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- Fisher-Price "School Days Play Desk," 1975 -

- 1975
- Collections - Artifact
Fisher-Price "School Days Play Desk," 1975
- "The Christmas Alphabet," 1994 - Robert Sabuda has always considered himself an artist, making models, dioramas, and other 3-dimensional works, including paper pop-up books. Born in Michigan in 1965, he attended the Pratt Institute in New York, where he continued his exploration of paper and paper crafts. <em>The Christmas Alphabet</em> is one of Sabuda's earliest commercial pop-up creations, exhibiting his artistry and love for pop-up paper engineering.

- 1994
- Collections - Artifact
"The Christmas Alphabet," 1994
Robert Sabuda has always considered himself an artist, making models, dioramas, and other 3-dimensional works, including paper pop-up books. Born in Michigan in 1965, he attended the Pratt Institute in New York, where he continued his exploration of paper and paper crafts. The Christmas Alphabet is one of Sabuda's earliest commercial pop-up creations, exhibiting his artistry and love for pop-up paper engineering.
- "ABC Coloring Book," 1961 -

- 1961
- Collections - Artifact
"ABC Coloring Book," 1961
- Embroidery Sampler, 1799 - From the mid-17th century until the Civil War, young girls learned useful embroidery skills by stitching samplers. Embroidered with alphabet letters, a verse, designs, or images, samplers demonstrated achievement and refinement. Young Mary Wakefield stitched this sampler in 1799 -- it was likely her first effort. Mary probably created more elaborate and ornamental works as she grew older.

- July 29, 1799
- Collections - Artifact
Embroidery Sampler, 1799
From the mid-17th century until the Civil War, young girls learned useful embroidery skills by stitching samplers. Embroidered with alphabet letters, a verse, designs, or images, samplers demonstrated achievement and refinement. Young Mary Wakefield stitched this sampler in 1799 -- it was likely her first effort. Mary probably created more elaborate and ornamental works as she grew older.
- Oil Painting, "Boy with Dog" by William Bartoll, 1840-1850 - William Bartoll, like his father, uncle and brother, was a house painter, as well as a portraitist and mural painter in the seaside town of Marblehead, Massachusetts. This endearing portrait of an unknown little boy is meticulously painted to emphasize the boy's relationship to his faithful dog and his little book of ABCs.

- 1840-1850
- Collections - Artifact
Oil Painting, "Boy with Dog" by William Bartoll, 1840-1850
William Bartoll, like his father, uncle and brother, was a house painter, as well as a portraitist and mural painter in the seaside town of Marblehead, Massachusetts. This endearing portrait of an unknown little boy is meticulously painted to emphasize the boy's relationship to his faithful dog and his little book of ABCs.