Friday, 1 May 2020

German Cancel Advertising Praktica Cameras, Dresden

Date of use : 1958 germany

German Cancel Advertising Praktica Cameras, Dresden

This document is a commercial invitation card from the period of East Germany and can be interpreted as part of a distribution network associated with photographic equipment and related retail goods. The printed inscription on the front reads "Kameras Drogersache – Praktica." This phrase indicates that cameras and photographic accessories were distributed through retail channels that also handled small commercial goods or drugstore-type merchandise. The card also prominently references the Praktica brand, a well-known camera brand associated with the photographic industry of East Germany. Praktica cameras were produced in Dresden, a city that had long been one of the most important centers of optical and photographic manufacturing in Germany.
On the left side of the card the sending organization is identified as "Grosshandelskontor für Kurzwaren," which translates roughly as "Wholesale Office for Small Goods or Haberdashery Items." The address provided is Peterswalder Landstraße 23, Dresden, along with telephone numbers and a telegraph address. The presence of these details indicates that the card was issued by an official commercial distribution organization. In the economic system of the German Democratic Republic, centralized trade offices often coordinated the distribution of various consumer products. It is therefore likely that this institution functioned as a wholesale distributor responsible for supplying retailers with items such as haberdashery products, small accessories, and possibly photographic equipment.
The text on the reverse side of the card constitutes an invitation to a sales event. It informs the recipient that a sales meeting will be organized in order to receive and discuss purchasing requests for haberdashery goods, hats, and caps. This indicates that photographic equipment may have been distributed within a broader commercial system that included multiple categories of retail merchandise.
Handwritten annotations on the reverse side provide additional details regarding the event. According to the handwritten notes, the sales meeting was scheduled for 30 April 1958. The location appears to be Ulbricht (the exact reading may be uncertain), and the venue is described as a hotel or guesthouse where the sales event would take place. Such regional sales meetings were common in mid-twentieth-century commercial networks, allowing wholesalers and retailers to meet directly and discuss product orders.
From a philatelic perspective the card bears a postage stamp issued by the German Democratic Republic (DDR) with a denomination of 5 Pfennig. The design includes an image of an aircraft, a motif commonly used in mid-century East German postal issues. The postal cancellation indicates that the card was mailed on 27 April 1958, only a few days before the scheduled sales event.
The card was addressed to Herr O. Krüger at Goethestraße 16, Zwickau. Zwickau was an important industrial city in the Saxony region of East Germany. This suggests that the recipient may have been a retailer or regional commercial representative participating in the sales network organized by the Dresden wholesale office.
From a collecting perspective this document can be associated with several thematic areas. It is particularly relevant to collections focusing on the history of photographic equipment distribution, Praktica camera history, and commercial institutions of the German Democratic Republic. It also holds significance within collections related to DDR postal history, commercial invitation cards, and state-organized distribution networks in socialist economies.
In conclusion, this card represents a small yet informative historical artifact documenting the commercial distribution systems of East Germany during the mid-twentieth century. Its connection to Dresden, a major center of photographic manufacturing, highlights the relationship between industrial production and regional commercial networks. Documents such as this provide valuable insight into the economic and organizational structures through which photographic technology was distributed and marketed during the socialist period.
This item is documented as part of the Photography in Postal History research project.
For research context, see the Research Methodology.
For academic reference, please refer to How to Cite This Archive.

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