This vintage mail-order catalog from Miles Kimball of Oshkosh, Wisconsin, features a charming and vibrant winter scene on its cover, signed by the artist V. McLellan. The illustration captures a classic piece of mid-century Americana, depicting a rosy-cheeked child in a green knit cap and plaid jacket feeding a bright red cardinal from an outstretched hand. The snowy landscape is populated with other songbirds, including a female cardinal on a branch, and a background scene of figures ice skating on a frozen pond, all rendered in a soft, painterly style reminiscent of the era's commercial art. The cover shows signs of its age, including several white scuffs and small tears, most notably along the top edge and in the upper right corner near the company name. There is light wear and minor creasing along the perimeter, and small dark spots, possibly foxing, are visible in the lower snowy areas. The paper exhibits a gentle, uniform yellowing consistent with vintage ephemera from this period. The catalog's interior pages offer a fascinating snapshot of late 1960s consumer life and holiday shopping, featuring a wide array of products that defined the Miles Kimball brand. Beyond the personalized stationery and Christmas cards the company was known for, the pages are filled with mid-century kitchen innovations like Teflon-coated omelet pans and stoneware cookie stamps, practical automotive accessories for winter driving such as collapsible snow shovels and frost-free window bonnets, and whimsical pet supplies including personalized dog towels and catnip scratching bars. The catalog also prominently advertises children's Oshkosh B'Gosh "Play-O-Alls," connecting it directly to another iconic Wisconsin brand. An introductory letter from Alberta Kimball emphasizes the company's three-decade history and customer guarantee, while the back cover retains its original mailing label addressed to a resident of Oshkosh, Winnebago County, Wisconsin, sent via bulk rate mail. The interior pages are clean and intact, showing light toning and typical center-fold wear, with all text and product photography remaining sharp and legible. This complete catalog serves as a valuable piece of advertising ephemera and social history, illustrating the marketing aesthetics and domestic trends of its time.