Vintage magazine cover and advertising art from the
Golden Age of American Illustration



You can help Magazineart.org: Subscribe to magazines; buy books about magazine design or books about American illustrators.

Login
MagazineArt.org Gallery: Top Level General Magazines Weekly Magazines Saturday Evening Post Saturday Evening Post 1902-05-17
Advanced Search
View Slideshow (Fullscreen)

Random Image

American Rifleman 1933-08

American Rifleman 1933-08

Date: 12/02/2014 Views: 615

About: MagazineArt.org:
The Home Page
The Top Level
About This Website
What's New?
About the Magazines
About the Artists
About the Publishers
Contact Us
Your Privacy
Legal Notices
Copyrights
Help This Website
Thanks! and Our Volunteers
Reference Library
Our Bookstore
Our Poster Store
Interesting Links

 

 

Saturday Evening Post 1902-05-17

Portrait of some important man, bracketed by workmen holding up bags of money. "The David Harum of the Cabinet," by Jesse Lynch Williams; "The Unknown Captains of Industry," by Paul Latzke.

Artist: Guernsey Moore
Source: the Antique Paper Shop
Restoration by: magscanner

Date: 04/03/2013
Owner: Magazine Art Gallery Administrator
Full size: 650x833
nextSaturday Evening Post 1902-05-24lastSaturday Evening Post 1949-09-17
Saturday Evening Post 1901-12-07first Saturday Evening Post 1902-05-10previous
Saturday Evening Post 1902-05-17
nextSaturday Evening Post 1902-05-24lastSaturday Evening Post 1949-09-17
Saturday Evening Post 1901-12-07first Saturday Evening Post 1902-05-10previous

 

 

Original copyrights are the property of their creators or successors, where applicable; image restoration and processing copyright MagazineArt.org.

Have covers we're missing, or better copies? Can you scan them or take digital photographs? Send us e-mail.

This website is sponsored by Hidden Knowledge, publishers of electronic books. Visit the Hidden Knowledge websites:

| Hidden Knowledge | Travel History | Burton Holmes, Traveler | Rafael Sabatini | Trans-Siberian Rail | Look at Pictures |
| Blogs: Early Radio | Mike's Rail | Picture History | Old High Tech | Chromolithography

 

 

 

Powered by Gallery v2.2