Date of use : 1939, Bolivia
Casa Kavlin: Bolivian Camera & Optical Materials Dealer
This commercial envelope represents an important document illustrating the connections between the photographic supply trade in South America and the European chemical industry. The printed letterhead at the top of the envelope identifies the sender as Casa Kavlin, a business specializing in photographic supplies. The phrase "Artículos Fotográficos" indicates that the company was engaged in the distribution of photographic equipment and possibly photographic chemicals. The letterhead lists addresses in three Bolivian cities—La Paz, Oruro, and Cochabamba—suggesting that the firm maintained a broad commercial distribution network within the country. The telegraphic address simply reads "Kavlin," implying that the company had established a recognizable commercial identity within its communication networks.
The envelope itself does not provide direct information about the founders or the exact year of establishment of Casa Kavlin. However, the surname Kavlin appears to have a European origin, which may indicate that the business was founded by a migrant entrepreneur. During the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, many European merchants played a significant role in the distribution of photographic equipment and technical goods throughout South America. Within this context, Casa Kavlin likely operated as an importer and distributor of cameras, photographic film materials, and the chemical substances required for photographic processing.
The envelope is addressed to I.G. Farbenindustrie Aktiengesellschaft in Berlin, Germany. This corporation was one of the largest chemical companies in the world during the first half of the twentieth century. Its production range included dyes, pharmaceuticals, synthetic materials, and various chemical compounds used in photographic processes. In the context of photographic technology, companies within the German chemical industry were major suppliers of materials essential for film development and photographic printing. The address given on the envelope indicates Lohmühlenstrasse in the Berlin district designated as SO 36, which may have been associated with an administrative or commercial branch of the company.
The correspondence was most likely related to the supply of photographic materials. During the early twentieth century, photographic markets in Latin America depended heavily on equipment and materials imported from Europe and North America. Cameras, optical instruments, photographic paper, and chemical processing agents were largely produced in Germany, France, and the United States and distributed through regional commercial intermediaries. For this reason, it is entirely consistent with the economic structure of the period that a Bolivian distributor of photographic supplies would maintain commercial correspondence with a major German chemical company.
Three Bolivian postage stamps appear on the envelope. One stamp has a value of five centavos and features an image of llamas, while the other two stamps carry a value of thirty centavos and display national symbolic motifs. The combined use of multiple stamps suggests that the required international postal rate was paid through a combination of denominations. A postal cancellation from La Paz is visible, and the date appears to indicate the year 1939. This places the correspondence in the historical context of the period immediately surrounding the outbreak of the Second World War.
From a postal history perspective, the envelope represents a standard form of international commercial correspondence. There is no visible marking indicating airmail service, which suggests that the letter may have been transported via maritime postal routes across the Atlantic Ocean. During this period, much of the international mail between South America and Europe was carried by ship.
A notable feature of the envelope design is the illustration of a folding bellows camera printed on the letterhead. This visual element directly communicates the company's association with photographic technology. Such illustrations were commonly used on business stationery by photographic supply firms during the early twentieth century. In this way, the envelope served not only as a means of correspondence but also as a subtle form of commercial promotion.
From a collecting perspective, this envelope belongs to several intersecting thematic categories. It represents commercial correspondence within the photographic industry, an example of international postal history between South America and Europe, and a document illustrating the industrial supply chain of photographic technology. The connection between a photographic distributor and a major chemical manufacturer provides valuable insight into the economic networks that supported photographic production during this period.
Within a broader historical framework, this envelope reflects the global structure of the photographic industry. The production of photography was not limited to the development of cameras and optical instruments but relied equally on a complex chemical industry. Chemical materials produced in Europe were distributed through commercial intermediaries to photographic markets in distant regions such as South America. Consequently, this envelope sent by Casa Kavlin can be understood as a small but meaningful witness to the international commercial networks that enabled the global circulation of photographic technology.
Record Information
Title: Casa Kavlin Business Stationery (La Paz to Berlin)
Category: Photographic Industry History / Commercial Correspondence
Subcategory: South American Distributors / European Chemical Industry Connections
Country: Bolivia (Sender: La Paz) → Germany (Recipient: Berlin)
🗺️ Show Route
City: La Paz (Sender: Casa Kavlin) → Berlin (Recipient: I.G. Farbenindustrie AG)
Date of use: 1939
Company (Sender): Casa Kavlin, Artículos Fotográficos. Operated in La Paz, Oruro, and Cochabamba, Bolivia. A distributor of photographic equipment and supplies with a broad commercial network across Bolivia, likely serving as an importer of European photographic materials and chemicals.
Company (Recipient): I.G. Farbenindustrie Aktiengesellschaft, Lohmühlenstrasse, Berlin SO 36, Germany. One of the largest chemical corporations in the world during the first half of the twentieth century, producing dyes, pharmaceuticals, synthetic materials, and photographic chemicals.
Object Type: International commercial envelope (business stationery with printed letterhead and camera illustration)
Postal Route 🚢: La Paz, Bolivia → Berlin, Germany (Maritime mail via Atlantic)
Estimated Travel Time: Approximately 2-3 weeks (maritime route via Atlantic Ocean)
Postal Features: Three Bolivian postage stamps (5c llama stamp, two 30c national motif stamps); La Paz postal cancellation (1939); maritime postal route (no airmail marking).
Language: Spanish
Material: Paper envelope with printed folding bellows camera illustration
Dimensions: Standard commercial envelope format
Collection Theme: Casa Kavlin, Bolivia photography trade, La Paz commerce, I.G. Farben, German chemical industry, South American photographic distributors, 1930s postal history, Bolivia-Germany trade, photographic chemicals, bellows camera illustration, pre-World War II commerce.
Archival Significance: This 1939 envelope documents commercial correspondence between a Bolivian photographic distributor (Casa Kavlin) and the German chemical conglomerate I.G. Farben, illustrating the global supply chains that provided photographic chemicals and materials to South American markets in the pre-World War II period.
Research Note:
This article is based on historical research and independent analysis of the material in the author's collection. The text has been prepared as an original interpretative study and does not reproduce copyrighted material.
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.
For research context, see the Research Methodology.
For academic reference, please refer to How to Cite This Archive.
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