Friday, June 20, 2025

It's been a looooong work week, so here are some Setsuko Hara photos

I haven't even had a chance to think about wrangling up an ephemera post yet this week, which was week #2 of a fortnight of holding down the fort while my boss was on vacation. 

So here's something delightful that I stumbled upon. I was made aware for the first time of a 1948 Japanese film titled Taifuken no onna (The Woman in the Typhoon Area), in which Setsuko Hara, Japan's cinema sweetheart, plays the villain. What?!? It's described very loosely as a Japanese version of Key Largo, which came out the same year. I don't want to know anything more about it, because I'll be watching it soon enough. But here are some photos of Hara in Taifuken no onna from the outstanding blog Japan on Film, which also reviews the obscure movie.

Bonus: Here's a shelfie this week I took as part of a work project. The final version ended up being much better and way less cluttered.

Saturday, June 14, 2025

Saturday, June 14, 2025:
Completely random postcards

This linen postcard from Mebane Greeting Card Company showcases the Lehigh County Soldiers and Sailors Monument, which was erected in the center square of Allentown, Pennsylvania, in 1899. The website of the 47th Pennsylvania Volunteers states: "It was intended by its makers to inspire — and it does with its imposing form and its message of hope — that, no matter how greatly divided a nation may be, it will always be possible for its citizens to come together again when they appreciate both their shared humanity and the guiding principles upon which their Republic stands"
There are several state of Delaware historical markers that have this same text. I believe this A. Ken Pfister postcard shows KC-34, which was installed in 1940 on North State Street in Dover. It states: "County seat since 1680. William Penn, in 1683, ordered townsite laid out and named Dover. Plotted in 1717. Temporary capital in 1777 and permanent capital since 1779. Federal Constitution ratified here in 1787, making Delaware first State in Union. State Constitutional Conventions held here in 1791-1792, 1831, 1852, and 1897."
Looks like a nice day for a peaceful rally. 
Oh, hey, it's Windsor Castle, one of the principal residences of British monarch, most of whom have been kings. This postcard was published by Valentine & Sons and features and original watercolor painting by Brian Gerald. 
This Lehnert & Landrock postcard out of Cairo, Egypt, shows the golden throne of King Tutankhamun (c. 1341 BC – c. 1323 BC). Tutankhamun lived in a culture that revered gold spiritually, symbolically and politically, where it signified kingship. Unlike other Egyptian pharaohs, he didn't leave any personal writings behind (and there were no social media back then). Most historians believe that his official decrees were authored by his inner circle of advisers, who wielded great power. But that's all history now.

Anyway, those are just some postcards I randomly pulled from the shoebox.

Wednesday, June 11, 2025

My 2,000th Postcrossing arrival

Here's Mama Orange posing with the "Happy Mother's Day" Postcrossing postcard that represents the 2,000th arrival in my mailbox since I joined in December 2012. On average, I've sent and received 13 postcards per month since I started this hobby 12½ years ago to have fun and help keep snail mail alive

According to my Postcrossing statistics, I've engaged with 83 different countries while either sending or receiving cards. Germany is the No. 1 country in both categories, with 451 sent and 434 received. Russia is still No. 2 in both categories, even though I haven't been able to send postcards to Russia since the U.S. Postal Service suspended service to that country in March 2022. The Netherlands is No. 3 in both categories.

And it's from the Netherlands that I "met" Marte, one of the many pen-pal relationships I've developed through Postcrossing over the past decade. We still exchange postcards about once per week. I've also had pen pals from Ukraine, Russia, Japan, Taiwan, Canada, and Mexico, among other countries.

The 2,000th arrival is from Mia in Taiwan, who's been on Postcrossing since 2017. She enjoys map cards and lighthouse cards, and writes on this Hibeetle postcard that plum rain season has arrived in Taiwan and is very welcome. I learn something with almost every postcard! Here in Arizona, we're awaiting monsoon season. Maybe it will come early, maybe it will be right on time. Either way, we will happily welcome the rains.

Sunday, June 8, 2025

Snapshots of post-WWII Japan from a photo album

The Papergreat archives are full of hundreds of vintage vernacular photos and real photo postcards. They're snapshots from a fleeting moment of time decades ago, or perhaps even more than a century ago. I love looking at the faces and the scenery, and thinking about what was going on in those people's minds. What had their life been like up to that point? What was it like afterward? Sometimes you can make guesses based on what you see etched in their faces, but they're only guesses.

Today's photos are all from a 20th century photo album from Japan. I don't know anything about it beyond these photos, though being able to read Japanese might have helped. My guess is that most of these photos are from the 1950s and 1960s, but please correct me if I'm wrong. Several of the photos feature Japanese baseball teams; baseball had been popular in Japan since the 1870s and grew even more popular there after World War II.

All of these photos, including the one above, feature great faces. The kind of faces you could guess about for hours...

Saturday, June 7, 2025

Foldout postcard of Los Angeles in a very different moment

This A. Mitock & Sons folding postcard of Los Angeles, California, was mailed in April 1956 to the Ideal Convalescent Home in Gresham, Oregon. (Which presupposes, I guess, that there's a Non-Ideal Convalescent Home.) It shows the clean, happy and economically vibrant side of Los Angeles seven decades ago. Construction was completed on the iconic Capitol Records Building that very month of April 1956.

