Flow & Dante 🔱🗝️ With their son, Torito 🪸
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Flow & Dante 🔱🗝️ With their son, Torito 🪸
Just got my FGO arcade cards! ( The two on the left were freebies)
[image description- 10 FGO arcade cards on a desk. The servants and their ascensions are- Chevalier D'eon 1st, Georgios 1st, Jeanne D'arc Alter 1st and 2nd, Asagami Fujino 1st and 3rd, Artoria Alter 1st and 3rd. Two ce cards are Valentine's Dojo of Tears and GUDAGUDA Poster Girl. End description]
Arcade Cards A.K.A “Exhibit Cards”
One of these cards was included in last months ‘Ephemera Club’ Patreon perk!
Known as either “arcade cards” or “exhibit cards,” these large-format printed cards were dispensed from machines available across the US, from the 1920s through the 1960s. They could be found in any location they could be parked, usually alongside other games of chance and skill you would find in penny arcades and shooting galleries on seaside boardwalks like Coney Island. To get one of these cards, a penny would be placed into the slot of the machine, pushed in, and a card will drop into the receptacle. The same mechanism you might find on any other coin-operated machine in small grocery stores and arcades today.
The largest distributor was the Exhibit Supply Co. based in Chicago. Their machines would be sold (filled with cards) to businesses, who would then purchase additional cards as needed to restock the machines. Some 14,000 different cards were produced over the life-time of the company.
Card Types and Appearance
The majority of these cards were cheaply made, printed on thick card stock, and usually in only one or two colours. Typically they were postcard-sized (some also featuring postcard backs), though variations on size did exist.
Subjects that appeared on these cards ranged from sports, music, or cinema stars, to cars and other vehicles, fortunes, and humour. Famous photos were often accompanied by facsimiles of their autographs, accompanied by “Truly yours,” “Cordially,” or “Sincerely.” Another type of card was the “art model” variety, which featured risque pin-up images of women. These would put you out 5-cents (rather than the standard 1-cent) but were an exciting find for any teenage boy.
I have no doubt that our boys would have had a few of these arcade cards floating around their personal collections. They were affordable and easy to come by. While the prime location for them sounds to have been places like seaside boardwalks, I would be surprised if they didn’t also grace the sidewalks and interiors or grocery stores or candy stores, the way other machines containing cumballs and the like do. Also, consider the way that many teens of this century have posters on their walls of beloved sports and film stars — arcade cards would have been the comparable product available. Have a crush on an actor or actress? Find a machine featuring them and insert coins until you get them. Like cars? Spend your pennies on cards filled with images of them.
Image Sources
Baseball Exhibit Vending Machine, 1940s | Source Perry Como Arcade Card, 1940s | SRNY Collection (Patreon Perk item) Clark Gable Arcade Card, 1940s | SRNY Collection (Patreon Perk item) Peggy Lee Arcade Card, 1940s | SRNY Collection (Patreon Perk item) Gary Cooper Arcade Card, 1940s | SRNY Collection (Patreon Perk item) Tony Martin Arcade Card, 1940s | SRNY Collection (Patreon Perk item) Kay Starr Arcade Card, 1940s | SRNY Collection (Patreon Perk item)
I’ll have another post on these cards and the machines in future, so keep and eye out! Access to the full research document for this topic is available on the “Patreon Clubhouse” channel of the Discord, open to all $3+ supporters!
If you would like to receive neat period-typical items like these in the mail each month, you can subscribe to the ‘Ephemera Club’ perk on Patreon.
[ Support SRNY through Patreon and Ko-Fi ] And join us on Discord for fun conversation!
"YOUR FUTURE HUSBAND will be a bill collector, traveling from door to door dunning people, and will get so many "No's" that when you say "Yes" he will chase away the "Bill" who has been trying to "Collect" you. If you don't say "Yes", remember that he never takes "No" for an answer and he will be back . . . he's funny that way. Even your dog won't scare him. You will collect six little "attachments".
"YOUR FUTURE WIFE will be a nurse. She will be good for that headache you have-- the day after. She has some definite ideas as to what kind of man she wants, and after you are married will try to make you over by manicuring your nails and painting them red, filing the fizz of your tongue, and giving you plenty of paregoric, to keep your temperature down. Your hitch will result in six little pill boxes."
Identifying film scenes from arcade/exhibit cards and reconstructing film plots and synopses
http://maryhaberstroh.com/identifying-film-scenes-from-arcadeexhibit-cards-and-reconstructing-film-plots-and-synopses/
cleanin out my purses like SMH
A Timeless Sense Of Humor
These arcade cards came out of penny arcades made by the Exhibit Supply Company in Chicago around 1927. Arcade cards most commonly featured photographs of movie stars or risqué women, but these feature delightful cartoon illustrations. I wish the illustrator had signed his/her name to these because I love their quirky style and humor. I always enjoy finding antiques that show that a good sense of humor is timeless.