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Tag: vintage travel

Luggage Labels-A Lost Travel Art

I love travelling and and whenever I travel I always try to take a piece of that location home with me (it’s usually a postcard or magnet). For generations before me though, trips ended up being documented thru the gorgeous illustrations on Luggage Labels. But they were not placed there as a way to remember where you have been, there were other reasons these labels existed….

vintage luggage - Steamer trunk

For today’s post I want to share a brief history of those reasons and then showcase some stunning examples of vacations gone by in sticker form.


Disclosure: Some of the links on my blog from Etsy , eBay, are Affiliate Links, meaning, at no additional cost to you, I will earn a commission if you click through and make a purchase. 

NOTE: Etsy & eBay have 1000s of vintage items on their websites. So if you click thru and the item is gone, just do a search for others.


Beautiful Vintage Luggage Labels

“What do we find on old luggage? We find the traces of… the places visited. We will follow these, and with them, we will tour the world, not in 80 days like Phileas Fogg, but much faster still.”


– Gaston-Louis Vuitton
Vintage luggage labels

Source: Etsy

The Brief History of the Luggage Label

19th Century-The Golden Age of Travel. Why? It was the industrial revolution and more reliable modes of transportation like trains and oceans liners were allowing more and more people to travel and see the world.

The golden age of travel. Image from 19th century of people traveling

If you decided to make a trip via a grand ocean liner, luggage labels were created in order to keep track of all the luggage being brought on-board (trains typically used tags). They tended to indict the class of cabin for the traveler as well as as the destination of the ship (Source).

Vintage Cruise Ship Luggage Label CUNARD LINE State Room Baggage

Source: eBay

Hotels during this time utilized these stickers as a way for their porters to know which boat or train the guest was travelling on, but they soon evolved into a great way to advertise ones lodgings to people all over the world. The labels would become more and more sophisticated in design to stand out for the thousands of other hotels and destinations doing the same.

Vintage Hotel-Rest Adr. De Haas Amsterdam Holland Souvenir Luggage Label - Vintage Suitcase Travel Label

Source: Etsy

When air travel started to be accessible to travelers around the 1920s, they too jumped on the label advertising popularity to capture the “experience” of seeing the world from the air.

Braniff Airways circa early 1930s vintage luggage label

Braniff Airways circa early 1930s via National Air & Space Museum

By the 1960’s and the advent of jet planes, luggage labels disappeared as travel became more of a form of mass transit to be endured, and though baggage tags (not labels) are still utilized, many are very generic and not at all exciting (Source).

FUN FACT: Did you know that luggage labels were originally affixed with gum and so if you were to try to remove the label you would damage it (of course)? So when you find a mint condition label it’s because the traveler would ask for a second or even third that was never placed on the luggage, as a souvenir from their trip (Source).


Vintage Luggage Label Art Examples:

(Please note that at time of posting the labels sourced from Etsy and eBay were for sale. Click thru to see lots of options if your fav is sold)

BOAC British Overseas Airways.

Vintage BOAC British Overseas Airway Luggage Labels

Source: Etsy

1930s Hotel Splendide in Lugano, Switzerland.

1930s Genuine Original Unused Luggage Steamer Trunk Label Grand Hotel Splendide Lugano Switzerland

Source: Etsy

Sport Hotel, Gerlos Platte Austria – 1950s.

Sport Hotel, Gerlos Platte Austria - 1950s luggage label

Source: eBay

1939 Golden Gate International Exposition San Francisco-World’s Fair.

1939 Golden Gate International Exposition San Francisco-World's Fair.

Source: Pinterest

Luggage Label for the Hotel Oasis Alger.

Luggage Label Hotel Oasis Alger Vintage Original

Source: eBay

Intourist, Caucasus Soviet Union.

Intourist CAUCASUS Soviet Union - vintage luggage tourist travel label vintage

Source: eBay

The Excelsior Hotel was part of the CIGA chain from 1920 to 1985. The label below is believed to be from the 1930’s or 40’s; they came from a collection of labels gathered by twin boys who traveled Europe with their parents and acquired as many labels as they could get their hands on, not just hotels they stayed at.

Genuine 1930s-'40s Original Unused Luggage Steamer Trunk Label Hotel Excelsior Rome

Source: Etsy

1940s Vintage TWA (Transcontiental Airlines). Artwork by George Petty.

1940s Vintage TWA (Transcontiental Airlines). Artwork by George Petty.

Source: Etsy

Hotel Victor, Copenhagen Denmark -1960s (This one is fun!)

Hotel Victor COPENHAGEN Denmark - vintage luggage label

Source: eBay

Hotel Union, Bucuresti Romania.

Hotel Union BUCURESTI Romania - vintage luggage label

Source: eBay

Hotel Splendid, Monte Carlo Monaco.

Hotel Splendid MONTE CARLO Monaco - vintage luggage label

Source: eBay

Strand Hotel, Darligen Switzerland-1960s.

Strand Hotel DARLIGEN Switzerland - vintage luggage label 1960s

Source: eBay

Friends! What did you think of these lovely labels (Gosh the Typography alone is outstanding)? Did you have any favourites in the bunch? Do you have a collection of your own? Please share in the comments below.

