The Art of Wrapping Gifts by Drucella Lowrie

The Art of Wrapping Gifts by Drucella Lowrie

published 1950

 

 


In the recent Important Blog Search for Matron Hats I came across a book on millinery by one Drucella Lowrie. And then – even more joy – I found that she had also written a whole book on wrapping presents, ‘with 130 illustrations’ so naturally had to read it. Feel this might be the first practical craft book I have ever blogged on. It is a book that had me – who can make a simple bought giftbag look terrible – gawping.

When my daughter was small I used to say ‘this is from both of us’ when giving gifts, until she was old enough to order me not to say that anymore as people would think she had had a hand in the general dog’s-breakfast-ness of the parcel.

If only I had had this book.

By page 25 Drucella seemed to have covered everything. The list of materials needed took up nearly nine of them. But on she went with more instructions. There was a book once with this immortal line about Frenchwomen’s style:

Their scarves alone, an entire chapter.

I feel Drucella would’ve been on board with that. ‘Bows – an entire chapter.’

The following bows are described: glamour bow with five variations, loop bow with seven variations, pinwheel bow with one variation, poinsettia bow, hair bow, wreath bow, corsage bow, Greek bow, pussy cat bow, figure-8 bow, basket bow, tied bows with two variations.




There is a lot of general advice in it, the kind that makes you wonder who exactly the book is aimed at:

For boys and men choose wrapping paper with masculine colours designs and textures. (This is important, so is repeated later: keep off pink for boys and men)

Decorate a baby’s package with a rattle, teething ring, soap babies, tiny cans of talcum powder, powder puff, soft wash cloth…

As  soon as all the packages are wrapped, put away the remaining paper and clear the working surface so that you will have ample room for tying and bow-making.

Round here we like books, and we give and receive them. Are we ever tempted to do this with them, as recommended by Drucella? I leave you to guess the answer.

Valentines day gift: Attach a sonnet with a red seal to the package.

(You know who’d do that? Lord Peter Wimsey or Harriet D Vane - see Gaudy Night)

 


Possibly my favourite passage is coming now - I keep re-reading it: instructions on how to give money to someone. It is, by the way, clear that this performance is to make sure sufficient fuss is made of the money gift, it isn’t ignored in favour of more visible items.

Another way of giving money is to make it into a corsage. Change old cash into shiny new coins at the bank. Wrap each coin in a 3or 4-inch square of cellophane and twist tightly underneath. Wrap one end of a pipe cleaner (red, green, or white) tightly around the twisted cellophane to form a stem. Cut stems to desired length. Arrange coins in cluster and tie stems together. Push ends through a lace-paper doily. Add a ribbon bow and place in a box. Cut away a section of the box lid and paste a piece of cellophane in back of the opening so that the corsage can be seen through the top of the package. Tie ribbon around ends of box and add a bow at one corner. (An assortment of various colored postage stamps may be made up into a colorful corsage in the same manner. This makes an appropriate decoration for a gift box of stationery. )

 

Five or more new dollar bills will make a calla lily corsage (see Fig. 58). 



Fold each bill in half, crosswise, then twist it into a funnel shape and hold with Scotch tape. Next wrap yellow yarn or gold foil paper around one end of a pipe cleaner until it reaches the thickness of a pencil and extends about 11/ inches in length. Push unwrapped end down through funnel opening, allowing the yellow end to stick up at the top as does the spike of the lily. Group the bills to form a corsage and tie with yellow and green ribbon.

 

When she’s told us an awful lot about wrapping, Drucella branches out into recommending gifts, and here I can’t decide whether there are cultural differences, or it is that the book is 75 years old, or that these suggestions are truly as mad crazy as they sound.

For your hostess: at the end of your stay, ‘give her  book on flower arrangements.’ I do feel this might be seen as insulting? What was wrong with her own flower arrangements?

“Gifts of baked or canned foods, fresh-killed fowl or other meat, an assortment of vegetables, jellies, or a basket of fruit are appropriate. So, too, are candies, flowers, fireplace logs.”

(It all sounds very Little House on the Prairie, but am also asking you: please please never give me a fresh-killed fowl)

“In some cases a canary, goldfish, or kitten may be just the thing.” (No, it is never just the thing)

Sometimes she moves smoothly between the very general and the weirdly specific, as in this list of potential  wedding gifts:

A clock, pottery, glassware, mirror, lamp with shade, blankets, sheets, teakwood vase stand, set of ash trays.

