Date of use : 1959, Germany
Ringier Germany GmbH Publishing Legacy
This envelope represents a commercial mailing sent by a publishing house operating in Germany. The printed letterhead along the left side identifies the sender as Heering-Verlag, located in the town of Seebruck am Chiemsee in the Bavarian region of Germany. The imprint also refers to Dr. Walther Heering, who was associated with the publishing operation and its distribution activities. The red printed inscription "Ihr Heering-Verlag PHOTOMAGAZIN" clearly indicates that the item was connected to a photographic periodical published or distributed by the company.
Heering-Verlag belonged to the group of publishing enterprises that contributed to the expansion of photographic culture in post-war Germany. During the 1950s photography became increasingly accessible not only to professional studios but also to a rapidly growing community of amateur photographers. As a result, specialized magazines dedicated to photographic techniques, equipment reviews, and aesthetic discussions became important platforms for communication within the photographic community. The magazine known as Photomagazin formed part of this publishing environment, serving as a medium through which information about photographic technology and practice could circulate among photographers and enthusiasts.
The recipient of the envelope is Rudolf Chlumsky, whose address is listed in the Berlin district of Wilmersdorf at Durlacher Straße. The profession of the recipient is not specified on the envelope; however, the mailing of a photographic magazine suggests that he may have been a subscriber, a photography enthusiast, or a professional connected to the photographic field. During the 1950s it was common for photographic magazines to be distributed through subscription systems, with publishing houses regularly sending issues to readers via the postal service.
The postal markings on the envelope belong to the system of the Deutsche Bundespost, the postal administration of the Federal Republic of Germany. Instead of adhesive postage stamps, the envelope bears a red meter franking mark, indicating that the postage was applied through a mechanical franking machine. This method was widely used by businesses that sent large volumes of mail, allowing postage fees to be printed directly onto envelopes. The cancellation mark indicates the date 3 June 1959, confirming that the item entered the postal system through the Seebruck postal office.
The reverse side of the envelope contains a small graphic map illustrating the geographical position of Seebruck in relation to nearby regional centers such as Munich and Salzburg. Such graphic elements were often incorporated into commercial envelopes as part of the sender's visual identity, highlighting the origin of the company and reinforcing its brand presence. In this way the envelope functioned not only as a means of postal transmission but also as a subtle form of corporate communication.
From a collecting perspective, this envelope may be placed within several thematic categories. It represents an example of commercial correspondence associated with photographic publishing and magazine distribution. It is also relevant to collections documenting the postal history of post-war West Germany and the use of mechanical franking systems in business mail. Furthermore, as a document connected to the distribution of a photographic magazine, it illustrates the networks through which photographic culture and technical knowledge circulated during the mid-twentieth century.
When viewed within a broader historical framework, the envelope represents a small but meaningful artifact of the cultural publishing economy that developed in West Germany after the Second World War. As photographic technology became more widely accessible, magazines played a crucial role in disseminating technical knowledge and shaping aesthetic discussions among photographers. Publishing houses relied heavily on postal distribution systems to reach readers across the country. Consequently, this envelope should be interpreted not merely as a postal artifact but as a document reflecting the communication networks that supported the spread of photographic culture in the post-war period.
Record Information
Title: Heering-Verlag Business Envelope (Seebruck to Berlin)
Category: Photographic Publishing History / Commercial Correspondence
Subcategory: West German Photographic Magazines / Magazine Distribution
Country: Germany (Sender: Seebruck) → Germany (Recipient: Berlin)
City: Seebruck am Chiemsee, Bavaria (Sender: Heering-Verlag) → Berlin-Wilmersdorf (Recipient: Rudolf Chlumsky)
Date of use: 3 June 1959
Company (Sender): Heering-Verlag, Dr. Walther Heering, Seebruck am Chiemsee, Germany. A publishing house specializing in photographic magazines, including Photomagazin, and books on photography.
Object Type: Commercial envelope (postage meter mail)
Postal Features: West German "Deutsche Bundespost" postage meter frank; Seebruck postal cancellation (3 June 1959); red meter imprint.
Language: German
Material: Paper envelope
Dimensions: Standard commercial envelope format
Collection Theme: Heering-Verlag, Dr. Walther Heering, Photomagazin, Seebruck am Chiemsee, West German publishing, photographic magazines, amateur photography, magazine distribution, Deutsche Bundespost, postage meter mail, 1950s German postal history.
Archival Significance: This 1959 envelope documents the distribution of a West German photographic magazine (Photomagazin) by Heering-Verlag, illustrating the role of specialized publishing houses in disseminating photographic knowledge and the use of postal distribution networks to reach subscribers across Germany during the post-war era.
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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