Film, Media & TV0 min ago
Help Me Work Out What This Item Is
17 Answers
This is a follow-on to a question that I asked a few weeks ago. https:/ /www.th eanswer bank.co .uk/How -it-Wor ks/Ques tion176 7200.ht ml
TTT tried to help me but it seems that we were going in the wrong direction.
https:/ /postim g.cc/ga llery/n MLsnpg
Using my new spectacles and a magnifying glass I have managed to locate a little more information from the leaflet.
"modèle déposé - Breveté s.g.d.g." is printed at the bottom of the middle page of the leaflet.
I have discovered that: Breveté SGDG was a French type of patent that ceased to exist in 1968. The name was a common abbreviation for "Breveté Sans Garantie Du Gouvernement“
The 'picture' in the middle of the leaflet is constructed by a few layers of plastic with trees etc between the layers.
Can anyone tell me if this item has another name? Uncle Google gives me many results but none of them is in any way similar to this item.
I am off to bed to play with my Kindle - I will be back.
TTT tried to help me but it seems that we were going in the wrong direction.
https:/
Using my new spectacles and a magnifying glass I have managed to locate a little more information from the leaflet.
"modèle déposé - Breveté s.g.d.g." is printed at the bottom of the middle page of the leaflet.
I have discovered that: Breveté SGDG was a French type of patent that ceased to exist in 1968. The name was a common abbreviation for "Breveté Sans Garantie Du Gouvernement“
The 'picture' in the middle of the leaflet is constructed by a few layers of plastic with trees etc between the layers.
Can anyone tell me if this item has another name? Uncle Google gives me many results but none of them is in any way similar to this item.
I am off to bed to play with my Kindle - I will be back.
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.any reason why it isn't just what it looks like, a souvenir leaflet? The plastic overlays are unusual, giving a sort of 3D effect, and it may be that someone has tried to copyright or patent the idea - I've not seen that sort of thing before, but it probably failed to catch on.
It looks envelope-sized so it might have been mailable as an upmarket postcard.
It looks envelope-sized so it might have been mailable as an upmarket postcard.
Jno
The fact that I can't find anything like it annoys me. If all else fails I can put it on the Oxfam site and think of a value/guesstimate.
I managed to sell one old postcard for £20 last week. I put it on the Oxfam site whilst in the shop and by the time that I got home it had sold. I could have undervalued the postcard!!
The fact that I can't find anything like it annoys me. If all else fails I can put it on the Oxfam site and think of a value/guesstimate.
I managed to sell one old postcard for £20 last week. I put it on the Oxfam site whilst in the shop and by the time that I got home it had sold. I could have undervalued the postcard!!
very galling. But selling postcards has always seemed rather random to me. It might fetch more if it's unusual, like this one, or to someone building up a collection of Eiffel Tower representations, or to someone who's visited it, or if it's particularly old or by Cezanne, or to someone who just likes it. You might be able to guess the age (post-1931) if you can get a good look at the plane. I'd just label it "rare French information leaflet" and charge whatever you fancy.
It just looks like a souvenir pamphlet intended for tourists. The composition of the picture was probably designed to allow similar coloured images to be easily created, in other pamphlets, with different Parisian landmarks in the background. The date of publication can be pinned down fairly accurately: the penultimate sentence of the text talks about how the Tower has stood overlooking Paris for 60 years ("soixante ans"), so it must have been printed round about 1950.