Sunday, July 6, 2014
Saturday, July 5, 2014
Livingston's History, Plus Phlox Drummondi and Pansies for 1910
It is such a nice day outside here in Connecticut I could not just post text heavy history at the top of the page ...interesting as it may be to you or me.
(I have even placed a huge version of this flower litho at the end so you can wallow in the flowers!)
The article below from a 1910 issue of American Florist magazine is of interest because it mentions the acreage acquired over time...plus has good photos of the Livingstons.
A larger version of the next article for easier reading is at the end.
Friday, July 4, 2014
Thursday, July 3, 2014
1906 - Livingston Seed Co.: Be Still My Heart
Summer!
This is a 1906 Livingston's Seeds catalog.
This sweet pepper is the vegetable equivalent of a Henry Miller novel.
You wouldn't know that inside, by this time, dull photo illustrations had almost replaced the sprightly engravings inside the catalog.
I just love this green.
!
This is rather overstating the matter as applied to seed catalogs, but I do look for that special life affirming page within them :-)
"I believe that today more than ever a book should be sought after even if it has only one great page in it: we must search for fragments, splinters, toenails, anything that has ore in it, anything that is capable of resuscitating the body and soul. It may be that we are doomed, that there is no hope for us, any of us, but if that is so then let us set up a last agonizing, bloodcurdling howl, a screech of defiance, a war whoop! Away with lamentation! Away with elegies and dirges! Away with biographies and histories, and libraries and museums! Let the dead eat the dead. Let us living ones dance about the rim of the crater, a last expiring dance. But a dance!"
Henry Miller, Tropic of Cancer, 1934
Wednesday, July 2, 2014
1893 - Telephone Peas?!
Telephone Peas!
The 1893 analog of 1969's Jet Star tomato? Seedsmen know the value of naming their vegies, in these two cases after something really new and exciting.
The Livingston's Sons catalog page describing Telephone Peas is below this Heroine Pea engraving.
(Can you tell I love vegetable engravings?)
Actually, it was the Heroine Pea that first got my attention. This is the sort of engraving that makes my heart go pitter-pat!
Actually, it was the Heroine Pea that first got my attention. This is the sort of engraving that makes my heart go pitter-pat!
And in a tip of the hat to my cantaloupe loving husband, below is the colorful back cover featuring a Nutmeg melon variety.
Cantaloupes, I read somewhere, became popular after the Civil War even though they had been around since the 1700s. I think it must be due to more extensive and illustrated catalogs. Can you think of another reason?
Yummy looking illustration! And I don't like cantaloupe.
I know when they are ripe when the house smells like garbage...something about the taste and smell pushes negative reaction smell buttons in my nose.
Cantaloupes, I read somewhere, became popular after the Civil War even though they had been around since the 1700s. I think it must be due to more extensive and illustrated catalogs. Can you think of another reason?
Yummy looking illustration! And I don't like cantaloupe.
I know when they are ripe when the house smells like garbage...something about the taste and smell pushes negative reaction smell buttons in my nose.
Tuesday, July 1, 2014
Monday, June 30, 2014
Next Year, 1900, Life Returns!
Phew! Someone saw the light. One year after the drab eviscerated corn adorned the back cover came this collection back there.
The cover is an unambiguous celebration of the Livingston's Seed new tomato, Magnus! Notice the twine trying to hold up the heavy truss of fruit?
The onion and parsley are printed with only two colors I think. Nice, very nice, for the money.
The other day I showed you the fantastic carrot engraving. This radish illustration is a similar, though less whimsical, production.
It makes it easy for you to compare features. It is a clear presentation of useful information.
Confession: I am a sucker for ribbon labels :-)
While I am in my catalog critique mood, look at this illustration of the Magnus tomato from inside the catalog. Pathetic, isn't it? This catalog is straddling the engraving/photo illustration divide.
They must have seen this is so much less inviting than the engravings.
I suppose having the company seen as forward thinking, using photography, was more important.
The catalog used both in 1900.
Tomatoes are not the easiest vegetable to represent in a catalog without color. Especially as men like A.W. Livingston bred them to be smooth, featureless globes.
Below is an earlier engraving. I find it much more lively. Their plumpness just plumps at you! The perky little calyx look like crowns.
More tomorrow...probably straying into tomato land, but maybe not.
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