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In the 1750s [[Simon François Ravenet]] developed the [[decalcomania]] process by which engravings and prints via a transfer paper are affixed to pottery, wood, metal or glass.<ref>Glazier, Richard (1899) ''A Manual of Historic Ornament'' London: Batsford p. 106</ref><ref>Baker, Whitney (2015) [https://books.google.com/books?id=7q8fDAAAQBAJ&pg=PA277 Sticking Point: History of Decals] ''Collections'' Vol 11 #4:275–290</ref>
In the 1750s [[Simon François Ravenet]] developed the [[decalcomania]] process by which engravings and prints via a transfer paper are affixed to pottery, wood, metal or glass.<ref>Glazier, Richard (1899) ''A Manual of Historic Ornament'' London: Batsford p. 106</ref><ref>Baker, Whitney (2015) [https://books.google.com/books?id=7q8fDAAAQBAJ&pg=PA277 Sticking Point: History of Decals] ''Collections'' Vol 11 #4:275–290</ref>


Two important advances were gummed [[adhesive]] paper by [[Rowland Hill]] in 1839, and [[pressure-sensitive adhesive]]s in 1845.<ref>Akyar, Isin (2011) [https://books.google.com/books?id=jIqfDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA310 ''Wide Spectra of Quality Control'']</ref>
The precursors to adhesive stickers included paper images (bilderbogen) manually cut and pasted. Two important advances were gummed [[adhesive]] paper by [[Rowland Hill]] in 1839, and [[pressure-sensitive adhesive]]s in 1845.<ref>Akyar, Isin (2011) [https://books.google.com/books?id=jIqfDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA310 ''Wide Spectra of Quality Control'']</ref>


===User-moistened stickers===
===User-moistened stickers===
The adhesive [[Penny Black|postage stamp]] appeared in 1840, then pharmacy bottle labels in 1850,<ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=6zJbAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA330-R1 Medical Label Warehouse advertisement] ''The Medical Times'' 1850 p330</ref> and other gummed and cut paper labels by the 1860s,<ref>Mack, Horace (1879) [https://books.google.com/books?id=OeA4AQAAMAAJ&pg=PA225 ''History of Columbiana County Ohio'']</ref> which needed to be moistened with water to activate the adhesive before being affixed. Another early application was [[ex libris (bookplate)|book plate]]s and library tags.<ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=PkoFAAAAQAAJ&pg=RA1-PA186 ''American Literary Gazette and Publishers' Circular''] 1867 v9 #7:186</ref>
The adhesive [[Penny Black|postage stamp]] appeared in 1840, then pharmacy bottle labels in 1850,<ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=6zJbAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA330-R1 Medical Label Warehouse advertisement] ''The Medical Times'' 1850 p330</ref> and other gummed and cut paper labels by the 1860s,<ref>Mack, Horace (1879) [https://books.google.com/books?id=OeA4AQAAMAAJ&pg=PA225 ''History of Columbiana County Ohio'']</ref> which needed to be moistened with water to activate the adhesive before being affixed. Another early application was [[ex libris (bookplate)|book plate]]s and library tags.<ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=PkoFAAAAQAAJ&pg=RA1-PA186 ''American Literary Gazette and Publishers' Circular''] 1867 v9 #7:186</ref>
[[Poster stamp]]s were issued for events such as the 1851 London [[Great Exhibition]], 1896 Budapest National Millennium Exhibition, [[Brussels International Exposition (1897)]], [[Exposition Universelle (1900)|1900 Paris Exposition]], 1901 [[Pan-American Exposition]], and [[1904 Summer Olympics]].<ref>de Rampacher, Paul (1937) [https://alphabetilately.org/Cisfor/PSB/02-2-8.html A Short History of European Commemorative Stamps] ''Poster Stamp Bulletin'' v2 #2:8</ref><ref>Bartholomew, Ralph (1914)  [https://books.google.com/books?id=KQ88AQAAMAAJ&pg=PA202 Poster Stamps] ''Printing Art'' v23 #3:202-4</ref>


