas cards inscription read: Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. Merry was then a spiritual word meaning blessed, Of the original one thousand cards printed, twelve exist today. Printed cards became the rage in England; then Germany. It required an additional thirty years for American. In 1875, Boston lithographer Louis Prang, a native of Germany, began publishing cards, and earned the title father of the American Christmas card. Prangs high-quality cards were costly, and they initially featured not such images as the Madonna and Child, a decorated tree, or even Santa Claus, but colored floral arrangements of roses, daisies, gardenias, geraniums, and apple blossoms. It was cheap penny Christmas postcards imported from Germany that remained in vogue until World War 1. Today more than two billion Cards are exchanged annually. These are individually printed using the very finest inks and paper. You will see and feel the Quality the instant you pick up and examine them. They are suitable for framing. |
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Victorian Santa Christmas Eve Present Delivery, Vintage Holiday Note Cards Boxed Set $18 Philo Hooke Publishing celebrates The Holidays with Victorian and Vintage Christmas Cards. Partly because of the beauty and sentiment but also it brings us back to simpler more peaceful times. The sending of commercially printed Christmas cards originated in London,1843. People exchanged handwritten holiday greetings, first in person, then via post. By 1922, homemade Christmas cards had become the bane of the U.S. postal system. The first Christmas card designed for sale was by London artist John Calcott Horsley. A respected illustrator of the day, Horsley was commissioned by Sir Henry Cole, who wanted a card he could proudly send to friends and acquaintances to wish them a Merry Christmas. Horsley produced a triptych. Each panels depicted a good deed; clothing the poor and feeding the hungry. The centerpiece featured a party of adults and children, with plentiful food and drink. The first Christmas cards inscription read: Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. Merry was then a spiritual word meaning blessed, Of the original one thousand cards printed, twelve exist today. Printed cards became the rage in England; then Germany. It required an additional thirty years for American. In 1875, Boston lithographer Louis Prang, a native of Germany, began publishing cards, and earned the title father of the American Christmas card. Prangs high-quality cards were costly, and they initially featured not such images as the Madonna and Child, a decorated tree, or even Santa Claus, but colored floral arrangements of roses, daisies, gardenias, geraniums, and apple blossoms. It was cheap penny Christmas postcards imported from Germany that remained in vogue until World War 1. Today more than two billion Cards are exchanged annually. These are individually printed using the very finest inks and paper. You will see and feel the Quality the instant you pick up and examine them. They are suitable for framing. |
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Victorian Santa Wishing you a Merry Christmas and Happy New Year Holiday Vintage Greeting Cards Boxed Set $18 Philo Hooke Publishing celebrates The Holidays with Victorian and Vintage Christmas Cards. Partly because of the beauty and sentiment but also it brings us back to simpler more peaceful times. The sending of commercially printed Christmas cards originated in London,1843. People exchanged handwritten holiday greetings, first in person, then via post. By 1922, homemade Christmas cards had become the bane of the U.S. postal system. The first Christmas card designed for sale was by London artist John Calcott Horsley. A respected illustrator of the day, Horsley was commissioned by Sir Henry Cole, who wanted a card he could proudly send to friends and acquaintances to wish them a Merry Christmas. Horsley produced a triptych. Each panels depicted a good deed; clothing the poor and feeding the hungry. The centerpiece featured a party of adults and children, with plentiful food and drink. The first Christmas cards inscription read: Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. Merry was then a spiritual word meaning blessed, Of the original one thousand cards printed, twelve exist today. Printed cards became the rage in England; then Germany. It required an additional thirty years for American. In 1875, Boston lithographer Louis Prang, a native of Germany, began publishing cards, and earned the title father of the American Christmas card. Prangs high-quality cards were costly, and they initially featured not such images as the Madonna and Child, a decorated tree, or even Santa Claus, but colored floral arrangements of roses, daisies, gardenias, geraniums, and apple blossoms. It was cheap penny Christmas postcards imported from Germany that remained in vogue until World War 1. Today more than two billion Cards are exchanged annually. These are individually printed using the very finest inks and paper. You will see and feel the Quality the instant you pick up and examine them. They are suitable for framing. |
