Discover 3,000+ vintage American prints from 1885–1928 by theme, birth month, decade, or original publication.
Browse by theme
Seventeen themed collections — from magazine cover art to holiday cards.
(846) Vintage Magazine Cover Art 1885–1928
(539) Vintage Labor Day Cards
(304) Vintage Mother's Day Cards
(249) Vintage Christmas Cards
(245) Vintage Father's Day Cards
(185) Vintage Fourth of July Prints
(152) Vintage New Year Cards
(122) Vintage Valentine's Day Cards
(98) Vintage Memorial Day Cards
(87) Vintage Election Day Prints
(72) Vintage Easter Cards
(66) Vintage Armistice Day Cards
(50) Vintage Columbus Day Cards
(31) Vintage St. Patrick's Day Cards
(29) Vintage Thanksgiving Cards
(10) Vintage Sunday Comic Strips 1893–1920
(3) Vintage Halloween Cards
Browse by birth month
Match a print to a birthday, anniversary, or family milestone.
January
New Year cards, ice & snow scenes, Edwardian winter weeklies.
February
Valentine cards and George Washington commemorative prints.
March
St. Patrick’s Day cards and the first spring covers.
April
Easter cards, spring fashion plates, baseball-season covers.
May
Mother’s Day cards, Memorial Day prints, garden covers.
June
Father’s Day cards, summer-resort covers, June brides.
July
Fourth of July prints, beach scenes, flags & Uncle Sam.
August
Late-summer leisure covers, country-club and boating scenes.
September
Labor Day cards, back-to-school covers, autumn weeklies.
October
Halloween cards, Columbus Day cards, harvest covers.
November
Election Day prints, Armistice cards, Thanksgiving cards.
December
Christmas cards, New Year prints, winter holiday weeklies.
Browse by decade
From late-Victorian chromolithographs (1880s) to Jazz Age covers (1920s).
1880s
Late-Victorian chromolithographs and the first wave of American holiday cards.
1890s
Gilded Age weeklies — Puck at its political peak, Life as urban satire, Judge as the GOP organ.
1900s
Edwardian magazine illustration — peak Puck, Life and Judge, plus the rise of Vogue and Collier’s.
1910s
The largest decade in the archive — World War I, Armistice, and the modernising holiday card.
1920s
Jazz Age and Art Deco — Sunday comics, Vogue’s fashion plates, and the final years of the illustrated weekly.
Browse by publication
The illustrated weeklies that defined American magazine cover art 1885–1928.
Puck
America’s leading colour political weekly, 1877–1918.
Life
The original Life — urbane satire, Gibson Girls, and Charles Dana Gibson.
Judge
Republican-leaning weekly, 1881–1947.
Vogue
Society and fashion before the Condé Nast era.
Sunday Comic Strips
Yellow Kid, Buster Brown, Foxy Grandpa, and the rest of the first generation.