Victorian Valentine's Day Card with Ornate Heart Frame

Victorian Valentine's Day Card with Ornate Heart Frame

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OccasionValentine
EraVictorian (1870-1900)
Decade1880s-1890s
Stylechromolithograph with embossing and die-cut
Colorsgold, cream, blue (powder/steel blue, not cobalt), auburn, pale pink, green/teal
Vibesluxurious, romantic

Text on Card

Love to my Valentine

Description

Distinguished by its labor-intensive combination of chromolithographic printing and embossed metallic detailing, this exquisite Victorian Valentine's greeting card showcases the ornamental excess and romantic sensibility of the late 19th century. A refined young woman in profile adorns the center, her auburn hair arranged in fashionable Gibson Girl style, gazing demurely to the side. She wears a delicate white gown with soft shading, embodying the feminine ideal of the era. The card's most striking feature is its elaborate die-cut heart frame, lavishly embellished with gold filigree, pearl-like cabochons, and jewel-tone enamel accents in cobalt blue. Four prominent heart-shaped enamel plaques punctuate the ornamental border, reinforcing the Valentine's Day theme. The text "Love to my Valentine" curves gracefully across the top, rendered in elegant period script. This card exemplifies a luxury item that only the middle and upper classes could afford to exchange, given its ornate construction.

Subjects

woman, profile, valentine, heart, romantic

Printing Notes

Ornamental die-cut heart frame with applied enamel cabochons and gold filigree detailing. Chromolithographic portrait with hand-applied embellishments.

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