Plus, an excellent quick history of seed package art!
We love to show postage stamps based on old illustrations — a cheap, cheerful and utilitarian way to celebrate the vintage every day. But, we are often late to the party, and by the time we get around to writing about some pretty stamps, they’re sold out. Well, not today! Get over to the post office, peoples, because these new stamps honoring vintage seed packets go on sale today, April 5. The 10 available flower species all came from illustrations that decorated the fronts of seed packets between 1910 and 1920. They are beautiful renderings — and it made me smile to see that my favorite flower — the zinnia — was included in the set. Admiring these stamps and using them to send flowers through the mail is a good way to get a dose of pretty — even if there is still snow on the ground outside my window.
We KNOW you’re all going to be scrolling to see the beautiful images. BUT, read this news release from the USPS — it’s really good! It gives a lovely little history of vintage seed packages and the artistry behind them. It was great fun to read!:
In 2013 the U.S. Postal Service celebrates the beauty of American flowers with an issuance that features ten colorful antique seed packets. The Vintage Seed Packets stamp art depicts the rich and detailed illustrations that encouraged millions of Americans at the turn of the last century to dream of creating the perfect garden.
Created using chromolithography—a process that replaced hand-tinted lithographs and allowed for inexpensive multi-color prints—the illustrations originally graced the fronts of flower seed packets printed between 1910 and 1920. Whether hand-tinted lithographs, vintage chromolithographs, or modern photographs, seed packet art presents a picture of floral perfection.Each of the ten stamps depicts the perfect blossoms of one variety of flower—a trio of cosmos in delicate white, pink, and red; stalks of yellow, pink, and coral digitalis; bright yellow primrose flowers with orange centers; a vibrant orange calendula; white, pink, and blue aster blooms; two shades of pinks (dianthus), one pale, one dark; linum blossoms in a rich red; white drifts of alyssum; clusters of phlox in red, pink, and purple; and pale pink, subtle yellow, and muted orange-red zinnia flowers.
Art director Antonio Alcalá of Alexandria, VA, used photographs of actual seed packets, cropping them to highlight the beautiful floral detail. Above each illustration is the name of the flower in bold capital letters.
In the early 1800s, Shakers began growing and selling garden seeds, distributing their wares in many states. They innovated the use of small packets for marketing and shipping their product. Undecorated, these packets contained only handwritten identification of the contents on the outside. As seed companies grew larger and more widespread in the late 19th century, colorful catalogs made an appearance, enticing gardeners with beautiful—almost fairy tale—illustrations of plants covered with perfect blooms and bountiful vegetables. The seed packaging, however, remained utilitarian until a revolution in on-site retail.F.W. Woolworth began a new era in 1879 when he opened stores that featured self-service counters, allowing customers direct access to merchandize that had previously been accessible only with the help of a salesman. Up to this time, seed vendors did business extensively through mail order, which could take several weeks, or at stores where customers had to ask for seeds from behind a counter, making seed buying deliberate and not subject to whim.
That changed when the D.M. Ferry and Company became one of the first seed companies to take advantage of this new way of selling. It not only began using bright, colorful packaging, but also pioneered the use of a rack called a “commission box” that exhibited the packets to best advantage and inspired impulse purchases. These eye-catching displays were also widely distributed in grocery, hardware, and general stores, and later even in gas stations.
Hand-tinted prints first decorated seed packets in the late 19th century. By the early 1900s, chromolithography, a printing process that allowed the production of inexpensive, multicolor prints, had almost entirely replaced hand tinting on the seed envelopes. Each packet illustration presented an ideal, beautifully rendered flower or vegetable plant at the peak of perfection. Photographic images became the norm on seed packets by World War II; the photographs still presented the most beautiful and almost unattainable examples of flower and vegetable plants.
Though some companies have returned to packaging with a vintage look, fanciful yet apparently realistic photographs now adorn most seed packets, still luring gardeners to dream—and to buy. Antique seed packets, however, are in great demand, particularly those with hand-tinted and early chromolithographic illustrations. The rich colors and intricate details of the drawings make them valuable to several different audiences. Collectors scour online auctions and antique stores for packets in mint condition, hunting for examples from a specific seed company or printing house or with certain types of illustrations. Decorators use framed seed packets as unique art for rustic and country interiors. Most importantly, the seed packets, along with vintage catalogs, are a valuable resource for horticulturalists, historians, and scientists, helping them to study heirloom—and sometimes extinct—varieties of plants.
