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A parallel in pictures to the world of Persephone Books.

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26th March 2026

This is one of several photos of blossom - possibly on  damson trees - in Coniston in the Lake District (n.d., Lakeland Museum) taken by Joseph Hardman (1893-1973). It also includes clumps of Wordsworthian daffodils. 


25th March 2026

Blossom lasts only a short time and barely at all when cut, but makes a wonderful subject for a still-life. Debbie George is inspired by flowers and ceramics, often combining the two, as here with apple blossom in a Ravilious mug.


24th March 2025

The blossom is in the background in this woodblock, Cherry Blossoms at Arashiyama from the series 'Famous Places of Kyōto' (c1834, The Met) by Utagawa Hiroshige (1797-1858). And in the foreground is a delightful little figure smoking a pipe and enjoying the scene, looking very much like a transposed Jacques Tati as Monsieur Hulot.


23rd March 2026

Now that Spring is both officially and actually here, this week on the Post we are celebrating spring blossom. The Impressionists were drawn to "trees courageous with blossom", as Kathleen Jamie put it in her poem, their techniques ideally suited to the fleeting nature of the small, modest flowers. This is Orchard in Bloom, Louveciennes (1872, National Gallery of Art, Washington) by Camille Pissarro (1830-1903). 


20th March 2026

Envelopes (2005) by Harriet Russell is delightful. The book brings together the 100+ envelopes she created with different ways of communicating an address, such as mazes, puzzles, illustrations, joining dots, and old maps. As Lynne Truss says in her foreword, “each envelope… is also a triumph of humanity – because... in nearly every case, the letter arrived! Therefore a human person must have worked out Harriet’s code." As the project evolved, the postal workers started writing “Solved by the Glasgow Mail Centre” on the backs of the envelopes, and added their own annotations. It is a work of wit, humour, and faith in the postal system.


19th March 2026

Some senders cannot resist adding a body to the face on a stamp or several stamps to great effect (although it is an offence to deface the actual stamp). Axel Scheffler (b.1957), illustrator ofThe Gruffalo is famed for his inventively illustrated envelopes, two hundred of which had their own exhibitions in Frankfurt and Leipzig in 2022.


18th March 2025

Although many of his images of women are unsmiling and serious, Edward Burne-Jones revealed a sense of humour in his illustrated letters and envelopes. These are in the British Museum, examples of his clever, witty self-portraits of the artist using the stamp as the canvas. This gives the background to the correspondence with Katie Lewis.

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