Postcards were to people in 1900 what the Internet was
to the world in 2000. Postcards can be thought of as the
world’s first mass transfusion of images. e world went
from thousand to a billion postcards in a very short span of
time, with the finest painters from India, Austria and Japan
getting involved.
Paper Jewels is the story of postcards during the Raj, and
covers India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Burma. It is the first
book on the subject and contains some of the most beautiful
and popular postcards telling the stories of the first postcard
publishers between 1892 and 1947. e essays cover the
major cities and regions important to postcard publishing
and the key themes—from dancers to religion, to tea, soap,
famines, fakirs, humour and warfare.
e volume uncovers such gems as the early postcards of the
great Indian painter M V Dhurandhar and the Ravi Varma
Press, the exceptional work of an early Austrian lithographer
in Kolkata and a German one in Mumbai. Many of the
images in the book have never been published since their
first runs a century ago.