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Newsletter
April 2010

Tramp Art as a Form of Early Recycling

Tramp Art is a form of folk art that was made in America between 1870 and the end of 1930s. Recycling wooden cigar boxes and produce crates, the artist used chip-carving and layered pieces into frames, small decorative boxes such as jewelry boxes, sewing caddies, and even full-sized pieces of furniture.

The technique of chip carving was first introduced to America in the early nineteenth century by German and Scandinavian immigrants. Wood is cut at an angle, usually in a "U" or "V" pattern, and the resulting chip is pried or “notched” out. Tramp artists borrowed this technique and painstakingly layered the chips so that each piece was unique. Making tramp art pieces became a popular pastime in the second half of the nineteenth century in almost every region of the United States and also in Canada. The Virginia Historical Society on their website writes:

“Constructing a piece of tramp art did not require superior carving skills, elaborate tools, or costly materials. Patience, imagination, and a penknife were all that was needed. Discarded cigar boxes and fruit crates, made of soft, thin sheets of cedar, mahogany, and maple usually provided the raw materials for the carved decoration. This decoration was then glued or nailed to the object or piece of furniture to be embellished. The use of discarded and recycled materials, the commonness of both maker and the types of objects made, and the quirky and sometimes bizarre nature of the finished pieces may have contributed to the designation of this folk-art form as "tramp art" in the 1940s. Tramp art was also called the "landlubber's scrimshaw" because of the painstaking and time-consuming nature of its creation.”

The most common finishes for Tramp Art were lacquer or stain, although you will also see some painted surfaces. Making Tramp Art could be done with just a pen knife and recycled wood leading to the widespread lore that it was made by wandering souls, or “hobos”, and bartered for food and shelter. While there is some truth to this lore, many who produced tramp art were skilled craftspeople who devoted major amounts of time to their creative pursuits. Typical with folk art, most tramp art is unsigned and undated, leaving the origins of a piece a mystery.

Here are some good reference articles and books on Tramp Art:

 

Power Search Tips-n-Tricks

Are you a power searcher? Most people use a simple couple of words in search engines, whether it's Dig Antiques, Google, Yahoo, Bing or others. But, you can find more of what you're looking for if you know a little math. Here are a few tips to help you have more successful searches:

Use the + Symbol to Add
+ tells the search engine to only return matches if the word immediately following the + is on the page. For example: +blue +pantry tells the search engine only to return results when both blue and pantry is on the page.

Use the - Symbol to Subtract
- tells the search engine to only return matches if the word immediately following the - is not on the page. For example: +blue +pantry -bail would return pages with blue and pantry but not bail so you could eliminate a bail handled pantry box in the search results.

Using Quotation Marks
The quotation mark allows searching for an exact phrase with the words on a page in that exact order. So "red pantry box" will return pages that match that phrase with all words in that exact order. Sometimes it works to use the quotes but other times you could be missing antiques that work. For instance if a page has red painted pantry box then the above search would not match that page.

Putting It Together
You can mix and match the +, - and quotation marks to be very powerful search tools. For instance, if you are looking for a blue decorated norton stoneware crock but not a jug, then you could use this search: +"norton stoneware" +blue -jug

Using these simple symbols is very powerful and enables you to find exactly what your looking for! Remember these search tips work on Dig Antiques searches and on those other search engines too. More details are available under Help button next to all search boxes on Dig Antiques.

 

If you're in the San Francisco Bay Area, the American Folk Art Festival in Napa on May 1 is sure to have some wonderful Tramp Art. We'll be there so come on by and say hi! As always, thanks for your support.

Sincerely,
Tom & Sheila Baker
diginfo@digantiques.com

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