This Online Group Collects Images Of Historical Mementos People Randomly Found And Here’re 30 Of The Most Interesting Ones
Among all the amazing things out there in the world, the smell of wet concrete after a thunderstorm and the whiff of old paper rank at the very top for me. Couple the latter with my love of old books, documents, and all sorts of arcane papyri and you’ve got yourself a literature lover. I’ll read everything. Heck, I’ll read anything, even your cereal box. So I was pleasantly surprised after I stumbled upon the ‘Found Paper’ community over on Reddit.
A community of just over 147k members, r/FoundPaper likes to keep it simple and does exactly what it says on the tin. It’s a community dedicated to documenting various pieces of paper found out in the wild. We’ve collected some of the best paper mementos as shared on the community for you to enjoy, dear Pandas, so remember to upvote your fave pics as you scroll down. Be sure to check out r/FoundPaper when you have the time and give them a follow if you like their stuff.
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Sad Find Today
Friend Of Mine Just Moved Into A New House. Took Off All The Heating Vents To Paint Them, And This Was Behind One Of Them
Death Warrant For My 10th Great Grandmother Susannah North Martin, Tried And Convicted At The Salem Witch Trials
The r/FoundPaper subreddit celebrated its 7th birthday a few days ago, on April 30 (congratulations!), proving that communities thrive and survive based on the quality of the content they post. And the fact that the subreddit has had so many birthdays is proof enough that it’s got quality entertainment locked down tight.
One of the ‘Found Paper’ community’s greatest strengths is how streamlined and niche its interests are. Its second strength is that it actually encourages its members to get out of the house and start their own small adventures in order to have something to post.
Good Advice For Everyone!
Found On A Collected Airplane Food Tray By Flight Attendant
“Ain’t I A Peach? Ha, Ha” In A 1895 Bible
“Photographs of found pieces of PAPER(!) with writing on them. Look for paper, make every day a scavenger hunt. Appreciate the forgotten artifacts of everyday life. Share any paper that you found (on the ground, stuck in some bushes, or between cans of soup at the store for example) and you do not know who wrote it,” the subreddit’s moderators explain what their community is all about.
Found Under Windshield
My Mother-In-Law Found A Message In A Bottle Washed Up On The Beach This Weekend. East Coast
Found This Passive Aggressive Customer Service Letter From 1964 In My Garage
“Love letters, doodles, interesting to-do or grocery lists, notes from the past—share your discovery with us!” the mods encourage book, paper, scavenger hunt, and adventure lovers to share their awesome finds with everyone else.
Found On My Daily Walk —“Wow”
In The Library
Found In A Couch Being Re-Upholstered
The moderators also highlight the fact that in order to post any photos, the paper has to be found and it has to be paper. No forgotten plastic from your garage. No granite engravings from your neighbors Tom and Jane’s farm (because you know exactly whom they belong to and, well, paper beats rock).
Found In My Fortune Cookie....made Me Smile
Paper Found Among My Late Grandmother’s Belongings Talking About The Armistice Ending Ww I
"I Remember That Old Pole"
What’s more, the mods want everyone to be “courteous and friendly” toward one another, avoid being “overly annoying or bothersome,” embrace tolerance and sensitivity, as well as remove any and all sensitive personal info from the photos before posting them. Sounds simple enough and it’s the basis for the rules most larger subreddits follow. Disruptive, chaotic, and intolerant communities don’t tend to last for long on Reddit (unless they’re doing it on purpose for the sake of humor).
Prom - April 24, 1970. Found While Walking The Dog This Morning
Reminds me of myself. And my two pretty friends. Yep, if there’s going to be ONE person whose face is caught looking weird while everyone else looks fabulous in a picture, it’d usually be me. Every. Damn. Time.
Did you find this on your walk near someone’s house? Anyway, cool picture.
HOLY CRAP!!! WTFH IS THAT SILHOUTTE IN THE BACKGROUND DOORWAY!!!
are they dressed as Disney princesses? they certainly look like they r right out of the Disney movies.
If your talking about the one creepily loitering in the background... I have no idea....
Load More Replies...Found (Under) Wallpaper
Was Told To Post Here: My Cousin Is Using This Bag Which Originally Belonged To Our Great Grandmother For Her Dance Tomorrow Night And Found A Note Which Has Been Hidden For 81 Years
The Library of Congress explains that how quickly paper deteriorates depends on its quality and in what environment it’s stored. Some ancient tomes and documents can actually be in far better condition than a scrap of paper that’s just a few years old.
“Paper is made of cellulose—a repeating chain of glucose molecules—derived from plant cell walls. One measure of paper quality is how long the cellulose chains, and subsequently the paper fibers, are: long-fibered paper is stronger and more flexible and durable than short-fibered paper,” the LoC points out that not all paper is created equally. If you’re going for longevity, long-fibered paper is your best bet.
Found Posted On A Couple Of The Walls Around My City. Email At The Bottom Blacked Out
This Book From 1892 I Found Inside A Hole In The Wall In A Rental Flat
Bought An Abandoned House And Found This In The Attic
Can you imagine how terrifying it would be to recieve newspapers like that during those times?