According to my contact at the Post Office, the stamps will be dedicated April 5 in Oaks, PA, at the PA National Stamp Exhibition. How wonderful it is to have such a gorgeous collection of flower stamps. Many thanks to the USPS for supplying us with images and information for this story.
Wendy in St. Louis says
“the photographs still presented the most beautiful and almost unattainable examples of flower and vegetable plants.”
According to my garden, “unattainable” is the key word 😉
Melanie says
They are all beautiful. But…. as much as I love, love, love flowers, AND vintage seed packets, I wouldn’t buy these. I refuse to support anything as inept, incompetent, inefficient, and mismanaged as the USPS.
Dan says
I love the USPS! Such a bargain, especially for shipping. And our mail lady is great – loves our dogs, and when our old Dachshund died (at twenty) she bought us a nice plant and card.
Contrast that with Fed Ex, who – when they can even find the house – throw stuff over the 3′ fence to let it get soaked in the rain. Pay four times as much for 1/4 the service? No thanks.
I have several elderly friends I regularly send cards too. I think these will make their day.
Melanie says
Dan, so glad to hear of someone with a positive experience with the postal service. Apparently some parts of the country are much better than mine.
I mailed a package to my cousin about 150 miles away. Paid the extra to send it Priority, paid some more to have delivery confirmation (lesson learned after a previous disaster) and I could have walked to her house faster than the package arrived. 🙁
Sad story aside, these are GORGEOUS stamps that make me drool. Checked at my PO yesterday morning and found that there weren’t any there yet.
Brian T says
About 10 years ago, I bought a couple dozen vintage Ferry seed packets on eBay and had them framed — one frame with four flower packets, one with 15, and one with three vegetables. The mats were the most expensive part of the deal, since there was a $5 cutting charge for each rectangle. But there’s no way I could neatly make all those cuts, so paying a pro was the only way to go.
I thought this up without having seen seed packets used in decor — ahead of a trend for once in my life!
rebecca Prichard says
Zinnias are my favorite, too!
Sara says
Wow, very pretty! Framing the entire collection of these stamps would look really neat against a black background. I have some framed vintage seed packets and fruit crate labels hanging on my walls in the kitchen and bathroom. The artwork and colors are just fabulous. It’s a nice inexpensive way to add some genuine vintage art to your decor.
Michelle Teall says
Our main kitchen wall is covered in mounted crate labels, we love the illustrations and colors. I have a few vintage seed packets, I should add them to the wall!
Mark E. says
Wow! Gotta run to the basement and find my vintage seed packets. (Thirty-five years ago my grandmother moved INTO a 1941 time capsule home where the original “house-doting” couple had carefully preserved (and left behind) unopened packets of seeds.) I think it’s high time–and the season–to display them. Oh, but how?
Annie B. says
A vintage seed packet collage!
nina462 says
no collage. you wouldn’t want to damage them with decopage etc.
I, myself, have old labels from cherries framed (red frame) in my kitchen/hallway.
Stephanie says
Thanks for sharing! They are all so beautiful. My favorite has to be Digitalis…very whimsical 🙂
toni syring says
cosmos is a favorite of mine,but i like them all.
Janet in CT says
I agree with Toni; I love them all. I think the primrose is my favorite because I love yellow but the cosmos one runs a very close second choice. I love the idea of vintage seed packets and I hope the post office finds more vintage subjects for stamps.
Jay says
Why the zinnias but in actuality my first garden love is red geraniums then red zinnias. I am seeing the old seed packets more and more at antique shows. Thanks for sharing, will have to get some of these stamps. Happy Friday everyone!
Bill Williams says
These are really beautiful stamps. Thanks for sharing!
My favorite is Phlox. It looks so striking.
It would be interesting to have access to the sales data for some of these seed companies to see what difference the packaging really makes in terms of the numbers sold.
I wonder if putting the seeds in a pack with a vintage picture on the front vs having a picture of the real plant in bloom makes any difference to the sales?