[[File:Suitcase_with_luggage_labels_(178491614).jpg|thumb|Suitcase with luggage labels]]
[[File:Suitcase_with_luggage_labels_(178491614).jpg|thumb|Suitcase with luggage labels]]
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In some areas of the U.S. voters used stickers to enter pre-printed candidate names onto election ballots.<ref>[https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83020847/1882-10-27/ed-1/seq-1/#words=stickers State Campaign] MA ''Springfield Republican'' 1882-Oct-27 p1 5th column</ref> <ref>
In some areas of the U.S. voters used stickers to enter pre-printed candidate names onto election ballots.<ref>[https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83020847/1882-10-27/ed-1/seq-1/#words=stickers State Campaign] MA ''Springfield Republican'' 1882-Oct-27 p1 5th column</ref> <ref>
[https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83040340/1882-11-24/ed-1/seq-7/ "Stickers"] KS ''Iola Register'' 1882-Nov-24 p7</ref>
[https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83040340/1882-11-24/ed-1/seq-7/ "Stickers"] KS ''Iola Register'' 1882-Nov-24 p7</ref>
In 1886 continuous gummed paper tape was introduced for parcel sealing, then later available decorated around 1919.<ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=91jOAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA27 ''Stationery Trades' Journal''] Nov 1927 pp12,27</ref>


In 1891 [[Trading stamp]] store loyalty programs began.
In 1891 [[Trading stamp]] store loyalty programs began.


By 1896 the [[Return address]] pre-printed gummed label was being offered by printers.
By 1896 the [[Return address]] pre-printed gummed label was being offered by printers.
The [[Brussels International Exposition (1897)]] in Belgium commissioned a series of stickers to promote the exhibition.


Around 1900 [[Avery Dennison|Dennison]] Manufacturing Company offered gummed seals in gold, silver, red, green and blue, soon followed by gold [[Five-pointed star|stars]], and flag stickers.<ref>
Around 1900 [[Avery Dennison|Dennison]] Manufacturing Company offered gummed seals in gold, silver, red, green and blue, soon followed by gold [[Five-pointed star|stars]], and flag stickers.<ref>
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[https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84022871/1921-01-26/ed-1/seq-6/ Yes Mr. Hoover] [VT Barton] ''Orleans County Monitor'' 1921-Jan-26 p6</ref>
[https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84022871/1921-01-26/ed-1/seq-6/ Yes Mr. Hoover] [VT Barton] ''Orleans County Monitor'' 1921-Jan-26 p6</ref>


Sticker red [[Heart symbol|hearts]] are sold by 1911.<ref>
Starting in 1910 the [[Great Northern Railway (U.S.)|Great Northern Railway]] issued poster stamps as part of their "See America First" travel advertising.<ref>Harris, Leo J. (2014) [https://rchs.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/RCHS_Spring2014_Harris.pdf Neither Posters Nor Stamps] ''Ramsey County History'' v49 #1:3-10</ref>
[https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn82016014/1911-02-04/ed-1/seq-16/#words=stickers KS ''Topeka State Journal''] 1911-02-04 p16</ref>
 
In 1910 user-supplied photograph stickers became available.<ref>[https://archive.org/details/sim_billboard_1910-03-26_22_13/page/46/mode/1up?view=theater Stamp Photo of Yourself] ''Billboard'' v22 #13:46</ref>


Sometime after 1912 [[Cracker Jack]] included prize may have been [[temporary tattoo]] sticker, and later by breakfast cereal and bubble gum offerings.
Sometime after 1912 [[Cracker Jack]] included prize may have been [[temporary tattoo]] sticker, and later by breakfast cereal and bubble gum offerings.