Acids from the environment (like from air pollution or poor-quality enclosures) or from within the paper cut these glucose chains into shorter and shorter lengths in the presence of moisture. “This acid hydrolysis reaction produces more acids, feeding further, continued degradation.”
Found In The Hallway Of My School
Garage Sale Find (1929) - About 100 Love Letters Over Two Years From A Guy In Seattle To A Girl In Aberdeen, Wa
Historicfound This On The Street In Downtown Sd About 4 Years Ago When I Needed It Most. It’s Been In My Wallet Ever Since
One of the reasons why newspapers don’t last for long is because they’re printed on mechanically pulped paper, meaning the paper has got the shortest fiber length. Meanwhile, the lignin from the wood isn’t removed (as in the case of chemical pulping) and promotes acid hydrolysis, shortening the glucose chains even more.
This Dollar Bill I Found In My Change
Well......that’s kind of true. Money does kind of control our lives sometimes.
Purchased Old Poetry Book At Flea Market And Found This Old Receipt For A College Poetry Class. This Receipt Has Been In This Book For 102 Years!
This Came Out Of A Book I Was Flipping Through
What’s more, it’s not just acid hydrolysis that threatens a piece of paper’s structural integrity. It can also be damaged by light (what’s known as being susceptible to photolytic degradation) and oxygen (oxidative degradation).
The poorer quality of the paper, the more light degradation affects it. Meanwhile, oxygen degrades paper in a very limited way, unless there are nitrogen oxide pollutants in the air.
Found On The Floor Of A Target. Meet Carla Rose
Found In My Apartment Building Lobby Today In North Dakota
"No. Not Yet." ~ Found In 1908 High School Geometry Textbook
My husband can spackle drywall like a professional. I cannot. I have tried and tried - I end up with lumps, uneven coats, need to sand too much, can't "feather it out." I was given the attic crawlspace to help finish the attic. There is a note written in pencil in the far back where I had to scrunch in to spackle. "Please forgive the terrible spackle job in here. This was the one area I was allowed to do..."
Me and my friend once wrote a note and attached a jigsaw puzzle piece we found to it. We put it in a ziplock bag and tied it to a lamppost - I hope that person found their jigsaw piece.
My fave was buying a used book and someone had left a twenty in it as a bookmark. It was so old (book and bookmark) that the pic on it wasn't Jackson but Grover Cleveland!
A couple things I've found: 1. In high school, I was wiring some speakers in our living room and went into the crawl space beneath it and found a 6-pack of Black Label beer that must have been left there by the construction crew, and a catalogue from a local ski shop dated 1950, or so (this was 1988). The beer bottles were so old that you could break them by flicking them with your finger. 2. I was living in an apartment with really high ceilings, but the bathroom had a drop ceiling for some reason. One day I popped a tile to look up there and I found a plastic back containing a blonde wig, high heel shoes, some women's underwear, and two *really* sketchy porno tapes (yes, I checked them out - and very quickly turned them off).
I love making bookmarks out of thick cardboard paper and putting them in library books I read. I got the idea long, long ago when I found one that someone else had left in a book and I thought how nice that was. A bit of paper and a bit of beautiful gift wrap, maybe, stuck together with a braided string on the top. It was such a small thing but was a feeling of "community" I guess. I've probably made over 500 bookmarks in various libraries or even in leaving books to be "found". (https://www.bookcrossing.com) Things like this might make someone's day, and it's so fun (and free!)
My husband can spackle drywall like a professional. I cannot. I have tried and tried - I end up with lumps, uneven coats, need to sand too much, can't "feather it out." I was given the attic crawlspace to help finish the attic. There is a note written in pencil in the far back where I had to scrunch in to spackle. "Please forgive the terrible spackle job in here. This was the one area I was allowed to do..."
Me and my friend once wrote a note and attached a jigsaw puzzle piece we found to it. We put it in a ziplock bag and tied it to a lamppost - I hope that person found their jigsaw piece.
My fave was buying a used book and someone had left a twenty in it as a bookmark. It was so old (book and bookmark) that the pic on it wasn't Jackson but Grover Cleveland!
A couple things I've found: 1. In high school, I was wiring some speakers in our living room and went into the crawl space beneath it and found a 6-pack of Black Label beer that must have been left there by the construction crew, and a catalogue from a local ski shop dated 1950, or so (this was 1988). The beer bottles were so old that you could break them by flicking them with your finger. 2. I was living in an apartment with really high ceilings, but the bathroom had a drop ceiling for some reason. One day I popped a tile to look up there and I found a plastic back containing a blonde wig, high heel shoes, some women's underwear, and two *really* sketchy porno tapes (yes, I checked them out - and very quickly turned them off).
I love making bookmarks out of thick cardboard paper and putting them in library books I read. I got the idea long, long ago when I found one that someone else had left in a book and I thought how nice that was. A bit of paper and a bit of beautiful gift wrap, maybe, stuck together with a braided string on the top. It was such a small thing but was a feeling of "community" I guess. I've probably made over 500 bookmarks in various libraries or even in leaving books to be "found". (https://www.bookcrossing.com) Things like this might make someone's day, and it's so fun (and free!)