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Victorian Santa illustrated in Black and White in a Chimney-Vintage Christmas Holiday Greeting Boxed Card Set $18 Philo Hooke Publishing celebrates The Holidays with Victorian and Vintage Christmas Cards. Partly because of the beauty and sentiment but also it brings us back to simpler more peaceful times. The sending of commercially printed Christmas cards originated in London,1843. People exchanged handwritten holiday greetings, first in person, then via post. By 1922, homemade Christmas cards had become the bane of the U.S. postal system. The first Christmas card designed for sale was by London artist John Calcott Horsley. A respected illustrator of the day, Horsley was commissioned by Sir Henry Cole, who wanted a card he could proudly send to friends and acquaintances to wish them a Merry Christmas. Horsley produced a triptych. Each panels depicted a good deed; clothing the poor and feeding the hungry. The centerpiece featured a party of adults and children, with plentiful food and drink. The first Christmas cards inscription read: Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. Merry was then a spiritual word meaning blessed, Of the original one thousand cards printed, twelve exist today. Printed cards became the rage in England; then Germany. It required an additional thirty years for American. In 1875, Boston lithographer Louis Prang, a native of Germany, began publishing cards, and earned the title father of the American Christmas card. Prangs high-quality cards were costly, and they initially featured not such images as the Madonna and Child, a decorated tree, or even Santa Claus, but colored floral arrangements of roses, daisies, gardenias, geraniums, and apple blossoms. It was cheap penny Christmas postcards imported from Germany that remained in vogue until World War 1. Today more than two billion Cards are exchanged annually. These are individually printed using the very finest inks and paper. You will see and feel the Quality the instant you pick up and examine them. They are suitable for framing. |
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Victorian Santa illustrated in Black and White in a Chimney-Vintage Christmas Holiday Note Boxed Card Set $18 Philo Hooke Publishing celebrates The Holidays with Victorian and Vintage Christmas Cards. Partly because of the beauty and sentiment but also it brings us back to simpler more peaceful times. The sending of commercially printed Christmas cards originated in London,1843. People exchanged handwritten holiday greetings, first in person, then via post. By 1922, homemade Christmas cards had become the bane of the U.S. postal system. The first Christmas card designed for sale was by London artist John Calcott Horsley. A respected illustrator of the day, Horsley was commissioned by Sir Henry Cole, who wanted a card he could proudly send to friends and acquaintances to wish them a Merry Christmas. Horsley produced a triptych. Each panels depicted a good deed; clothing the poor and feeding the hungry. The centerpiece featured a party of adults and children, with plentiful food and drink. The first Christmas cards inscription read: Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. Merry was then a spiritual word meaning blessed, Of the original one thousand cards printed, twelve exist today. Printed cards became the rage in England; then Germany. It required an additional thirty years for American. In 1875, Boston lithographer Louis Prang, a native of Germany, began publishing cards, and earned the title father of the American Christmas card. Prangs high-quality cards were costly, and they initially featured not such images as the Madonna and Child, a decorated tree, or even Santa Claus, but colored floral arrangements of roses, daisies, gardenias, geraniums, and apple blossoms. It was cheap penny Christmas postcards imported from Germany that remained in vogue until World War 1. Today more than two billion Cards are exchanged annually. These are individually printed using the very finest inks and paper. You will see and feel the Quality the instant you pick up and examine them. They are suitable for framing. |