Around 1914 the [[Industrial Workers of the World]] advocated their causes via [[Silent agitators|stickerettes]]
Around 1914 the [[Industrial Workers of the World]] advocated their causes via [[Silent agitators|stickerettes]].
<ref>
<ref>
[https://www.jstor.org/site/stlawu/iww-stickerettes-history/?so=item_title_str_asc History of I.W.W. "Silent Agitators" or "Stickerettes"] St. Lawrence University</ref>
[https://www.jstor.org/site/stlawu/iww-stickerettes-history/?so=item_title_str_asc History of I.W.W. "Silent Agitators" or "Stickerettes"] St. Lawrence University</ref>
In 1914 Famous Stars Series of portrait stamps featured silent film stars.
<ref>[https://archive.org/details/motionpicturemag08moti/page/n700/mode/1up?view=theater ''Motion Picture Magazine''] 1915 v8 #12:183</ref>


Fruit origin stickers began in 1917,<ref>
Fruit origin stickers began in 1917,<ref>
[https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn92070582/1917-02-17/ed-1/seq-8/ Blue Sticker] [NM Albuquerque] ''Evening Herald'' 1917-Feb-17 p8</ref> then later by [[Fyffes]] and widespread with 1990 [[Price look-up code|PLU code]]s.
[https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn92070582/1917-02-17/ed-1/seq-8/ Blue Sticker] [NM Albuquerque] ''Evening Herald'' 1917-Feb-17 p8</ref> then later by [[Fyffes]] and widespread with 1990 [[Price look-up code|PLU code]]s.
Before 1918 in the U.S. stickers were in use as merchandise [[price tag]]s.<ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=68zmAAAAMAAJ&pg=RA9-PA31 Suggestions on Pricing Goods] ''Southern Hardware'' Vol 80 #4:31 (1918)</ref><ref>Rappold, Orville S. & Forbes, John Franklin (1920) [https://www.google.com/books/edition/Retail_Training_Service/l_QYAQAAIAAJ&pg=PA9 ''Retail Training Service: A Vocational Training for Retail Salespeople''] Part 3 Book 8 p9</ref>


In 1919 a business in Buffalo, New York, applied stickers on receipts with the word "thanks" and a smiling face.
In 1919 a business in Buffalo, New York, applied stickers on receipts with the word "thanks" and a smiling face.


Automobile window decals, such as National Park emblems,<ref>Francis, Michael H. & Reynolds, Bobby (2023)  [https://books.google.com/books?id=ZPcJEQAAQBAJ&pg=PA205 Stickers & Decals] ''Yellowstone Collectibles'' Page 205</ref> became popular in 1920s.<ref>
Automobile window decals, such as National Park emblems,<ref>Francis, Michael H. & Reynolds, Bobby (2023)  [https://books.google.com/books?id=ZPcJEQAAQBAJ&pg=PA205 Stickers & Decals] ''Yellowstone Collectibles'' Page 205</ref><ref>[https://www.nps.gov/articles/000/50-nifty-finds-18-portable-posters.htm Portable Posters] U.S. National Park Service</ref> became popular in the 1920s.<ref>
[https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn87093407/1924-08-06/ed-1/seq-1/ New Sticker Disease] ''Seattle Star'' 1924-Aug-6</ref>
[https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn87093407/1924-08-06/ed-1/seq-1/ New Sticker Disease] ''Seattle Star'' 1924-Aug-6</ref>
[[Whitman Publishing]] in 1940 sold a ''Sticker Fun'' Activity Set.


In 1967 Topps began the [[Wacky Packages]] initial series of collectible moisten and stick cards.
In 1967 Topps began the [[Wacky Packages]] initial series of collectible moisten and stick cards.
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* 1942 war time gas rationing allocation<ref>Hendricks, Nancy (2018) [https://books.google.com/books?id=GxjOEAAAQBAJ&pg=PA248 ''Popular Fads and Crazes through American History''] p248</ref>
* 1942 war time gas rationing allocation<ref>Hendricks, Nancy (2018) [https://books.google.com/books?id=GxjOEAAAQBAJ&pg=PA248 ''Popular Fads and Crazes through American History''] p248</ref>


