Ephemera

The term ephemera was originally a medical term term for a short term fever (only lasting a day), and eventually came to mean something short lived or an object meant to be disposable ( such as a ticket or a playbill). These items are slightly more difficult to come by, as they get thrown out the vast majority of the time, and those that do survive, are usually paper, which degrades easily.

Recipe booklet from 1873, advertising Diamond Spectacles
A postage stamp from Guyana, honoring the optometric profession.
Our Eyes, an 1889 booklet promoting Aqua-Crystal Spectacles

1950s American Optical advertisement about vision
Bar of soap advertising Dr. Salter’s Eye Lotion, dated 1903
Advertising mirror, c. 1910, with birthstone circular chart.
1930s spectacle Valentines Day Card
Turn of the 20th century bookmark, advertising Eyefix eye drops.(See our eye medicine section)
Here is a tin lithograph ashtray advertising Eye Fix eye remedy, circa 1900

1950s safety propaganda with artificial eye,advertising by American Optical Safety Glasses

Inkblotter showing the exam room of optometrist, early 1900s. Equipment in the room includes a Genophthalmic combination retinoscope-ophthalmoscope, a keratometer and an optometer, all part of the Eyeseum collection.

Written Rx from 1903
Calendar advertising booklet for soft-lite lenses, 1936-37
Matchbook cover advertising optometrist, 1950s
Zippo optometric lighter, c. 1950s
1836 broadside of a lecture by William Clay Wallace about the eye. A broadside is a sheet that was glued to a wall or lamppost to advertise a specific event, such as a circus. Theses are quite hard to come by, as they usually were destroyed when removed.