Hi Folks,
I'm Mr Sauga, not Mrs Sauga as the handle might display. I confess. I have become a deltiologist. I must be nuts paying money for somebody's junk. But Oh Well....... I luv it !
deltiology; The collection and study of postcards.
Hey! it's better than alcohol hobbies or cigarette hobbies or collecting another disease hobby.
I especially like the written postcards. Some cards admittedly are something they just picked up at the spur of the moment to scribble on. Others are a true slice of history and are priceless. Many cards traded are over 100 years old. That of course means the authors are dead. But they made their mark in the world and now their writing is closely guarded by thousands of collectors. How neet is that?
Those street scenes are something else. Wow Each individual in the picture had their own life story. We can tell something of that story form the split second that the camera was clicked. They might have been a milkman, or a new mother, a taxi driver, a funeral director or a farmer selling his goods for food. Some are staring into the camera because they welcomed that slice of life captured in the moment. Way back when of course, they had to stand still for the long shutter exposure. 100 years from now in 2108 they will look at the cars on the road in a postcard and ask how we could drive those gas gussling monsters.
My uncle fought in WW1 and sent silk knitted postcards from France to Canada to tell his mother that he was still alive and thriving. Those cards are priceless to us.
Well thanks folks for hosting these sites and keeping them alive and flourishing. Maybe we'll buy one of your memories along the way.
Hi Folks,
I'm Mr Sauga, not Mrs Sauga as the handle might display. I confess. I have become a deltiologist. I must be nuts paying money for somebody's junk. But Oh Well....... I luv it !
deltiology; The collection and study of postcards.
Hey! it's better than alcohol hobbies or cigarette hobbies or collecting another disease hobby.
I especially like the written postcards. Some cards admittedly are something they just picked up at the spur of the moment to scribble on. Others are a true slice of history and are priceless. Many cards traded are over 100 years old. That of course means the authors are dead. But they made their mark in the world and now their writing is closely guarded by thousands of collectors. How neet is that?
Those street scenes are something else. Wow Each individual in the picture had their own life story. We can tell something of that story form the split second that the camera was clicked. They might have been a milkman, or a new mother, a taxi driver, a funeral director or a farmer selling his goods for food. Some are staring into the camera because they welcomed that slice of life captured in the moment. Way back when of course, they had to stand still for the long shutter exposure. 100 years from now in 2108 they will look at the cars on the road in a postcard and ask how we could drive those gas gussling monsters.
My uncle fought in WW1 and sent silk knitted postcards from France to Canada to tell his mother that he was still alive and thriving. Those cards are priceless to us.
Well thanks folks for hosting these sites and keeping them alive and flourishing. Maybe we'll buy one of your memories along the way.
Mr Sauga
Welcome Mr Sauga,
As a seller of postcards I have to agree with you that these postcards are fascinating to read and really gives a great insight into the times gone past.
On the "other" site I have sold over 20,000 postcards over the years and every now and again one throws up a surprise.
I have lost count the number of times where someone has got in touch with me after seeing a postcard up for auction where the sender or where it was going to was a relative from years gone by
The best one though was a postcard showing 2 young boys and a dog on Canford Cliffs in Dorset from the early 1930s I had up for sale and one of the boys, who must have been in his 80s, got in touch to say that he just couldn't believe it when he saw himself on the postcard and that he remembers the photo being taken all of those years ago and for the past 30 years he had been going to postcard fairs and trawling through auctions just to see if he could find it !
The other boy in the photo was his best mate who's dog it was and his best mate was killed in a motorbike accident some years later
I told him he could have it for nothing as it only seemed right and he travelled up 200 miles to pick it up just in case it got lost in the post....but the best part is coming up !!
When he got here to pick it up he couldn't believe it when he read the back, it was sent by his future wife to her Auntie 18 years after the photo was taken and 4 months before they met !
Since then I have always shown the back of the postcards as well as the front and have had loads of people get in touch who can associate with them
The trouble is that because I read the back of each and every one I put on, I don't list as fast as I want to !!
It also amazes me as to how the writing has changed, especially the ones from the early 1900s and sometimes the writing, to me, is really hard to read, but when I take them to my Dad he can read them with no problem....must be his age !
Welcome Mr Sauga,
As a seller of postcards I have to agree with you that these postcards are fascinating to read and really gives a great insight into the times gone past.
On the "other" site I have sold over 20,000 postcards over the years and every now and again one throws up a surprise.
I have lost count the number of times where someone has got in touch with me after seeing a postcard up for auction where the sender or where it was going to was a relative from years gone by
The best one though was a postcard showing 2 young boys and a dog on Canford Cliffs in Dorset from the early 1930s I had up for sale and one of the boys, who must have been in his 80s, got in touch to say that he just couldn't believe it when he saw himself on the postcard and that he remembers the photo being taken all of those years ago and for the past 30 years he had been going to postcard fairs and trawling through auctions just to see if he could find it !
The other boy in the photo was his best mate who's dog it was and his best mate was killed in a motorbike accident some years later
I told him he could have it for nothing as it only seemed right and he travelled up 200 miles to pick it up just in case it got lost in the post....but the best part is coming up !!
When he got here to pick it up he couldn't believe it when he read the back, it was sent by his future wife to her Auntie 18 years after the photo was taken a