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Vintage BUZZA CARDOZO Lot 6 GET WELL CARDS Envelopes Cat #35 C 8937 A Fantasy

$ 0.52

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Handmade: No
  • Condition: New
  • Modified Item: No
  • Item must be returned within: 30 Days
  • Vintage: Yes
  • Restocking Fee: No
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer

    Description

    Vintage NOS BUZZA CARDOZO GET WELL 6 (full-sized) CARDS Envelopes Cat #35 C 8937 A Fantasy Card. The Cards are in NEW OLD STOCK Condition: the envelopes have some fading of the Petal Pink color. The message inside says: “hope you’re soon up and around.” The cards are still vividly colorful, see pictures. The cards will be shipped via USPS Media Mail.
    Now, for a little history...”Buzza-Cardozo Cards originated in Minneapolis in 1909 by George Earl Buzza. Business partner Ralph Nunus Cardozo's name was added when the company moved to Hollywood in the thirties. The Gibson greeting card company purchased Buzza-Cardozo in the early fifties. (More about the early company (with vintage artwork) here.” (Source: https://cartoonresearch.com/index.php/classic-cartoon-greeting-card-records-by-buzza-cardozo/)
    George Earl Buzza (born June 22, 1882) had already been working as a commercial artist when he began making greeting cards in 1909. He started with a set of 24 different designs that have been described as "poster-like" and stood out as unusual in the greeting card market. The company was first called The Buzza Rheem Company, soon changing to The Buzza Company.
    Though he struggled for the first 6 years, eventually his unusual style and high quality won over many fans leading the company to expand in 1915, from its one-man show origins. They had of course by then, long ago moved on from the original poster style of the earliest cards, expanding to include a diverse array of cards. C. D. Van Gorder is credited with helping design quite a number of cards after this point. Ralph Nunus Cardozo (b June 14, 1894) who went on to become a partner with Buzza after the sale of the original Buzza company, was with the company in its early years. Other important early figures include artists Lee Mero, Bernice Shaver and Janet Scott.
    In 1922 the company obtained exclusive rights to use the writings of "Just Folks" poet, Edgar A. Guest, in its cards and mottos. In addition the company employed J. P. McEvoy as a writer. George Buzza himself continued to contribute his own creativity, including original verse, to the cards his company produced. Another hallmark of the company was the high quality and often unusual colors and textures of the papers used in manufacturing their greetings.
    The company moved from Minneapolis, Minnesotta to Hollywood, California in the 1930s. At the same time they changed their name to Buzza-Cardozo with Ralph Cardozo now a full partner with George Buzza. There are mentions in some sources of the original company being sold with George Buzza planning to retire upon his move to California. Whether this was the intention or not, it was not to become reality, as George instead launched a new endeavor with Ralph Cardozo, who also made the trek from Minnesota to California. The building they had occupied in the Uptown neighborhood of Minneapolis from 1923 remained a design studio for the company after the move, until 1942 when it was acquired by the federal government and used for war-time manufacturing by the Minneapolis-Honeywell Regulator Company. Still bearing the Buzza name, the building is now listed on the National Registry of Historic Places.
    (Source: www.vintagevalentinemuseum)