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PHOTOCHROM
A French publisher going back to 1918 or so, early cards bearing also the DOUNO mark. (Modern Photochrom cards have a cursive “Photochrom” mark.) The early card 132 is clearly taken from a German original.

PHOTOCHROM also is the name of a licensed colour printing process, invented by Orell Füssli in the 1880s in Switzerland and widely used on postcards by various publishers, so this word on cards may refer to this rather than a publisher.

There are also cards with “Photochrom” logos issued by publishers based in London/Kent (The Photochrome Co.) and in Prague, normally view cards. The Prague cards include a monogram MS in the logo, which stands for M Schulz according to the TPA site.

Douno

PHOTOCHROM
A French publisher going back to 1918 or so, early cards bearing also the DOUNO mark. (Modern Photochrom cards have a cursive “Photochrom” mark.) The early card 132 is clearly taken from a German original.

PHOTOCHROM also is the name of a licensed colour printing process, invented by Orell Füssli in the 1880s in Switzerland and widely used on postcards by various publishers, so this word on cards may refer to this rather than a publisher.

There are also cards with “Photochrom” logos issued by publishers based in London/Kent (The Photochrome Co.) and in Prague, normally view cards. The Prague cards include a monogram MS in the logo, which stands for M Schulz according to the TPA site.