* 1940s [[bumper sticker]]s used to advertise travel attractions
* 1940s [[bumper sticker]]s used to advertise travel attractions<ref>Baker, Whitney (2011)  [https://books.google.com/books?id=Wz2OCwAAQBAJ&pg=PA260 Soapbox for the Automobile: Bumper Sticker History] ''Collections'' Vol 7 #3:251-268</ref>


* 1958 Automobile Information Disclosure Act prescribed a [[Monroney sticker]] be affixed to the window of every new car sold in the U.S.
* 1958 Automobile Information Disclosure Act prescribed a [[Monroney sticker]] be affixed to the window of every new car sold in the U.S.
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[[File:DkSkilt.svg|thumb|Denmark VRI]]
[[File:DkSkilt.svg|thumb|Denmark VRI]]


* 1988 Janet Boudreau's rippling flag “I Voted” sticker offered at U.S. election polling locations<ref>[https://www.aarp.org/politics-society/history/info-2024/i-voted-sticker.html I Voted sticker] ''AARP Magazine'' 2024</ref>
* 1988 Janet Boudreau's rippling flag [[I Voted sticker|“I Voted” sticker]] offered at U.S. election polling locations<ref>[https://www.aarp.org/politics-society/history/info-2024/i-voted-sticker.html I Voted sticker] ''AARP Magazine'' 2024</ref>


* 1989 [[Andre the Giant Has a Posse]] [[street art]]
* 1989 [[Andre the Giant Has a Posse]] [[street art]]

Latest revision as of 01:36, 19 June 2025

Template:Short description Script error: No such module "other uses".

File:Bananas on countertop.JPG
Brand name sticker used to label fruit

A sticker is a type of label: a piece of printed paper, plastic, vinyl, or other material with temporary or permanent pressure sensitive adhesive on one side. It can be used for decoration or for functional purposes, depending on the situation.

Stickers can come in many different shapes and sizes and also vary widely in color and design. They are often adhered to items such as lunchboxes, paper, lockers, notebooks, walls, cars, windows, used as name tags, and so on.

The term "sticker price" refers to the historic practice of adhering a large sticker to the window of a new car listing its base price, options, shipping charges, etc. (from which a discount was often negotiated).

History

Notices, advertisements, and posted bills applied to surfaces with tacks or paste have been widespread, although sometimes strictly regulated. An early example is the Peukestas order, a papyrus notice posted in Egypt around 331 BCE.[1]

File:Man posting an advertisement for La publicité en France par Emile Mermet.jpg
Posting an advertisement

In the 1750s Simon François Ravenet developed the decalcomania process by which engravings and prints via a transfer paper are affixed to pottery, wood, metal or glass.[2][3]

The precursors to adhesive stickers included paper images (bilderbogen) manually cut and pasted. Two important advances were gummed adhesive paper by Rowland Hill in 1839, and pressure-sensitive adhesives in 1845.[4]

User-moistened stickers

The adhesive postage stamp appeared in 1840, then pharmacy bottle labels in 1850,[5] and other gummed and cut paper labels by the 1860s,[6] which needed to be moistened with water to activate the adhesive before being affixed. Another early application was book plates and library tags.[7]

Poster stamps were issued for events such as the 1851 London Great Exhibition, 1896 Budapest National Millennium Exhibition, Brussels International Exposition (1897), 1900 Paris Exposition, 1901 Pan-American Exposition, and 1904 Summer Olympics.[8][9]

File:Suitcase with luggage labels (178491614).jpg
Suitcase with luggage labels

Steamer trunk luggage labels which appeared in the 1870s represented an early status symbol.[10]

In some areas of the U.S. voters used stickers to enter pre-printed candidate names onto election ballots.[11] [12]

In 1891 Trading stamp store loyalty programs began.

By 1896 the Return address pre-printed gummed label was being offered by printers.

Around 1900 Dennison Manufacturing Company offered gummed seals in gold, silver, red, green and blue, soon followed by gold stars, and flag stickers.[13]

By 1902 stickers began to proliferate,[14] including dedicated businesses such as St. Louis Sticker Co.[15] [16]

In 1904 Christmas seals were first issued in Denmark.

