P.F. Sénéclauze, Viticulteur
Domaine Saint-Eugène — Oran, Algeria — 1912
A museum-quality framed print of an original 1912 letterhead from one of colonial Algeria's most respected wine estates — includes a companion postcard with QR-linked narrated audio story.
The story
A wine empire built on the wrong side of the Mediterranean — and what happened to it.
In 1912, the wine capital of the world wasn't Bordeaux. It was a port city on the Algerian coast facing Spain across the Mediterranean. P.F. Sénéclauze ran the Domaine Saint-Eugène outside Oran — one of the most respected wine estates in colonial Algeria — and this letterhead documents that world at its height. Three engraved vignettes across the top show the estate villa, the winery courtyard stacked with barrels, and a third scene that could only be North Africa: camels moving through rocky terrain at the edge of a vast operation.
The Sénéclauze family and the entire colonial Algerian wine industry they were part of followed a trajectory few could have predicted in 1912. This letterhead was printed at the peak of something that would grow much larger — before it was gone entirely.
This letterhead survived. The world it was printed in did not.
The art is not inspired by history. It is history.
Every image in The Ephemera Collective began as a real artifact. This one was created by a master engraver over 110 years ago, long before computers or any digital tools, at a time when the main instruments of design were a skilled hand, a steel plate, and time.
The three-vignette header on this letterhead was a prestige format — a commercial declaration of scale. The engraver rendered estate buildings, workers, palms, and camels with the same precision a portraitist would give a face. The villa is not a sketch. The barrels in the courtyard are not suggested. They are documented. This was craft work made to impress: a business tool that was also, quietly, a work of art. Pulled from the archive, not conjured from a prompt.
The story doesn't stop at the frame
Every print ships with a companion postcard. Scan the QR code on it and a narrator picks up where the frame leaves off — the crisis that created the Algerian wine industry, the family that built an empire inside it, and what happened when colonial Algeria ended in 1962.
Researched, written, and produced exclusively for this piece.
No app. No subscription. One scan, one story, yours permanently.
How it feels
This is not only decoration. It's a conversation starter — the kind of wall art that stops guests in their tracks and invites the question: “What's the story behind this?”
And now you have the answer — researched, documented, and narrated in full. This is a boutique piece, only available from Chronicles & Color, made in limited runs, from a collection you won't find on a shelf at any big box store or scrolling through an online marketplace.
Who this is for
For the collector of forgotten histories. The Algerian wine industry was one of the largest on earth. Almost no one knows it existed. This piece is for the person who finds that fact more interesting than the mainstream narrative.
For the wine enthusiast with a sense of irony. A piece of North African wine history — the wine that restored Bordeaux — hanging in a cellar, a dining room, or a bar. There is no better conversation starter in this category.
For the lover of engraving and industrial-era print. The three-vignette letterhead format was the prestige commercial printing of its time. This is a pristine example: three distinct scenes, unified composition, master-level execution on a business document.
For anyone drawn to objects that carry weight. This piece has a complete arc — a family, a world, a crisis, a survival. The frame holds all of it.
The details
| Frame dimensions |
21¼" W × 17¼" H |
| Visible print |
16" W × 12" H |
| Frame |
Premium box frame, black finish, Perspex glaze |
| Matting |
Snow white 2" border mount |
| Paper |
EMA 200gsm archival quality |
| Includes |
Companion postcard with QR access to full audio story |
| Packaging |
Premium archival presentation |
Own a piece of the story.