✦ Magazines & Ephemera

It's a Small World: A Disneyland Pictorial Souvenir — Late 1960s/Early 1970s Attraction Program

It's a Small World Disneyland pictorial souvenir program, 11 by 8.5 inches, showing the attraction exterior with period logo, late 1960s to early 1970s

A Window Into Disneyland's Most Beloved Attraction

Few objects in the world of Disney collecting carry the quiet emotional weight of a souvenir program from the golden era of Disneyland. This It's a Small World: A Disneyland Pictorial Souvenir — measuring a generous 11 by 8.5 inches and printed in rich, full color — is exactly that kind of artifact. The cover features a photograph of the attraction's iconic exterior as it appeared in the late 1960s to early 1970s, complete with the period-correct logo that longtime fans will recognize instantly. It is a document of a specific, irretrievable moment in the park's history, preserved in paper and ink.

Tucked carefully into a plastic sleeve and showing only minor edge wear and the gentlest corner blunting consistent with decades of loving ownership, this piece arrived as part of a larger Disney estate collection — the kind of accumulation that speaks to a life genuinely lived inside the Disney fandom. Someone carried this home from Anaheim, thumbed through it more than once, and kept it. That history is part of what makes it special.

Mary Blair, Walt's Vision, and the Ride That Changed Everything

To understand why a souvenir program like this resonates so deeply, you have to understand what It's a Small World meant — and still means — to the people who grew up with it. The attraction debuted at the 1964–1965 New York World's Fair, commissioned by Pepsi-Cola as a UNICEF benefit. Walt Disney himself championed the project, and he turned to the artist whose sensibility he trusted more than almost anyone else: Mary Blair.

Blair's aesthetic was unlike anything else in midcentury commercial art. Her color palettes were bold and flat, her figures stylized and joyful, her compositions theatrical. She had contributed to films like Cinderella, Alice in Wonderland, and Peter Pan, but It's a Small World was the fullest realization of her artistic voice. The attraction's facade — that soaring, white clockwork tower adorned with cut-out geometric figures representing children of the world — became one of the most photographed structures in Anaheim. When the ride moved permanently to Disneyland after the World's Fair closed, it found its forever home.

By the late 1960s and early 1970s, the period this souvenir documents, It's a Small World had already become a cornerstone of the Disneyland experience. The Sherman Brothers' earworm melody had burrowed into the consciousness of an entire generation. Families lined up in the California sun, climbed into boats, and floated through a world of singing dolls dressed in the costumes of dozens of nations. For many visitors, it was their first ride. For others, it was the one they returned to every single visit.

What This Program Captures

A pictorial souvenir from this era is more than a brochure — it is a keepsake publication designed to let guests relive the park experience long after they had driven home. Disneyland's souvenir publishing program in the late 1960s and early 1970s produced some of the most visually arresting ephemera in the theme park world. Full-color photography was expensive and impressive; having it in your hands at home was a genuine luxury for many families.

This particular program's cover image of the Small World exterior anchors it firmly in the opening era of the permanent Disneyland installation. The logo treatment visible on the cover is a period detail that collectors and historians of Disneyland signage pay close attention to — it places the item within a specific window of the park's visual identity history. Inside, guests would have found imagery of the attraction's interior scenes, the parade of nations, the cheerful dolls, and the distinctive Mary Blair-influenced color world that defined the ride's look.

Mickey Mouse also earns a credit alongside the Small World designs — a reminder that even in an attraction that was, conceptually, about the whole world rather than any single character, Mickey's presence as the park's host and ambassador was inescapable. His inclusion here is a small but meaningful detail for character collectors as well as attraction enthusiasts.

For the Collector: Why This Piece Matters

Paper ephemera from Disneyland's first two decades is notoriously difficult to find in any condition. Souvenir programs were made to be enjoyed, not archived. They got bent in back pockets, rained on in parking lots, stored in drawers and forgotten, recycled in estate cleanouts. The ones that survived in presentable condition did so largely by accident — or because someone cared enough to slip them into a sleeve, as the previous owner of this piece did.

The minor edge wear and corner blunting here are honest; they tell you this is a genuine period piece, not a later reprint. The overall presentation, protected and intact, is the kind of condition that makes a souvenir program displayable rather than just storable. For a collector building a focused Disneyland attraction archive, a Mary Blair tribute shelf, or a broader Walt-era Disney ephemera collection, this souvenir program slots in as an anchor piece — vivid, specific, and deeply connected to one of the most culturally durable things Walt Disney and his collaborators ever created.

It arrived with a collection. It deserves to find another one.

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