Example early sticker campaigns in U.S. include Red Sticker Union Made campaign,[17] American Red Cross,[18] and European Child Relief Fund.[19]

Starting in 1910 the Great Northern Railway issued poster stamps as part of their "See America First" travel advertising.[20]

In 1910 user-supplied photograph stickers became available.[21]

Sometime after 1912 Cracker Jack included prize may have been temporary tattoo sticker, and later by breakfast cereal and bubble gum offerings.

Around 1914 the Industrial Workers of the World advocated their causes via stickerettes. [22]

In 1914 Famous Stars Series of portrait stamps featured silent film stars. [23]

Fruit origin stickers began in 1917,[24] then later by Fyffes and widespread with 1990 PLU codes.

Before 1918 in the U.S. stickers were in use as merchandise price tags.[25][26]

In 1919 a business in Buffalo, New York, applied stickers on receipts with the word "thanks" and a smiling face.

Automobile window decals, such as National Park emblems,[27][28] became popular in the 1920s.[29]

Whitman Publishing in 1940 sold a Sticker Fun Activity Set.

In 1967 Topps began the Wacky Packages initial series of collectible moisten and stick cards.

Self-adhesive stickers

R. Stanton Avery is credited with creating the first self-adhesive sticker in 1935, with commercial sale in 1940 under the name "Kum Kleen Price Stickers", under the former "Avery Adhesives" company in Los Angeles, where its original use was for labeling on various goods and products.[30]

Example sticker types include:

  • 1942 war time gas rationing allocation[31]
  • 1958 Automobile Information Disclosure Act prescribed a Monroney sticker be affixed to the window of every new car sold in the U.S.
  • 1959 C-Line Products "Hello, my name is ..." name tag
File:DkSkilt.svg
Denmark VRI

Use

File:Advertisement for fitness studio in Germany.jpeg
Ad sticker for a boxing studio in Germany, in the style of guerilla marketing

Stickers are widely used when an object requires identification with a word or idea. Brand stickers may be attached to products to label these products as coming from a certain company. They may also be used to describe characteristics of the products that would not be obvious from simple examination, or to clarify either a printing error or change in the product of some kind, such as the country of origination, shift in a product's ingredients, a shelf life date, or copyright notice, without having to scrap pre-existing packaging for such a small change. A label dispenser is often used as a convenient way to separate the sticky label from its liner or backing tape.

Stickers placed on automobile bumpers, magnetic and permanent, called bumper stickers, are often used by individuals as a way of demonstrating support for political or ideological causes. Identification of vehicle registration and last service details are two examples of stickers on the inside of most car windscreens. The term "window sticker" is generally used for vinyl labels which are stuck to the inside of a vehicle's window, as opposed to water-resistant stickers that are stuck to the outside of a vehicle but can be affixed to anything.

Stickers are also used for embellishing scrapbooking pages. Kinds of stickers sold for this purpose include acrylic, 3D, cardstock, epoxy, fabric, flocked, sparkly, paper, puffy, and vellum. While in the earlier days of scrapbooking stickers were sold mostly on 2"x6" sheets, nowTemplate:When 6"x12" and even 12"x12" size sheets are very common.

File:Stickerart.jpg
Sticker vandalism in São Paulo, Brazil

They are frequently distributed as part of promotional, and political campaigns; for example, in many voting districts in the U.S., stickers indicating an individual has voted are given to each voter as they leave the polling place, largely as a reminder to others to vote. Observers may clap hands, honk a horn or otherwise applaud a good sticker.

In the 16th century French aristocracy wore stickers on their face to hide blemishes.[36]

Temporary stickers are used today to indicate whether someone is free of certain health symptoms, been vaccinated, or otherwise cleared some security protocol.

Stickers are also used as a form of guerilla marketing, as well as serving as a ubiquitous form of visual and physical vandalism.

Stickers are also printed for use as temporary tattoos.

