





Party Favor Seed Packet
This is a downloadable item.
The Myer family’s Bridgeville Nurseries stood as a beacon for small-scale growers and commercial farmers alike, offering prized cultivars such as the “Marie Strawberry” and the “Brilliant Raspberry.” Their emphasis on both yield and quality positioned the firm as a trusted name during a golden age of American pomology, when fruit growing was not only a livelihood but a national project.
With ornate lettering and chromolithographic flourish, the Myer & Son catalog embodied a particular brand of rural optimism—one that fused beauty with utility and treated the act of planting as both a science and an art. Today, their catalogs serve as cherished ephemera of agricultural heritage: artifacts from an era when the future came packaged not in plastic, but in seeds and sunlight.
Print, cut, and assemble by hand—because some things are best grown (or crafted) close to home.
This is a downloadable item.
The Myer family’s Bridgeville Nurseries stood as a beacon for small-scale growers and commercial farmers alike, offering prized cultivars such as the “Marie Strawberry” and the “Brilliant Raspberry.” Their emphasis on both yield and quality positioned the firm as a trusted name during a golden age of American pomology, when fruit growing was not only a livelihood but a national project.
With ornate lettering and chromolithographic flourish, the Myer & Son catalog embodied a particular brand of rural optimism—one that fused beauty with utility and treated the act of planting as both a science and an art. Today, their catalogs serve as cherished ephemera of agricultural heritage: artifacts from an era when the future came packaged not in plastic, but in seeds and sunlight.
Print, cut, and assemble by hand—because some things are best grown (or crafted) close to home.
This is a downloadable item.
The Myer family’s Bridgeville Nurseries stood as a beacon for small-scale growers and commercial farmers alike, offering prized cultivars such as the “Marie Strawberry” and the “Brilliant Raspberry.” Their emphasis on both yield and quality positioned the firm as a trusted name during a golden age of American pomology, when fruit growing was not only a livelihood but a national project.
With ornate lettering and chromolithographic flourish, the Myer & Son catalog embodied a particular brand of rural optimism—one that fused beauty with utility and treated the act of planting as both a science and an art. Today, their catalogs serve as cherished ephemera of agricultural heritage: artifacts from an era when the future came packaged not in plastic, but in seeds and sunlight.
Print, cut, and assemble by hand—because some things are best grown (or crafted) close to home.