top of page

today's special tidbit ~ in honor of the Valentine ...

each day brings a new adventure in the most unexpected way ~

vintage Valentines ...

what's old is new again - all the rage for the ages ~

Vintage Valentines

as you may know ...

Much of my day revolves around researching the treasures I uncover from the estate collection of antiques. I've known about vintage Valentines for some time. My grandmother had many as well as courting cards.

As great fortune would have it, Time featured an article by Merrill Fabry about, of all things, vintage Valentines and the history of Valentine's Day.

Here's an excerpt from the article:

It's been an occasion for romance since the 1400s (and hated since at least the 1840s)

The origin stories for Valentine’s Day abound, from the Roman fertility festival of Lupercalia to the tale of the martyred St. Valentine, but those stories omit the approximately 1,500 years since. How did we get from rowdy Romans trying to have babies to modern Americans spending billions of dollars each year on cards and chocolate?

Valentine’s Day has a well-deserved reputation for being excessively commercial; the National Retail Federation estimates that people in the U.S. will spend $19.7 billion for this year’s holiday, with $1.1 billion going to cards. But despite the big budget sensation, it’s not actually a so-called “Hallmark holiday,” invented merely to move merchandise. Its roots as a romantic occasion for lovers are more than 600 years old.

Chaucer’s late 14th century poem Parliament of Foules mentions Valentine’s Day as the time when birds selected their mates, though not all scholars agree he was necessarily referring to our Feb. 14 date. Another oft-cited early reference is from the French Duke of Orleans’ poems to his wife, written while he was imprisoned after the battle of Agincourt in 1415. In one he writes “I am already sick of love, My very gentle Valentine.” Even Shakespeare got in on it: in Hamlet (written around the turn of the 17th century) Ophelia sings, “Tomorrow is Saint Valentine’s day, All in the morning betime, And I a maid at your window, To be your Valentine.”

And Valentine’s Day wasn’t just for poets: In February of 1477, Margery Brews of Norfolk, England sent a letter to her fiancé John Paston calling him “my right well-beloved valentine.” The letter survived, and is now part of the British Library’s collection, where is is currently the oldest known Valentine written in English.

But, along with that romance, the commercialism—and backlash—are also older than you’d expect.

By the 18th century, the tradition of sending poems between lovers or sweethearts was so established that a volume called The New English Valentine Writer, or the High Road to Love; for both Sexes. Containing a Complete Set of Valentines was published in London. It offered a variety of love poems appropriate for all sorts of writers and recipients.

The tradition of sending Valentines didn’t become firmly entrenched in the U.S. until the 1840s. The holiday grew in popularity during the decade as stationers began to advertise their valentines in newspapers, which then also wrote about the customary practices of St. Valentine’s Day. Esther Howland of Worcester, Mass., became one of the most well known of these early Valentine’s Day card manufacturers for her creations featuring paper lace.

And along with the rise of exchanging cards, complaints about Valentine’s Day have been going strong since at least 1847, when the New York Daily Tribune ran an article lamenting the loss of an old-fashioned, non-commercial day of love: “There was a time when Valentine’s Day meant something. Then it was a business of real lovers and there was sweetness under its delicate shy disguise. Good [graces]! that’s gone long ago. Now nobody makes more than a joke of it.” Indeed, the Tribune went on to declare, “We hate this modern degeneracy, this miscellaneous and business fashion. Send a Valentine by the penny post too? Bah! Give us the sweet old days when there was a mystery about it.”

Still, despite all that disdain, people loved Valentine’s Day. Over the years, the numbers of cards, card manufacturers and additional merchandise associated with the holiday increased.

The British chocolate company Cadbury’s added a heart-shaped box of chocolates in the 1860s, and in 1907 Hershey’s introduced their chocolate Kisses. It wasn’t until in 1913 that Hallmark started selling their first Valentine’s Day cards.The commercial holiday has only grown since. But, even if you’re one to bemoan the forced feelings of Feb. 14, at least you can take comfort in knowing that your shelling out for flowers and cards is observing the holiday as it was meant to be celebrated.

Click the heart below to see the article as published and take a look at the vintage Valentines featured - so similar to the treasures we have, right here at The Art Loft Gallery. If you're looking for something extra sweet, extra special, and an ageless gift from the heart, this could be the treasure you seek.

The Art Loft Gallery, LTD., a locally owned and operated business in Collinsville, Illinois, has been open since 1984. In addition to offering custom picture framing services, The Art Loft Gallery, LTD. is an authorized dealer for renowned artist, Patricia Buckley Moss, and also has a wide variety of antiques and giftware for sale. Come in for a unique shopping experience and enjoy a cup of Starbucks and a cookie while you shop. Contact Us

Join our mailing list

Never miss an update

Featured Posts
Recent Posts
Archive
Categories
Follow Us
  • Facebook - Grey Circle
bottom of page