
WEIGHT: 54 kg
Breast: C
One HOUR:50$
NIGHT: +40$
Services: Foot Worship, Slave, Sex vaginal, Deep Throat, Uniforms
Scrapbooking was a popular pastime in Victorian times for both children and adults. Creating a scrapbook was not only a craft project, it was also a way of preserving memories. In the s, the automated printing press was invented. Suddenly books and printed material became much more widely available. As well as writing in their commonplace books, people began to cut out and stick in printed items. Things like greeting cards, calling cards, postcards, prayer cards, advertising trading cards and newspaper clippings were collected.
Some of these books contained a mix of personal journal entries, hand-drawn sketches and watercolours, along with various scraps of printed material. These books were literally books of scraps. By the s, collectable scraps had become more elaborate. Some items were embossed: a process by which a die a metal stamp for cutting or pressing was punched into the reverse side of the paper, giving the front a raised three-dimensional appearance.
In , the first year of Queen Victoria's reign, the colour printing process known as chromolithography was invented. Brightly coloured and embossed scraps were sold in sheets with the relief stamped out to the approximate shape of the image.
These pre-cut scraps were connected by small strips of paper to keep them in place. The laborious task of cutting out small pictures was thus removed, and sales of scraps went soaring.
Many of the best-quality scraps of the period were produced in Germany, where bakers and confectioners used small reliefs to decorate cakes and biscuits for special occasions such as christenings, weddings, Christmas and Easter. These embossed chromolithograph scraps are of German and British in origin and date from the s.