"Looking for the Band"
Posted: Mon May 06, 2019 4:37 pm
I think most collectors are familiar with the Edison advertisements featuring a drawing of a little boy with a hatchet, about to chop into an Edison Home while "Looking for the Band." There was even a three-dimensional paperweight version, and a stereoview showing a real child and phonograph. (I don't think that was made by the Edison company, so it a good indication that the promotion was well-known to the general public at the time.) The trade card was listed as Form 410.
What most people don't know is that there was an earlier version of this theme, Form 366, as a 30" wide paper folder with five photographs showing two little girls with a Home Phonograph. In the first photograph they are studying the machine; in the second one girl stares into the horn; in the third the other girl sticks her hand into the horn; in the fourth one girl looks at the machine while the other stares into the small end of the horn; and in the fifth they both examine the motor.
It's a cute tableau of images but apparently the sales department decided that such gentle curiosity didn't carry the impact of a boy about to destroy a phonograph while in search of the elusive band.
I've had this framed on my wall for over 20 years. I've never seen another. Anyone have one? Or has anyone seen any other versions of this early concept?
(Click the photo to enlarge it.)
What most people don't know is that there was an earlier version of this theme, Form 366, as a 30" wide paper folder with five photographs showing two little girls with a Home Phonograph. In the first photograph they are studying the machine; in the second one girl stares into the horn; in the third the other girl sticks her hand into the horn; in the fourth one girl looks at the machine while the other stares into the small end of the horn; and in the fifth they both examine the motor.
It's a cute tableau of images but apparently the sales department decided that such gentle curiosity didn't carry the impact of a boy about to destroy a phonograph while in search of the elusive band.
I've had this framed on my wall for over 20 years. I've never seen another. Anyone have one? Or has anyone seen any other versions of this early concept?
(Click the photo to enlarge it.)