3/8/11

Dear Auntie / Dear Cousin...FROM YOUR BAWDY NIECE / COUSIN


If you were going to send one card to your auntie and another to your cousin which one of the following would you choose?

The tweaker?

to auntie_tatteredandlost


or the kissing fondler?

to cousin_tatteredandlost

I know, tough decision, right? Well, as you'll see below "Marie" made that decision. Did auntie and cousin blush when they received these cards or were they aware of Marie's slight bawdy side?

Dear Auntie Dena...
Apple Blossoms_tatteredandlost
Apple Blossoms_bk_tatteredandlost

Dear Cousin Francis...
Honeysuckle and the Bee_tatteredandlost
Honeysuckle and the Bee_bk_tatteredandlost

Marie held the purse strings and Howard liked to bowl. Match made in heaven.

As to the publisher Bamforth & Co.:
Bamforth's was started in 1870 by James Bamforth, a portrait photographer in Holmfirth, West Yorkshire. In 1883 he began to specialise in making lantern slides. During 1898 'Bamforth & Co. Ltd' started making silent monochrome films with the Riley Brothers of Bradford, West Yorkshire, who had been making films since 1896. James Bamforths expertise with lantern slides proved invaluable in the film making. They used a camera developed by Bradford cine inventor Cecil Wray. This partnership with Riley and Bamforth, known as 'RAB' films lasted until 1900. Though film production was restarted in 1913 it was again stopped in 1915, when the film production was changed to the new named 'Holmfirth Producing Company,, which quickly moved operations to London. The last Holmfirth film, Meg o' the Woods, emerged in February 1918.

In 1910 Bamforth started making illustrated 'saucy' seaside postcards which, like his films, were exported worldwide for sale. The company was bought out by the Dennis Printing Company, in Scarborough during the early 1980s. Following the demise of Dennis the 'Bamforth & Co' name and postcards rights to over 50,000 designs were purchased by Ian Wallace in 2001.

Although the Bamforth company was best known in the United Kingdom for producing the 'saucy' seaside cards, what is less well known was their rich history of filmmaking. Drawing heavily on their work with magic lantern cinema, the company began making monochrome films in 1898. The popularity of these films, in particular those featuring a character named Winky, led to a film industry in West Yorkshire which for a time surpassed that of Hollywood in terms of productivity and originality. It is also believed the company invented film editing with the release in 1899 of The Kiss in the Tunnel.

In September 2010, on the 100th anniversary of the original launch of the postcards, the new owner Ian Wallace has relaunched the publication and sale of the postcards, with the Jane Evans Licensing Consultancy. (SOURCE: Wikipedia)
Click here to see more about Bamforth & Co.

These were purchased a few years ago at an estate sale. Believe me, they weren't bought for their poetry.

5 comments:

  1. Shocking! Especially the first one! :-}

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  2. Is it too late to send her off to a nunnery?

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  3. I'm imaging that they did a lot of begetting.

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  4. Anonymous3/09/2011

    I love this post - such a great mix of family history background information - and told with such warmth.
    Thanks,
    Evelyn in Montreal

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  5. Loved these postcards! I bet Marie was quite a character! Thanks for sharing!

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