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Victorian Vintage Christmas Holiday Winter Sports Teddy Bears Greeting Card Set $18 Here at Philo Hooke Publishing we celebrate The Holidays with Victorian and Vintage Christmas Cards. Partly because of the beauty and sentiment but also it brings us back to simpler more peaceful times. The sending of commercially printed Christmas cards originated in London,1843. People exchanged handwritten holiday greetings, first in person, then via post. By 1922, homemade Christmas cards had become the bane of the U.S. postal system. The first Christmas card designed for sale was by London artist John Calcott Horsley. A respected illustrator of the day, Horsley was commissioned by Sir Henry Cole, who wanted a card he could proudly send to friends and acquaintances to wish them a Merry Christmas. Horsley produced a triptych. Each panels depicted a good deed; clothing the poor and feeding the hungry. The centerpiece featured a party of adults and children, with plentiful food and drink. The first Christmas cards inscription read: Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. Merry was then a spiritual word meaning blessed, Of the original one thousand cards printed, twelve exist today. Printed cards became the rage in England; then Germany. It required an additional thirty years for American. In 1875, Boston lithographer Louis Prang, a native of Germany, began publishing cards, and earned the title father of the American Christmas card. Prangs high-quality cards were costly, and they initially featured not such images as the Madonna and Child, a decorated tree, or even Santa Claus, but colored floral arrangements of roses, daisies, gardenias, geraniums, and apple blossoms. It was cheap penny Christmas postcards imported from Germany that remained in vogue until World War 1. Today more than two billion Cards are exchanged annually. These are individually printed using the very finest inks and paper. You will see and feel the Quality the instant you pick up and examine them. They are suitable for framing. |
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Victorian Vintage Christmas Holiday Winter Sports Teddy Bears Note Card Set $18 Here at Philo Hooke Publishing we celebrate The Holidays with Victorian and Vintage Christmas Cards. Partly because of the beauty and sentiment but also it brings us back to simpler more peaceful times. The sending of commercially printed Christmas cards originated in London,1843. People exchanged handwritten holiday greetings, first in person, then via post. By 1922, homemade Christmas cards had become the bane of the U.S. postal system. The first Christmas card designed for sale was by London artist John Calcott Horsley. A respected illustrator of the day, Horsley was commissioned by Sir Henry Cole, who wanted a card he could proudly send to friends and acquaintances to wish them a Merry Christmas. Horsley produced a triptych. Each panels depicted a good deed; clothing the poor and feeding the hungry. The centerpiece featured a party of adults and children, with plentiful food and drink. The first Christmas cards inscription read: Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. Merry was then a spiritual word meaning blessed, Of the original one thousand cards printed, twelve exist today. Printed cards became the rage in England; then Germany. It required an additional thirty years for American. In 1875, Boston lithographer Louis Prang, a native of Germany, began publishing cards, and earned the title father of the American Christmas card. Prangs high-quality cards were costly, and they initially featured not such images as the Madonna and Child, a decorated tree, or even Santa Claus, but colored floral arrangements of roses, daisies, gardenias, geraniums, and apple blossoms. It was cheap penny Christmas postcards imported from Germany that remained in vogue until World War 1. Today more than two billion Cards are exchanged annually. These are individually printed using the very finest inks and paper. You will see and feel the Quality the instant you pick up and examine them. They are suitable for framing. |
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Victorian Vintage Holiday Chalkboard Santa Claus Christmas Greeting Card Set $18 Here at Philo Hooke Publishing we celebrate The Holidays with Victorian and Vintage Christmas Cards. Partly because of the beauty and sentiment but also it brings us back to simpler more peaceful times. The sending of commercially printed Christmas cards originated in London,1843. People exchanged handwritten holiday greetings, first in person, then via post. By 1922, homemade Christmas cards had become the bane of the U.S. postal system. The first Christmas card designed for sale was by London artist John Calcott Horsley. A respected illustrator of the day, Horsley was commissioned by Sir Henry Cole, who wanted a card he could proudly send to friends and acquaintances to wish them a Merry Christmas. Horsley produced a triptych. Each panels depicted a good deed; clothing the poor and feeding the hungry. The centerpiece featured a party of adults and children, with plentiful food and drink. The first Christmas cards inscription read: Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. Merry was then a spiritual word meaning blessed, Of the original one thousand cards printed, twelve exist today. Printed cards became the rage in England; then Germany. It required an additional thirty years for American. In 1875, Boston lithographer Louis Prang, a native of Germany, began publishing cards, and earned the title father of the American Christmas card. Prangs high-quality cards were costly, and they initially featured not such images as the Madonna and Child, a decorated tree, or even Santa Claus, but colored floral arrangements of roses, daisies, gardenias, geraniums, and apple blossoms. It was cheap penny Christmas postcards imported from Germany that remained in vogue until World War 1. Today more than two billion Cards are exchanged annually. These are individually printed using the very finest inks and paper. You will see and feel the Quality the instant you pick up and examine them. They are suitable for framing. |
