Reproduction of c. 1920s "Les Lunettes E.B. Meyerowitz" Advertising Poster by Geo Ham, Mounted
This is a neat reprint of a particularly colorful early Geo Ham (Georges Hamel) advertising piece, depicting a supercharged racer, likely at Le Mans, and advertising driver’s goggles made by E.B. Meyerowitz, which produced the goggles worn by the winner of the Le Mans endurance race every year from 1923 to 1940.
Believed to be a large-format scan of an original printed on an inkjet printer, this one may fool your friends when behind glass as it carries the faults of the source example (visible fold and wear marks), but an experienced poster collector will immediately note the inconsistent saturation and “flatness” associated with inkjet copies. Mounted, matted, and unframed.
This is a neat reprint of a particularly colorful early Geo Ham (Georges Hamel) advertising piece, depicting a supercharged racer, likely at Le Mans, and advertising driver’s goggles made by E.B. Meyerowitz, which produced the goggles worn by the winner of the Le Mans endurance race every year from 1923 to 1940.
Believed to be a large-format scan of an original printed on an inkjet printer, this one may fool your friends when behind glass as it carries the faults of the source example (visible fold and wear marks), but an experienced poster collector will immediately note the inconsistent saturation and “flatness” associated with inkjet copies. Mounted, matted, and unframed.
This is a neat reprint of a particularly colorful early Geo Ham (Georges Hamel) advertising piece, depicting a supercharged racer, likely at Le Mans, and advertising driver’s goggles made by E.B. Meyerowitz, which produced the goggles worn by the winner of the Le Mans endurance race every year from 1923 to 1940.
Believed to be a large-format scan of an original printed on an inkjet printer, this one may fool your friends when behind glass as it carries the faults of the source example (visible fold and wear marks), but an experienced poster collector will immediately note the inconsistent saturation and “flatness” associated with inkjet copies. Mounted, matted, and unframed.