Further Reading: Vintage Travel 1920s-1960s Blog Posts (Archived)

Liz

Vintage Travel To Do List: Fairmont Chateau Lake Louise

For Canada’s 150th Birthday this year,  I am devoting my ‘Vintage Travel To Do List posts to cool places in Canada that you and I should visit.

Up first…..

Fairmont Chateau Lake Louise

Located in Alberta’s Banff National Park, a UNESCO World Heritage Site

Fairmont Chateau Lake Louise photo
1920s vintage travel poster for Canadian Pacific - travel to Chateau Lake Louise. The illustration features 1920s women in 1920s bathingsuits.
Source: Ebay

Historic Overview:

  • The lake in front of the hotel was originally called “Lake of Little Fishes” by the Stoney Indians who lived in the area. Then it because “The Emerald Lake” after a Canadian Pacific Railway employee who was introduced to it by the Stoney Indians. It would change names one last time, to Lake Louise in honor of Queen Victoria’s fourth daughter, Princess Louise Caroline Alberta.
  • 1890-Chalet Lake Louise. One story log cabin constructed on the shores of Lake Louise, it hosted visitors from different dining stations along the railway line as well as day visitors from its elegant sister, the Banff Springs Hotel.
  • While only 50 guests registered at the chalet in 1890, by 1912, 50,000 guests had already slept there.
  • 2 Fires and 4 architects later,  the small cabin dating back to 1911 would become the Chateau Lake Louise standing today.
  • 1900’s Professional Swiss Mountain Guides were brought in to safely guide guests to the summits. Between 1899 and 1954, generations of these Swiss mountaineers taught thousands of visitors and locals to climb and, later, to ski.
  • Early movies shot in Lake Louise include 1928 ”Eternal Love” starring John Barrymore, 1942 ”Springtime in the Rockies” with Betty Grable and Carmen Miranda and 1944 ”Son of Lassie.”
  • Hundreds of stars have come here for filming or vacationing, including Mary Pickford, Douglas Fairbanks, Alfred Hitchcock, and Marilyn Monroe.
  • The Chateau has also welcomed dozens of royals including Prince Rainier of Monaco, Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Phillip, Queen Margrethe of Denmark, King Hussein and Queen Noor of Jordan.
  • Due to gas rationing and patriotism, Chateau Lake Louise was closed to the public during WWII.

1909 Lake Louise Chalet (not yet the Chateau)

Lake Louise Chalet Vintage Image 1909
Source: Historic Hotel then and Now

June 1928, now a Chateau (as you can tell from the increase in size).

Chateau Lake Louise 1928 vintage image
Source: Library & Archives Canada

Swimming at Chateau Lake Louise in the 1930’s.

1930s swimming in the pool at Chateau Lake Louise
Source: Heroines.ca

Another view of the pool in the 1930’s.

Outdoor swimming pool at the Chateau Lake Louise with swimmers 1930s vintage image
Source: Peel’s Prairie Provinces

Queen Elizabeth II paying a visit.

Queen Elizabeth the second at Chateau Lake Louise vintage image

1942 ”Springtime in the Rockies” with Betty Grable and Carmen Miranda.

springtime-in-the-rockies-1942-dvd-betty-grable-carmen-miranda-996-p

INTERIOR: Dining room 1930’s.

vintage image of the dining room of the chateau lake louise
Source: Peel’s Prairie Provinces

Ladies lunching in the Lakeview Lounge, circa 1930’s. Wow what a view!

1930s vintage image of Chateau Lake Louise
Source: Historic Hotel then and Now

Tea Time-1935.

1935 tea time chateau lake louise
Source: Fairmont Chateau Lake Louise

The Chateau Today-The Magnificent Grand Lobby.

Fairmont Chateau Lake Louise grand lobby other view
Source: Redtag.ca

My favorite room-The Victoria Ballroom.

Chateau Lake Louise Ballroom
Source: Design Locations

Lakeview Lounge. An updated version of the room seen in the vintage images above.

lakeview lounge chateau lake louise
Source: Pinterest
chateau lake louise lakeview lounge
Source: Fairmont Chateau Lake Louise

Walliser Stube

chateau lake louise interior Walliser Stube
Source: Redtag.ca
Vintage Travel Poster from the 1940s for visit by train with Canadian Pacific to Banff, Lake Louise in the Canadian Rockies. Illustration features Chateau Lake Louise and a young woman.
Source: Where.ca

And that my friends is the Fairmont Chateau Lake Louise. I hope you enjoyed our little online visit of this magnificent hotel and will consider adding it to your own ‘Vintage Travel To-Do-List. I know it’s on the top of mine!

FURTHER READING: Collection of Vintage Travel posts & Vintage Canada Posts by the Vintage Inn Blog

Liz

Want to Visit Lake Louise & Chateau Lake Louise?

I am an affliate with VIATOR a tour company I have used on several of my trips and trust 100% for a good time. They have lots of tour options for all different activities in Canada, including train rides. Take a look below at some sample tours!

Note: Viator is an Affiliate Link, meaning, at no additional cost to you, I will earn a commission if you click through and make a purchase. Thank you!