Rail
posters from the 1950s are likely to become more sought after, given
the growth in interest in this decade. These can he found for
£100-800 or more, depending on the artwork, designer, and
example
is works by Abram Games (designer of the Festival of Britain logo),
which have a strong design and may well rise in value. Designs from
the 1950s that fetch high prices today include Alan Durman's 'Bognor
Regis' poster (1955), in which a woman in a yellow bathing costume
holds a beach ball; and Jack Merriott's 'Newquay' poster (1954),
showing a girl surfing through breaking waves.
Retro Posters |
Retro Posters
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Company poster from the 1930s depicting a line-up of ships, perhaps
imitating Cassandre, can fetch around £600.
Retro Posters |
of
travel by liner that many other companies operated overseas. These
smaller lines offer a more accessible option, with prices often
ranging between £150 and £500.
Part
of the attraction of ocean travel was the exotic destination. Look
for alluring images of foreign destinations. Colours are usually
bright and saturated, calling people away from
grey,
rainy Britain. These posters can be found from around £150. For
example, a Blue Star Line poster for Mediterranean cruises showing a
Nortli African view with a man riding a camel amid Moorish buildings
can fetch around £200.
Retro Posters |
Later
posters for liners in the 1950s and 60s, when sea travel began to
fall out of fashion, are often less valuable than those from the
1920s and 30s and can fetch £50-250 or more for known brand names,
those by notable designers, or those with superb designs in period
styles. As the best posters become too expensive for most collectors,
these later posters may make a good investment.
Air
travel offered a swifter alternative to journeys by sea. The slogan,
Africa in days instead of weeks', on an Imperial Airways poster of
1937 neatly makes this point. Until Pan American (Pan Am) and
Imperial Airways had
planes
with the range to make the trip across the Atlantic, flying boats
provided the competition for liners. This was perhaps the most
glamorous way to travel from Southampton to New York. An Imperial
Airways poster from the 1930s shows a passenger reclining in comfort
attended by a waiter carrying cocktails on a tray. Many of these
1930s posters can be valuable, fetching £200-600 or more, as they
often have striking Art Deco artwork. As before, those by lesser-
known or unidentified designers generally fetch less.
After
World War II, passengers grew to expect the convenience of a plane
flying from a nearby airport. In the 1950s, foreign holidays by air became
cheaper and services expanded. Planes became less luxurious and
emphasis was placed on speed. Posters with images of speeding planes
are desirable, and many have their stylistic origins in the 1930s,
with clean lines, flat areas of bold colour, and angular shapes.
Those showing a multitude of foreign destinations, all conveniently
served by the featured airline, are popular. If by a leading designer
such as Abram Games, they are usually valuable and can fetch £200-600
or more.
Retro Posters |
posters
in the style of the period can sometimes be found.
Concorde
represented the ultimate in luxury travel, and poster prices are
probably yet to reach their peak. The withdrawal of Concorde from
service in 2003 may cause values to rise. A Concorde poster from 1977
(the year in which the plane first took paying passengers) can fetch
£30-50. As Concorde was operated by only two airlines, Air France
and British Airways, examples are rare compared to posters for the
more widespread Boeing 747, for example, and could prove to be a wise investment.
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