PopKulture's photos with the keyword: package design
Black_Crook_box
02 Jan 2008 |
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A terrific cigar box depicting the devil from a popular, long-running theatrical prodution, the 'Black Crook.' The devil design is even carried over to the front flap, and since these were often ripped off when the box was opened by merchants, few of the older boxes still retain them. The fact that the background is black is also somwhat unusual for a cigar box label, as the overwhelming majority of them were white.
CB_Henry_George_30s
07 Feb 2010 |
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This iteration of Henry George cigars got an interesting Depression-era update, celebrating four aspects of society: agriculture, commerce, industry, and academia.
Boxes that display the N.R.A. or National Recovery Administration stamp date almost exclusively to 1934.
CB_Henry_George_20s
07 Feb 2010 |
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This version of the Henry George cigar box carries a 1926 tax stamp and features a slightly more commercial redesign from the turn-of-the-century boxes.
Henry George was a nineteenth-century American writer and philosopher whose famous work, Progress and Poverty, examines social and economic inequality.
CB_Henry_George_early
07 Feb 2010 |
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This early Henry George cigar box carries a 1901 tax stamp and features vignettes typical in Victorian-era label design. On the right can be seen his seminal work, Progress and Poverty, which examines social and economic inequality.
CB_Henry_George_stack
07 Feb 2010 |
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Featured here are the side labels of three different versions of Henry George cigar boxes, dating from the turn-of-the-century to the Great Depression.
The interior views - which follow this photo in my photostream - show the evolution of the brand.
Henry George was a nineteenth-century American writer and philosopher whose famous work, Progress and Poverty, examines social and economic inequality.
Nov. 11th
11 Nov 2011 |
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Today we give pause to remember and honor all the people who served our country so dutifully and honorably through the years.
Vintage Nov. 11th cigar box, circa 1920's, Wisconsin.
Note that the box denotes the 11th as "Victory Day," a seldom used variation on what was first known as Armistice Day, then for a time Remembrance Day, and finally today's Veterans Day.
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