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The cat adamantly refuses, says he is through playing cards with the dog and, somewhat irritated, goes to sit on a nearby log. The Gambling Bug immediately sees this as an irresistible opportunity and bites the cat's ear. Now the cat, wound-up and anxious to bet, dashes back to the dog repeating, "Gimme the cards, deal 'em out, let's go, come on!"
The first to be depicted in an early advertising postcard was the Interstate Industrial Exposition that took place in Chicago in 1873. [26] As that exposition card was not intended to be a souvenir, the first postcard to be printed explicitly as a souvenir in the United States was created for the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition, also in Chicago.
The Game of Alice in Wonderland uses a custom deck of 52 cards divided into three "suits": starred picture cards, plain picture cards, and numbered cards.. Star picture cards: 16 cards are numbered from 1 to 16; each card has a star and a picture based on John Tenniel's original illustrations in Alice in Wonderland.
First used for horizontal views, then eventually adapted for portraits. Peak popularity: 1880s. Although not uncommon in the 1870s, the cabinet card became more widely used in the 1880s but never displaced the carte de visite. Decline: 1890s. As snapshot and personal photography became commonplace among the public, the popularity of the cabinet ...
It was GrandPré who came up with making the lightning bolt part of the title, a signature part of the branding to this day. "Soon after, Mary sent a sketch on vellum tracing paper of the words ...
Happy families is a traditional British card game usually with a specially made set of picture cards, featuring illustrations of fictional families of four, most often based on occupation types. The object of the game is to collect complete families, and the game is similar to Go Fish and Quartets .
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A flexo print is achieved by creating a mirrored master of the required image as a 3D relief in a rubber or polymer material. A measured amount of ink is deposited upon the surface of the printing plate (or printing cylinder) using an anilox roll. The print surface then rotates, contacting the print material which transfers the ink.