Vintage Saturday Evening Post Metal Framed Covers Set of Three 7.5 X 5.5
$25
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vintage, red, blue, green, artwork
Preloved. Great condition!
These set of 3 framed prints are ready to hang with metal frames (red, blue, green) featuring Saturday Evening Post prints.
#1 (Blue) - “No Money for Her Soda” by Frances Tipton Hunter on the cover of “The Saturday Evening Post,” June 6, 1936.
With her curly hair and that sailor outfit the girl looks like Shirley Temple in the 1936 movie “Poor Little Rich Girl.”
#2 (Red) Feb, 27, 1937 A Hanging Matter, Norman Rockwell
#3 (Green) March 5, 1932, 1932 Joseph Christian Leyendecker Living Mannequin
Living Mannequin sold at the U.S. War Bond at the United States Treasury-Saturday Evening Post War Bond Show. This event toured sixteen cities with over 1.2 million attendees and featured Norman Rockwell's Four Freedoms, inspiring donations and enlistments as well as numerous other famous Saturday Evening Post illustrations. At this specific show in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, it was an all-day event including a parade through the Golden Triangle, a vaudeville show, and numerous celebrities in attendance including Mickey Rooney, Judy Garland, Fred Astaire, and Lucille Ball. At Pittsburgh alone, The Saturday Evening Post War Bond Show raised an astounding $87 million, the equivalent of $1.1 billion today. This active relationship of illustrations, the publications, and the general population highlights the importance and influence of illustrators during this pivotal moment in United States history.
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