Over 850 trademarks registered in the 1920s offer artists, designers, and students of Americana a comprehensive look at how graphic artists of this often flamboyant period combined typography and design to "sell" a company and its products, which range from food to furniture to fabrics. Captions identify each company.
Marcie Cabarga Books


1,337 Spot Illustrations of the Twenties and Thirties
- 96 pages
- 4 hours of reading
Eye-catching spots with a nostalgic touch are invaluable for enlivening any number of graphic projects. Now this practical archive enables graphic artists, illustrators, and designers to choose from over 1,300 copyright-free cuts with period flavor. Recapturing the charm and flair of a bygone era, these ready-to-use illustrations encompass nearly every category you can think men in dress clothes, uniforms, period costumes, engaged in athletic and social activities; women as homemakers, models, and femmes fatales; animals as fantasy figures and in realistic poses; varied forms of transportation―from Spanish galleons and early steam locomotives to airplanes, buses, and steamships; attention-getting graphics that announce "We Grease to Please" or "Try Our Pressing Service" and scores of other amusing, startling, and genial visual commentaries.