Discount stickers

Template:Excerpt

Collecting

File:Troca de cromos da panini - 1.jpg
Sticker trade in Brazil for Panini’s 2018 World Cup sticker album

At their simplest stickers can be beginner-friendly collectables, serving as a gateway to the collecting hobby.

Forming a partnership with FIFA in 1970, Panini first produced a World Cup sticker album for the 1970 World Cup.[37][38] Initiating a craze for collecting and trading stickers, since then, collecting and trading stickers has become part of the World Cup experience, especially for the younger generation.[39][40] UK newspaper The Guardian states, "the tradition of swapping duplicate [World Cup] stickers was a playground fixture during the 1970s and 1980s."[39]

See also

References

Template:Reflist

External links

Template:Sister project Template:Authority control

  1. Schubert, Paul (2022) Posting a Public Notice on Papyrus: A Frequent Phenomenon? Aegyptus vol. 102, p. 203–218
  2. Glazier, Richard (1899) A Manual of Historic Ornament London: Batsford p. 106
  3. Baker, Whitney (2015) Sticking Point: History of Decals Collections Vol 11 #4:275–290
  4. Akyar, Isin (2011) Wide Spectra of Quality Control
  5. Medical Label Warehouse advertisement The Medical Times 1850 p330
  6. Mack, Horace (1879) History of Columbiana County Ohio
  7. American Literary Gazette and Publishers' Circular 1867 v9 #7:186
  8. de Rampacher, Paul (1937) A Short History of European Commemorative Stamps Poster Stamp Bulletin v2 #2:8
  9. Bartholomew, Ralph (1914) Poster Stamps Printing Art v23 #3:202-4
  10. Hartov, Oren (2024) A History of the Hotel Luggage Label Analog:Shift
  11. State Campaign MA Springfield Republican 1882-Oct-27 p1 5th column
  12. "Stickers" KS Iola Register 1882-Nov-24 p7
  13. Proceedings of New York State Teachers Association p413
  14. Epidemic of "Sticker Lips" St. Louis Republic 1902-Oct-24 p4
  15. 1903 St. Louis Sticker Co. St. Louis I Am A Sticker ebay.com
  16. Stickers St Louis Sticker Co Printers Ink Monthly 1926 V12 #5 p168
  17. The Red Sticker NE Wageworker Union 1906-Apr-13 p3
  18. Movement Reaches New York Pensacola Journal 1918-Jun-20 p5
  19. Yes Mr. Hoover [VT Barton] Orleans County Monitor 1921-Jan-26 p6
  20. Harris, Leo J. (2014) Neither Posters Nor Stamps Ramsey County History v49 #1:3-10
  21. Stamp Photo of Yourself Billboard v22 #13:46
  22. History of I.W.W. "Silent Agitators" or "Stickerettes" St. Lawrence University
  23. Motion Picture Magazine 1915 v8 #12:183
  24. Blue Sticker [NM Albuquerque] Evening Herald 1917-Feb-17 p8
  25. Suggestions on Pricing Goods Southern Hardware Vol 80 #4:31 (1918)
  26. Rappold, Orville S. & Forbes, John Franklin (1920) Retail Training Service: A Vocational Training for Retail Salespeople Part 3 Book 8 p9
  27. Francis, Michael H. & Reynolds, Bobby (2023) Stickers & Decals Yellowstone Collectibles Page 205
  28. Portable Posters U.S. National Park Service
  29. New Sticker Disease Seattle Star 1924-Aug-6
  30. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  31. Hendricks, Nancy (2018) Popular Fads and Crazes through American History p248
  32. Baker, Whitney (2011) Soapbox for the Automobile: Bumper Sticker History Collections Vol 7 #3:251-268
  33. Manning, Paddy (2019) Inside the Greens p1937
  34. Galin, Neil A. & Peppler, Amy (2006) Vintage Scratch & Sniff Sticker Collector's Guide
  35. I Voted sticker AARP Magazine 2024
  36. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  37. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  38. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  39. a b Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  40. “The Magic, Global Craze and Tradition of Panini's World Cup Sticker Albums”. Sports Illustrated. Retrieved 2 September 2018