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Victorian Young Couple Ice Skating on Christmas Holiday Break, Vintage Greeting Cards Boxed Set $18 Philo Hooke Publishing celebrates The Holidays with Victorian and Vintage Christmas Cards. Partly because of the beauty and sentiment but also it brings us back to simpler more peaceful times. The sending of commercially printed Christmas cards originated in London,1843. People exchanged handwritten holiday greetings, first in person, then via post. By 1922, homemade Christmas cards had become the bane of the U.S. postal system. The first Christmas card designed for sale was by London artist John Calcott Horsley. A respected illustrator of the day, Horsley was commissioned by Sir Henry Cole, who wanted a card he could proudly send to friends and acquaintances to wish them a Merry Christmas. Horsley produced a triptych. Each panels depicted a good deed; clothing the poor and feeding the hungry. The centerpiece featured a party of adults and children, with plentiful food and drink. The first Christmas cards inscription read: Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. Merry was then a spiritual word meaning blessed, Of the original one thousand cards printed, twelve exist today. Printed cards became the rage in England; then Germany. It required an additional thirty years for American. In 1875, Boston lithographer Louis Prang, a native of Germany, began publishing cards, and earned the title father of the American Christmas card. Prangs high-quality cards were costly, and they initially featured not such images as the Madonna and Child, a decorated tree, or even Santa Claus, but colored floral arrangements of roses, daisies, gardenias, geraniums, and apple blossoms. It was cheap penny Christmas postcards imported from Germany that remained in vogue until World War 1. Today more than two billion Cards are exchanged annually. These are individually printed using the very finest inks and paper. You will see and feel the Quality the instant you pick up and examine them. They are suitable for framing. |
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Victorian Young Couple on Christmas Holiday, Vintage Greeting Cards Boxed Set $18 Philo Hooke Publishing celebrates The Holidays with Victorian and Vintage Christmas Cards. Partly because of the beauty and sentiment but also it brings us back to simpler more peaceful times. The sending of commercially printed Christmas cards originated in London,1843. People exchanged handwritten holiday greetings, first in person, then via post. By 1922, homemade Christmas cards had become the bane of the U.S. postal system. The first Christmas card designed for sale was by London artist John Calcott Horsley. A respected illustrator of the day, Horsley was commissioned by Sir Henry Cole, who wanted a card he could proudly send to friends and acquaintances to wish them a Merry Christmas. Horsley produced a triptych. Each panels depicted a good deed; clothing the poor and feeding the hungry. The centerpiece featured a party of adults and children, with plentiful food and drink. The first Christmas cards inscription read: Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. Merry was then a spiritual word meaning blessed, Of the original one thousand cards printed, twelve exist today. Printed cards became the rage in England; then Germany. It required an additional thirty years for American. In 1875, Boston lithographer Louis Prang, a native of Germany, began publishing cards, and earned the title father of the American Christmas card. Prangs high-quality cards were costly, and they initially featured not such images as the Madonna and Child, a decorated tree, or even Santa Claus, but colored floral arrangements of roses, daisies, gardenias, geraniums, and apple blossoms. It was cheap penny Christmas postcards imported from Germany that remained in vogue until World War 1. Today more than two billion Cards are exchanged annually. These are individually printed using the very finest inks and paper. You will see and feel the Quality the instant you pick up and examine them. They are suitable for framing. |
