Brad and Dave,
Thank you for the nice words.
When I go to a course, I'm not someone who collects pencils or match books or tees or ballmarkers or buys shirts or tee shirts or Tervis Tumbles or whatever. Pretty much the only thing I keep from a visit to a course, other than the memory, is a scorecard and occasionally a tour visor. I enjoy having the cards in shoe boxes in the closet of my office and they tend to remain in chronological order from when they were played so I especially enjoy flipping through them and coming to a dozen from an overseas trip or a spring break out west to California.
And I should add, there is never any scores written down on them. But most clubs don't have any scorecard pride. They are on mushy paper stock and filled with redundant information and have miserably cluttered layouts and five sets of tees with five sets of handicaps. Like wft?About 12 years ago, the archivist in the Yale Athletic Department handed me this gorgeous card of the Yale course from 1933. It was one of those moments, which many of probably have all the time, when I thought, "Wow...how did it all go so wrong?"
We had a fascimile of that card made and it was included in the Golf at Yale book published back then. I had a couple hundred extra copies printed and and every time I showed the card to someone, they instantly loved it.
Back in the fall of 2018, there was this New Haven Arts Space event at Erector Square in the Fairhaven section. It is an old factory building that is now home to artists studios and it was like an open door event where you could wander into each studio and see their work.
One of them was Dexterity Press, home of Jeff Mueller, a very talented letter press artist when he isn't kicking ass with his punk band. Jeff uses a 120-year-old German press he brought with him from Chicago when he wife took a job at Yale. The whole studio was filled with his art and all the machinery of a historic print shot.
While in his studio, it occurred to me to approach him about doing some letterpress scorecards and bring back the lost art of tasteful, vintage scorecards with devotion to typeface, layout, colors and paper stock. With a friend, I made three day trips to the USGA museum and photographed hundreds and hundreds of pre-WW2 scorecards of all the famous courses, living and dead.
I briefly had dreams of it being a commercial endeavor. That's definitely not the case. But I love making them for friends and clubs I like whenever possible. The first card I had done was for the New Year Foursomes at Ohoopee, an event Will Smith and I co-hosted in January of 2019. The moment it came off the press and Jeff trimmed and scored it, we were instantly makers of the finest scorecards in golf. Here's some proofs for cards.
https://photos.app.goo.gl/uQbA6cJ6uHzh2Bp98And regarding Yale, here's a slideshow of the all the measurements of the course and as many cards as I could find through the years.
https://photos.app.goo.gl/UWmAMripioMacz6U9