Isabel Jay: Patience. Patience.
(same pose as 159A)
W.S. Penley:
Portrait
Louie Pounds
(bookmark format)
Fred Wright Junior:
Portrait
116
(also unnumbered)
George Edwardes:
Portrait
126A
George Grossmith:
Portrait
126B
George Grossmith:
Portrait
127
W.S. Penley.
159A
Isabel Jay dressed as Patience, Patience.
Sitting on a swing2
162C
Louie Pounds
180A
Decima Moore:
Portrait.
190A
Decima Moore:
Portrait
190C
Decima Moore:
Portrait.
190D
Decima Moore:
Portrait.
190F
Decima Moore:
Portrait.
190J
Decima Moore:
Safari costume.
190K
Decima Moore:
Safari costume.
245B
Ellis Jeffreys:
Portrait.
1103
Rutland Barrington:
Portrait.
1103C
Rutland Barrington:
Portrait.
1103E
Rutland Barrington:
Portrait.
1103F
Rutland Barrington:
Pooh-Bah. The Mikado.
1103G
Rutland Barrington:
Captain Corcoran. HMS Pinafore.
1103H
Rutland Barrington,
Henry Lytton.
Portraits.
1103I
Rutland Barrington:
Sergeant of Police. The Pirates of Penzance
1115
J.L. Toole:
Portrait
1 The earliest Rotary cards were issued without numbers. Later, some sets were issued with a series of photographs of an individual artist. Other shots of artists were published on a ‘one-off' basis. Rotary quite frequently would use the same photograph several times, sometimes taking a detail from a group, sometimes simply re-numbering.
2 This card of Isabel Jay also exists unnumbered, and without the dividing line on the back to show where the message and the address should be written. It seems likely that this version dates from 1902, very early in Rotary's existence as a publisher.