Artifex
Familiar Face
- Messages
- 90
- Location
- Nottingham, GB
Admittedly, this is nowhere near the Golden Era, but I hope equally of interest to anyone who takes enjoyment from doing things in the difficult, old-fashioned style.
(I make the usual apology to any moderator who thinks this is in the wrong forum!)
The story is that before flat-rate postage and cheap envelopes, a letter would be folded in on and around itself to form a closed packet. It would then be sealed, often with wax, and often with a distinctive design identifying the author.
The part that I didn't know, and seems largely to have been forgotten until recently, is that the letters were often cut and folded in especially intricate ways to foil interceptors. For example, a thin tail of paper might be cut out of the letter, then threaded through a slit in the other sheets before sealing, binding them tight. Other techniques used ribbon or string, also sealed with wax.
There's a group of academic enthusiasts working through a collection of hundreds of seventeenth century dead letters, and doing their best to catalogue them, and promote interest in the topic. They run a website at letterlocking.org, from which I've borrowed these photos:
Besides the historical significance of such techniques, it seems an excellent fit for the growing hobby of recreational letter-writing. The personal and tactile quality of a handwritten, sealed letter is what makes them worthwhile, so I'm going to have a go at learning to lock any letters I write as well.
Has anyone else around here come across the idea, or tried it perhaps?
(I make the usual apology to any moderator who thinks this is in the wrong forum!)
The story is that before flat-rate postage and cheap envelopes, a letter would be folded in on and around itself to form a closed packet. It would then be sealed, often with wax, and often with a distinctive design identifying the author.
The part that I didn't know, and seems largely to have been forgotten until recently, is that the letters were often cut and folded in especially intricate ways to foil interceptors. For example, a thin tail of paper might be cut out of the letter, then threaded through a slit in the other sheets before sealing, binding them tight. Other techniques used ribbon or string, also sealed with wax.
There's a group of academic enthusiasts working through a collection of hundreds of seventeenth century dead letters, and doing their best to catalogue them, and promote interest in the topic. They run a website at letterlocking.org, from which I've borrowed these photos:
Besides the historical significance of such techniques, it seems an excellent fit for the growing hobby of recreational letter-writing. The personal and tactile quality of a handwritten, sealed letter is what makes them worthwhile, so I'm going to have a go at learning to lock any letters I write as well.
Has anyone else around here come across the idea, or tried it perhaps?