What even is a teakwood vase stand?

For a young girl’s bridal shower, the suggestion is a Lazy Susan or a silent butler, which sounds like a pair of servants (specifically, probably characters from a Georgette Heyer detective novel). I am happily in the position to be able to tell you exactly when I – a fairly average UK person – first heard of a Lazy Susan: it was in 1982. If anyone had ever given me one I would have been surprised but grateful. I had never heard of a silent butler up till reading this book.

Wrapping shower gifts involves this: ‘For decoration, there are the traditional symbols of the parasol, sprinkling pot, love birds.’

I may need a US reader to explain this sentence to me. I may need a US reader to explain the whole book to me. But my goodness I did enjoy reading it, and feel both mystified and informed, though I shan’t be following her advice..

Pictures from the book.

 

 

Comments

  1. Oh my goodness, Moira, could I use this book! My gift-wrapping skill is nonexistent! Even when I use gift bags, people have to kindly remember that it's the gift and sentiment that matter, not the atrocious outer wrapping. I love the idea of directions for bows and so on, too. What an interesting focus for a book.

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  2. The late US humorist Andy Rooney did a Christmas-time magazine column once on gift wrapping. His theory was that there was one person per family unit who could really do it well, and everyone else had that person wrap gifts for them. Under the tree, you could tell which gifts were FOR that person because they were the only ones that weren't nicely wrapped. I assume that person's birthday presents were also badly wrapped!

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  3. What an entertaining book! No use to me - I'm more of the tissue paper and gift bag school!

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  4. Translated from the Japanese?
    They go in for wrapping on a grand scale - not just gifts but any kind of packet or parcel.
    Did Drucella Lowrie give her book on gift-wrapping to her hostess at the end of her stay? Did she keep lists of who had been given what? My own solution to gifts for hosts was something edible or - better yet, drinkable -given at the beginning of the visit.

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  5. At the garage the other day a gorgeous green Lotus pulled up. 'Hurray,' I thought, expecting at the very least a 21st C Lord Peter W. to come sauntering out. Not, as transpired, a tiny weeny panting Benny Hill.
    I'd read that book with caution. Present wrapping is often a fine and fragile line between showing off and diplomacy. All that fiddling with ribbons and wrappings: there'd better be something good inside.
    (Last present I gave anyone was in a brown paper bag.

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  6. Also, even as a US old-timer I can't explain any of this book! I especially can't see anyone messing about with a lot of coins to make a corsage! (Coins are a pain except for young kids, who wouldn't appreciate a corsage in any case.) I suppose fresh-killed meat might be a gift in rural areas, but more as a neighborly gesture than a formal present, and it would be hard to decorate butcher paper prettily! I wonder if this author didn't have a bit too much time on her hands?

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  7. A silent butler was a contraption for clearing crumbs and ashes off surfaces. http://thepeakofchic.blogspot.com/2009/10/silent-butler-and-some-canapes.html

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    Replies
    1. I suppose some people could find it quite useful, but I don't know who! My husband's aunt, who lived in Switzerland, once gave us a tiny dustpan and brush for the same purpose.
      The book sounds hilarious.

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  8. From the hilarious example you have given I wonder if this book was authored, as they say, by A I. Very early A I . It translates what people might want : kitten, goldfish, tinned food, money into potential presents and wrapping presents using bows, flowers cards, into time consuming fantasy creations with a high reliance on pipe cleaners. The Calla lily of money made me laugh so much. Lovely pics, too.

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  9. Oh my goodness, Moira. Love this. It has reminded me of the first Christmas with my husband (to be) and my stepchildren (to be) when I decided to demonstrate my credentials as a motherly type by making my own Christmas crackers, or rather assembling them from a kit. Never again. I realised that I would have to prove myself as a parent some other way. Chrissie

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  10. If you have an account at Open Library, the gift wrapping book is available to borrow there. https://openlibrary.org/works/OL7443658W/The_art_of_wrapping_gifts?edition=key%3A%2Fbooks%2FOL45746637M

    After years of struggle, I now wait until the third Sunday before Christmas, when the Ladies of the First Christian Church have their annual fundraiser - one dollar per gift, neatly wrapped and garnished, your choice of a variety of different papers.

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