CONCORD, N.H. - Curt Teich, a German immigrant and printer, began producing colorful linen-textured large-letter 'Greetings from' postcards in the early 1930s, and the Newberry Library in Chicago now holds the largest public collection of his work. Will Hansen, the library's curator of Americana, called Teich "kind of a genius" and said the company perfected a system of mass-producing large-letter cards, applying the idea that no town was too small to include. Teich's process emphasized saturated colors and simplified scenes that painted an enticing view of mid-20th-century America. The cards became widely popular in the 1940s through the 1960s as Americans embraced automobile travel; Hansen said they looked optimistic and matched a sense that the country was on an upward trajectory. Collectors prize the graphics: retired professor Peter Meggison has about 10,000 large-letter postcards, citing hometown New Bedford and a Saugatuck card with an artist's palette among his favorites. For many travelers the cards were an inexpensive way to share trips, and today mural-sized postcard images and social media posts echo the vintage designs; the Newberry even helped stage giant postcard backgrounds for The Eagles at the Sphere in Las Vegas.
Prepared by Emily Rhodes and reviewed by editorial team.
Curt Teich's postcards are a piece of Americana. They capture a time when road trips were a new adventure and every town had something to offer. If you're a fan of vintage design or history, check out the Newberry Library's collection online. It's a free trip down memory lane.
Teich's 'Greetings from' postcards shaped American culture, offering a colorful, optimistic view of mid-20th-century life. They're not just collectibles, but a testament to our nation's past. Worth forwarding if you know someone who loves a good nostalgia trip.
Collectors, postcard dealers, museums, and tourism promoters benefited from Teich's mass-distribution model and the lasting popularity of large-letter postcards.
Independent local printers who could not match Curt Teich's mass-production methods lost market share and business opportunities during the postcards' expansion.
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Curt Teich 'Greetings From' Postcards Shaped American Culture
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