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SCIENCE SOURCE
Puck Christmas, 1907
SS2628845
JA9499
Royalty Free
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Puck Christmas, 1907
Entitled: "Puck Christmas 1907" chromolithograph showing two women helping Puck hang Christmas decorations; they have used holly to form the name of the magazine "Puck" at the top of a window. Puck was America's first successful humor magazine of colorful cartoons, caricatures and political satire of the issues of the day. It was published from 1871 until 1918. It was the first magazine to carry illustrated advertising and the first to successfully adopt full-color lithography printing for a weekly publication. Holly, Ivy and other greenery such as Mistletoe were originally used in pre-Christian times to help celebrate the Winter Solstice Festival and ward off evil spirits and to celebrate new growth. When Christianity came into Western Europe, some people wanted to keep the greenery and give it Christian meanings. The prickly leaves of holly represent the crown of thorns that Jesus wore when he was crucified. The berries are the drops of blood that were shed by Jesus because of the thorns. Illustrated by Frank Arthur Nankivell for Puck and published by Keppler & Schwarzmann, December 4, 1907.
Source name:
SCIENCE SOURCE
Unique identifier:
SS2628845
Legacy Identifier:
JA9499
Type:
Image
Size:
3090px × 4200px 6MB
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Keywords
Keywords:
1907
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20th century
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america
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art
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cartoon
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christmas
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christmas decorations
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christmas greens
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christmas holly
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chromolithograph
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cover art
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december 4
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december 4th
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female
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frank arthur nankivell
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front cover
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history
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holiday
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lithograph
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puck
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puck christmas
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puck magazine
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religious holiday
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tradition
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traditional
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usa
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woman