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| Better Choose Me: Collecting and Creating with Tobacco Fabric Novelties, 1880-1920 This traveling exhibit is the first to tell the story of fabric novelties issued with tobacco products (1880 to 1920) which women sewed into colorful items for the home. The exhibition features cigar ribbons, cigarette "silkies," and tobacco flannels from the Ethel Ewert Abrahams collection . History Brightly colored silk ribbons were tied around bundles of cigars to advertise their quality and brand names. The ribbons became a popular collectible during the 1880s, and many women sewed them into table covers, quilts, and pillow tops. With increased competition in the tobacco industry in the early 20th century, new advertising items were produced to promote regular purchase and brand loyalty. Both silk and cotton flannel novelties were printed in collectible sets and distributed with tobacco purchases. Women were encouraged to collect these fabric novelties and to make them into useful and decorative items for the home. A traveling exhibit system Integral to the exhibition is a complete modular installation system to display the significant and fragile artifacts. Included with the system are period photographs to provide historical context and stools for sitting while studying individual fabric novelties installed in the system's railings. Additional artifacts are furnished with their own mounts. Past venues • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • The Dane G. Hansen Museum, Logan, KS The Valentine Museum, Richmond, VA Stauth Memorial Museum, Montezuma, KS Kauffman Museum, North Newton, KS This collection has been featured in two recent publications--Quilters Newsletter Magazine, June 2001 issue, and Uncoverings 2000, an article excerpted from a research paper presented to the American Quilt study group.
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