and if you can find old ones in good shape they tend to be pricey.
Oh Boy!~ I heard that! In any event, neat that your aunt carries on the tradition and does it very well too! I get alerts from auctions houses on stuff that i collect and i put in fraktur a year ago so i could at least track ones that i liked and maybe bid on a few if the estimate was reasonable. The problem is, the ones that i like, someone else likes more, in some cases A LOT MORE! You find these for sale at Pook and Conestoga (now Hess) in Pa, Garths in Ohio and southern ones at Brunk and Case. Fraktur is HIGHLY collectable and i can see why, it's very charming in depicting everyday life events in an often colorful way.