- Trade card
Trade card describes small cards, similar to the
visiting card s exchanged in social circles, that businesses would distribute to clients and potential customers. Trade cards first became popular at the beginning of the 17th century inLondon . These functioned asadvertising and also asmap s, directing the public to merchants' stores, as no formal street address numbering system existed at the time.The trade card is an early example of the modern
business card . Some businesses began to create increasingly sophisticated designs, especially with the development of color printing. A few companies specialized in producing stock cards, usually with an image on one side and space on the other side for the business to add its own information. As the designs became more attractive and colorful, collecting trade cards became a popularhobby in the late 19th century, since color images were not yet widely available.In its original sense, the "trade" in "trade card" refers to its use by the proprietor of a business to announce his trade, or line of business. By moving into the realm of
collecting , trade cards gave rise to thetrading card , the meaning now shifting to the exchange or trade of cards by enthusiasts. Some cards, particularly those produced bytobacco companies featuringbaseball players, later developed intocollectible s and lost their function as a business advertisement.ee also
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Advertising postcard
*Baseball card
*Cigarette card
*Postcard External links
* [http://doyle.lib.muohio.edu/cdm4/tradecards/ Victorian Tradecards]
* [http://fulton.brooklynpubliclibrary.org/ Brooklyn Public Library: Fulton Street Trade Card Collection]
* [http://www.heraldryshop.biz/catalogue/trade.htm Catalogue of heraldic tobacco and trading cards]
* [http://digital.lib.uiowa.edu/tradecards Iowa Digital Library: Victorian Trade Cards Digital Collection]
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