Our Stretched Canvas Option

What sets us apart from other Pulp Art and Art Deco art sites is that all of our Vintage images have been re-mastered to emulate the original artist intent. We feature the art as the artist intended as well as the genres they worked in. We use the finest premium artist canvas and archival inks on the market today.

45th Street Editions has a great selection of vintage pulp cover art as well as Art Deco and Hollywood Movie Star images.

Solution Graphics

 

 

Weird Tales

Art Deco Images on Canvas

We have Vintage Art Deco Images Posters and Prints

45th Street Editions is where Vintage Pulp Cover art and Art Deco images meet artists' canvas and the 21st Century!

45th Street Editions caters to those people who truly appreciate art from the Art Deco Era of the early 20th Century. We have compiled some of the best Vintage Images along with the most unique and sought after Pulp Covers of the 20's and 30's.

We also have a great selection of early hollywood movie star images from the 1920's and 1930's.

 

 

 

Weird Tales

Werewolf Story

Order number SF186

CANVAS SIZES

Weird Tales Magazine began in March 1923. In 1924 Farnsworth Wright assumed editorship and under his direction it grew into the greatest fantasy magazine ever published. It was the first venue for many of the classical "greats" of the genre. Writers such as Robert Bloch, Seabury Quinn, H.P Lovecraft, Clark Ashton Smith, C. L. Moore and Robert E. Howard (famous for his "Conan" stories) all contributed to Weird tales. In 1932, at the height of the depression, an "out of work", Chicago based agency artist and fashion designer named Margaret Brundage became the cover artist for Weird Tales. Thus began the career of possibly the most famous female artist in the fantasy field. Her sensuous nude or nearly nude women graced the magazines covers from then until 1938 when the magazine moved to New York under a different editorship. During the middle nineteen thirties there was a continuing debate over the use of nudes on the covers. Many readers argued that it did not accurately reflect the content of the magazine and the arguments reached a peak in September of 1933 when the cover pictured two nearly nude women in a whipping scene. Many of weird Tales readers expressed their outrage and Farnsworth reacted by having much more demure pictures on the covers of the next two months issues. The protests from fans who enjoyed the nude pictures was even louder and quite simply "naked ladies" sold more magazines, so W.T. returned to the earlier standard of having naked women on the covers.

 

Our Stretched Canvas Option

When you purchase a stretched canvas from 45th Street Editions you will be getting a completed canvas with colored border, stretched, finished with a wire on the back, and ready to hang on your wall.