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The holidays are over, but you can keep spreading gratitude. Try writing one postcard a month to show appreciation for your loved ones. The holidays are over, but you can keep spreading gratitude. ...
The Avery logo designed by Saul Bass in 1975 was used exclusively on office products by CCL Industries, which was allowed to license the logo when it purchased Avery Dennison's office products business in July 2013, until it was replaced sometime around the late-2010s with a new visual identity designed by Chermayeff & Geismar & Haviv.
Large-letter postcards were a style of postcards popular in North America in the first half of the 20th century, especially the 1930s through the 1950s. The cards are so-called because the name of a tourist destination was printed in three-dimensional block letters, each of which were inset with images of local landmarks. [ 1 ]
A statement from a spokesperson for the Seidler Trust, which controls the Padres, called her complaint "entirely without merit." Last month, the Padres named John Seidler, the oldest of Peter's ...
John Arthur Dixon (18 June 1897 - 19 May 1958) was the British founder of the eponymous manufacturer of greetings cards and postcards, J. Arthur Dixon. Dixon was born at Cross Hills, Keighley, Yorkshire, the eldest son of Charles C. Dixon. [1] In 1926, he moved to Shanklin on the Isle of Wight, where he bought a small printing business. Dixon ...
I joined a large table of people with seemingly professional-level glitter and Magic Marker skills. While their postcards looked like illuminated manuscripts, I painstakingly struggled to make ...
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