Today, Los Angeles is having a very different moment. The Associated Press reports:

LOS ANGELES (AP) — U.S. immigration authorities extended their activity in the Los Angeles area Saturday in the wake of protests at a federal detention facility and a police response that included tear gas, flash-bangs and the arrest of a union leader.
Border Patrol personnel in riot gear and gas masks stood guard outside an industrial park in the city of Paramount, deploying tear gas as bystanders and protesters gathered on medians and across the street, some jeering at authorities while recording the events on smartphones.
“ICE out of Paramount. We see you for what you are,” a woman said through a megaphone. “You are not welcome here.”
One handheld sign said, “No Human Being is Illegal.”
The boulevard was closed to traffic as Border Patrol officers circulated through the area. ICE representatives did not respond immediately to email inquiries about weekend enforcement activities.
The immigration arrests in Los Angeles came as President Donald Trump and his administration push to fulfill promises of mass deportations across the country.

It's a harrowing, heartbreaking contrast to this 1956 postcard highlighting Wilshire Boulevard, MacArthur Park, Miracle Mile, the original Brown Derby restaurant, pedestrians gaily going about their day and "Olvera Street operated by Mexicans in their colorful native costumes."

Friday, June 6, 2025

"Will You Buy My Story?"

My San Tan Valley hairstylist told me today that she has seen Wicked: Part I more than 60 times, which is amazing on many levels, but mostly because it only premiered less than seven months ago. Even as a movie lover, I cannot think of a movie I've seen even 20 times, let alone 60. 

We continued to talk about musicals as my head got buzzed, and that gives me a nice opening for today's ephemera. One of the first musicals I remember seeing is The Fabulous Fable Factory in the 1980s. But the crazy part is that I don't remember when or where. It was either fourth, fifth, sixth or seventh grade, and I went to four different schools in three different states over those four grades, so I can't nail down for sure when I saw it.

I know that it was a bus field trip, possibly to a local college. I don't know if was a full class trip or just the extracurricular chorus I was part of (in which case it was Montoursville, in fifth or sixth grade).

And the only part of the musical I remember is the extremely catchy Thomas Tierney/Joseph Robinette song "Will You Buy My Story?" That tidbit allowed me determine that it was 1973's The Fabulous Fable Factory and eventually to track down this worn copy of the book and lyrics.

The synopsis from Dramatic Publishing states: "Monroe wanders into a seemingly abandoned factory and accidentally trips a lever which activates the factory 'machinery,' an assembly line of seven actors who create fabulous fables. Then he meets the factory owner, a Mr. Aloysius A. Aesop, who explains that the factory has been idle for over 2,000 years because of a missing part."

According to this book, the one-act musical was first produced by Glassboro Summer Theatre at Playhouse 121 at Glassboro State College (now Rowan University) in southern New Jersey. That's another connection for me. We lived in Clayton, just a few miles from Glassboro, in the late 1970s.

Here are a few images from the book...

Tuesday, June 3, 2025

Photo postcard from a Ukrainian

This circular postcard is from my Ukrainian pen pal who has been displaced since Russia's invasion of her country in February 2022. She's currently in Germany, but is there under temporary, visa-free EU travel rules, and may soon have to be on the move again. It's nearly impossible for most of us to fathom what she's been through in the past three-plus years, with it being too unsettling for her to permanently return to Dnipro, Ukraine, while regular missile attacks continue. Yet there's not a permanent place for her elsewhere in the world. All of this while trying to juggle working remotely and live her life.

This postcard is a photo she took while on a short stay in the Netherlands. "I still remember that graceful woman on the bicycle," she writes.

In a recent email, she added: "Trump's winery [sic] really REALLY sucks, and I'm so sorry that your profession also implies the involvement in all of those negative news. For Ukraine, it's catastrophic too. Honestly speaking, I've reached the point where I'm tired of all the negative stuff around (including war, loss, uncertainty about the future) to the extent when I just stopped reading news and being engaged in those things."

That's a feeling I suspect many empathize with in these overwhelming times.

Related posts

Sunday, June 1, 2025

Before "Collector's Luck" heads out the door ...

As part of the Resimplify Me pruning, 1919's Collector's Luck, by Alice Van Leer Carrick (1875-1961) is among the stuff headed out the door tomorrow.

But it's a pretty nifty 106-year-old volume, with a lot of character, so I thought I'd highlight it with some photos for posterity.

The book's subtitle tells you all you need to know about what's inside: "A Repository of Pleasant and Profitable Discourses Descriptive of the Household Furniture of Ornaments of Olden Time."

The book has had numerous homes over the years. A blacked-out bookplate on the inside front cover indicates it was part of the reference library at the Baltimore Museum of Art

Many many pages of the book have a performating stamp indicating that it was part of the Enoch Pratt Library in Baltimore. I have no idea why there was a need to damage so many pages in this way. A red stamp on the title page indicates that it was withdrawn from Enoch Pratt at some point.

The last page and the inside back cover feature Enoch Pratt's due-date label and the circulation card pocket. Many people checked this book out, with due-date stamps spanning 1934 to 1938. 

Without further ado, here are some photos...
And here is Mademoiselle Fifi (IceBear), who turned 3 today, along with her sister Pete.