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Victorian Young Couple on Christmas Holiday, Vintage Note Cards Boxed Set $18 Philo Hooke Publishing celebrates The Holidays with Victorian and Vintage Christmas Cards. Partly because of the beauty and sentiment but also it brings us back to simpler more peaceful times. The sending of commercially printed Christmas cards originated in London,1843. People exchanged handwritten holiday greetings, first in person, then via post. By 1922, homemade Christmas cards had become the bane of the U.S. postal system. The first Christmas card designed for sale was by London artist John Calcott Horsley. A respected illustrator of the day, Horsley was commissioned by Sir Henry Cole, who wanted a card he could proudly send to friends and acquaintances to wish them a Merry Christmas. Horsley produced a triptych. Each panels depicted a good deed; clothing the poor and feeding the hungry. The centerpiece featured a party of adults and children, with plentiful food and drink. The first Christmas cards inscription read: Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. Merry was then a spiritual word meaning blessed, Of the original one thousand cards printed, twelve exist today. Printed cards became the rage in England; then Germany. It required an additional thirty years for American. In 1875, Boston lithographer Louis Prang, a native of Germany, began publishing cards, and earned the title father of the American Christmas card. Prangs high-quality cards were costly, and they initially featured not such images as the Madonna and Child, a decorated tree, or even Santa Claus, but colored floral arrangements of roses, daisies, gardenias, geraniums, and apple blossoms. It was cheap penny Christmas postcards imported from Germany that remained in vogue until World War 1. Today more than two billion Cards are exchanged annually. These are individually printed using the very finest inks and paper. You will see and feel the Quality the instant you pick up and examine them. They are suitable for framing. |
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Vintage Baby Doll Girl with Candy Cane Ice Skating Christmas Greeting Card Set $18 Here at Philo Hooke Publishing we celebrate The Holidays with Victorian and Vintage Christmas Cards. Partly because of the beauty and sentiment but also it brings us back to simpler more peaceful times. The sending of commercially printed Christmas cards originated in London,1843. People exchanged handwritten holiday greetings, first in person, then via post. By 1922, homemade Christmas cards had become the bane of the U.S. postal system. The first Christmas card designed for sale was by London artist John Calcott Horsley. A respected illustrator of the day, Horsley was commissioned by Sir Henry Cole, who wanted a card he could proudly send to friends and acquaintances to wish them a Merry Christmas. Horsley produced a triptych. Each panels depicted a good deed; clothing the poor and feeding the hungry. The centerpiece featured a party of adults and children, with plentiful food and drink. The first Christmas cards inscription read: Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. Merry was then a spiritual word meaning blessed, Of the original one thousand cards printed, twelve exist today. Printed cards became the rage in England; then Germany. It required an additional thirty years for American. In 1875, Boston lithographer Louis Prang, a native of Germany, began publishing cards, and earned the title father of the American Christmas card. Prangs high-quality cards were costly, and they initially featured not such images as the Madonna and Child, a decorated tree, or even Santa Claus, but colored floral arrangements of roses, daisies, gardenias, geraniums, and apple blossoms. It was cheap penny Christmas postcards imported from Germany that remained in vogue until World War 1. Today more than two billion Cards are exchanged annually. These are individually printed using the very finest inks and paper. You will see and feel the Quality the instant you pick up and examine them. They are suitable for framing. |
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Vintage Girl Angel Picking The Christmas Tree Holiday Greeting Card Boxed Set $18 Philo Hooke Publishing celebrates The Holidays with Victorian and Vintage Christmas Cards. Partly because of the beauty and sentiment but also it brings us back to simpler more peaceful times. The sending of commercially printed Christmas cards originated in London,1843. People exchanged handwritten holiday greetings, first in person, then via post. By 1922, homemade Christmas cards had become the bane of the U.S. postal system. The first Christmas card designed for sale was by London artist John Calcott Horsley. A respected illustrator of the day, Horsley was commissioned by Sir Henry Cole, who wanted a card he could proudly send to friends and acquaintances to wish them a Merry Christmas. Horsley produced a triptych. Each panels depicted a good deed; clothing the poor and feeding the hungry. The centerpiece featured a party of adults and children, with plentiful food and drink. The first Christmas cards inscription read: Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. Merry was then a spiritual word meaning blessed, Of the original one thousand