Tea Leaf Symbols in Art
From Mystic Tea Room
(sigline and see also and cats) |
(link) |
||
(2 intermediate revisions not shown) | |||
Line 13: | Line 13: | ||
* [[Fortune Telling Postcards by Fred C. Lounsbury]] | * [[Fortune Telling Postcards by Fred C. Lounsbury]] | ||
- | * [[ | + | * [[Fortunes in Teacups Postcards by Bamforth]] |
* [[Your Fortune in a Tea-Cup Postcards]] | * [[Your Fortune in a Tea-Cup Postcards]] | ||
+ | |||
<i><b>catherine yronwode</b><br>curator, historian, and docent | <i><b>catherine yronwode</b><br>curator, historian, and docent | ||
Line 21: | Line 22: | ||
==See Also== | ==See Also== | ||
- | |||
* [[Tea Leaf Symbols in Art]] | * [[Tea Leaf Symbols in Art]] | ||
+ | * [[Tea Leaf Reading in Art]] | ||
* [[Advertisements for Tea Leaf Reading Services]] | * [[Advertisements for Tea Leaf Reading Services]] | ||
* [http://www.mystictearoom.com/lamadama.html Harry Roseland's Fortune Teller Art] | * [http://www.mystictearoom.com/lamadama.html Harry Roseland's Fortune Teller Art] | ||
* [[Tea Company Booklets|Tea Company Booklet Art]] | * [[Tea Company Booklets|Tea Company Booklet Art]] | ||
* [[The Ceylonese Tea-Plucker in Art]] | * [[The Ceylonese Tea-Plucker in Art]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | [[Category:Tea Leaf Art]] |
Latest revision as of 02:25, 9 January 2021
Tea leaf omens and symbols -- images of the images found in the tea cup -- are themselves the subject of art, especially commercial paintings and cartoons used to decorate postcards during the early 20th century.
Tea Leaf Symbols on Postcards
In some cases the art is intended to teach or exemplify the symbolic meaning, after the manner of an instruction booklet or a set of flash cards. The Fred C. Lounsbury tea leaf fortune telling postcards of 1907 - 1908 are of this type. Lounsbury also produced similarly gilded postcards explicating the meanings of playing cards, dice, and dominos.
In other cases, the meaning of the symbol is thought to be so culturally well-known or so inherently obvious, that any comment made about it will take on a slightly comic air. This is the case in the example of the tea cup with the black cat, labelled as "Good Luck."
During the great postcard craze of 1905 to 1915, most narrative art postcards were released in sets of six, a number was dictated by the size of the printing presses used to produce them. So, generally, if you see one card, you will either find a set of six. Rarely, as in the case of astrology art cards, the set will consist of twelve -- the number of the signs of the zodiac.
- Fortune Telling Postcards by Fred C. Lounsbury
- Fortunes in Teacups Postcards by Bamforth
- Your Fortune in a Tea-Cup Postcards
catherine yronwode
curator, historian, and docent
The Mystic Tea Room