Alice Marble
Harry Warnecke
Alice Marble, 1939
Photograph
Courtesy of the National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution
In his pioneering color portraiture, Harry Warnecke captures Alice Marble, the American Grand Slam champion who dominated late 1930s tennis with a powerful serve and net-rushing game. Send to your one love, your doubles partner, or your summer-long opponent.
Courtesy of the National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution
Harry Warnecke
Alice Marble, 1939
Photograph
Courtesy of the National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution
In his pioneering color portraiture, Harry Warnecke captures Alice Marble, the American Grand Slam champion who dominated late 1930s tennis with a powerful serve and net-rushing game. Send to your one love, your doubles partner, or your summer-long opponent.
Courtesy of the National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution
From the people who send them
The handwriting doesn't look printed. My mom asked if I'd written it myself. I said yes.
— Blake, LA
Arrived in four days. I'd braced for longer.
— Ian, Chicago
Sent it to a friend I hadn't seen since college. He sent me a photo of it on his side table a week later.
— Dave, Philly
My wife sent it to me on a random Tuesday. No occasion. That was the point.
— Eddie, Tampa
Kept it on my shelf next to my books. Doesn't look out of place. That's the highest compliment I can give a card.
Chelsey, New York
My little brother graduated in May. I live across the country. This was the closest I could get to being there.
— Jared, Chicago
Put one in every welcome bag for a networking event I hosted. Got emails afterward asking how I'd handwritten them all. I told them my secret.
- Carly, Ft. Lauderdale
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