All Seasons Greetings from Your Milkman, St. Lawre…
All Seasons Greetings from Your Milkman, St. Lawre…
House on the banks
At the poplars swimming hole
A Sparkly Christmas Tree and a Shiny Fireplace
Electricity Trees......a second look.
Happy Fence Friday
erano le prime tracce d'autunno
Glimpse of Hicks Bay
Stream From Lake.
Snow Returns to Mulliken
The Gold Elms
nebbia nel Verde con tracce d'Autunno
Kinder Road
Xmas 1946
Season's Greetings
Who Was That Masked Santa?
Poetry in Yellow & Gold
Tokoroa's Lake Moana-nui
Between Potaka and Hicks Bay
Trees @ Lincoln Brick Park
Fog
Great place to camp.
Christmas Greetings from Our House to Your House
Lebanon Daily News-Times and I Wish You a Merry Ch…
Merry Costumed Christmas
Up Huihuitaha Road
Autumn Sunset
Cow on rock
On Wiltsdown Road
Let us say...
All I Got for Christmas Was a Bug! (Detail)
All I Got for Christmas Was a Bug!
Various trees
Boat
Charlie Brown Trees
Charlie Brown Trees
Charlie Brown Trees
Woodlot, Mt Hope Highway
Loucks School Road
Still hanging in there...........
Trees & the Grand
Trees & the Grand
Forêt des trois pignons
Forêt des trois pignons
Forêt des trois pignons
Forêt des trois pignons
Path through bush
Sneewittchen
Von dem Machandelboom
Looking Through
Looking down on the lake
Autumn tree
Triple
Looking toward river
Horses, Prairieville
Lichen and leaves
Autumn
Bush growth
The Old Metal Barn
Fireproof Christmas Snow for Decorating Christmas…
A Merry Christmas Holdup
Grace Highway
McWhorter Highway
Grace Highway
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Christmas Greetings from Karl Ramet, 1915
Single-sided greeting card printed in blue with other handpainted colors.
Information regarding Karl Ramet is elusive. From brief mentions here and there, I believe that he was an artist who taught drawing in the Reading, Pa., schools in the early 1910s and then later moved to New York City, where he designed the sets for at least one Broadway show.
Information regarding Karl Ramet is elusive. From brief mentions here and there, I believe that he was an artist who taught drawing in the Reading, Pa., schools in the early 1910s and then later moved to New York City, where he designed the sets for at least one Broadway show.
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