cards printed, twelve exist today. Printed cards became the rage in England; then Germany. It required an additional thirty years for American. In 1875, Boston lithographer Louis Prang, a native of Germany, began publishing cards, and earned the title father of the American Christmas card. Prangs high-quality cards were costly, and they initially featured not such images as the Madonna and Child, a decorated tree, or even Santa Claus, but colored floral arrangements of roses, daisies, gardenias, geraniums, and apple blossoms. It was cheap penny Christmas postcards imported from Germany that remained in vogue until World War 1. Today more than two billion Cards are exchanged annually. These are individually printed using the very finest inks and paper. You will see and feel the Quality the instant you pick up and examine them. They are suitable for framing. |
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Vintage Girl Dreaming of Sugar Plums And Fairies Christmas Holiday Greeting Card Set $18 Here at Philo Hooke Publishing we celebrate The Holidays with Victorian and Vintage Christmas Cards. Partly because of the beauty and sentiment but also it brings us back to simpler more peaceful times. The sending of commercially printed Christmas cards originated in London,1843. People exchanged handwritten holiday greetings, first in person, then via post. By 1922, homemade Christmas cards had become the bane of the U.S. postal system. The first Christmas card designed for sale was by London artist John Calcott Horsley. A respected illustrator of the day, Horsley was commissioned by Sir Henry Cole, who wanted a card he could proudly send to friends and acquaintances to wish them a Merry Christmas. Horsley produced a triptych. Each panels depicted a good deed; clothing the poor and feeding the hungry. The centerpiece featured a party of adults and children, with plentiful food and drink. The first Christmas cards inscription read: Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. Merry was then a spiritual word meaning blessed, Of the original one thousand cards printed, twelve exist today. Printed cards became the rage in England; then Germany. It required an additional thirty years for American. In 1875, Boston lithographer Louis Prang, a native of Germany, began publishing cards, and earned the title father of the American Christmas card. Prangs high-quality cards were costly, and they initially featured not such images as the Madonna and Child, a decorated tree, or even Santa Claus, but colored floral arrangements of roses, daisies, gardenias, geraniums, and apple blossoms. It was cheap penny Christmas postcards imported from Germany that remained in vogue until World War 1. Today more than two billion Cards are exchanged annually. These are individually printed using the very finest inks and paper. You will see and feel the Quality the instant you pick up and examine them. They are suitable for framing. |
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Vintage Illustrated Santa with Bag of Toys Christmas Holiday Note Cards Set $18 Here at Philo Hooke Publishing we celebrate The Holidays with Victorian and Vintage Christmas Cards. Partly because of the beauty and sentiment but also it brings us back to simpler more peaceful times. The sending of commercially printed Christmas cards originated in London,1843. People exchanged handwritten holiday greetings, first in person, then via post. By 1922, homemade Christmas cards had become the bane of the U.S. postal system. The first Christmas card designed for sale was by London artist John Calcott Horsley. A respected illustrator of the day, Horsley was commissioned by Sir Henry Cole, who wanted a card he could proudly send to friends and acquaintances to wish them a Merry Christmas. Horsley produced a triptych. Each panels depicted a good deed; clothing the poor and feeding the hungry. The centerpiece featured a party of adults and children, with plentiful food and drink. The first Christmas cards inscription read: Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. Merry was then a spiritual word meaning blessed, Of the original one thousand cards printed, twelve exist today. Printed cards became the rage in England; then Germany. It required an additional thirty years for American. In 1875, Boston lithographer Louis Prang, a native of Germany, began publishing cards, and earned the title father of the American Christmas card. Prangs high-quality cards were costly, and they initially featured not such images as the Madonna and Child, a decorated tree, or even Santa Claus, but colored floral arrangements of roses, daisies, gardenias, geraniums, and apple blossoms. It was cheap penny Christmas postcards imported from Germany that remained in vogue until World War 1. Today more than two billion Cards are exchanged annually. These are individually printed using the very finest inks and paper. You will see and feel the Quality the instant you pick up and examine them. They are suitable for framing. |