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The illustrator's work also compared favourably with official recruitment posters of the time. As Richard Slocombe, senior curator of art at the Imperial War Museum, explains: "Poster design was a ...
Here are some interesting examples of military recruitment posters from World War I. England This poster was designed to bring a sense of shame to those who weren’t fighting.
A British Army recruitment campaign targets "snowflakes, selfie addicts" in boring jobs, with a design that draws on World War I recruitment posters.
The Army has unveiled its latest recruitment campaign - with posters targeting "snowflakes", "millennials" and "selfie addicts". But how does it compare with previous recruitment drives? MoD/Crown ...
Job board multi-posting software provider Vacancy Poster today announced that it has completed integration with the Facebook app Tabsite. This now allows all Vacancy Poster clients to post their ...
Lord Kitchener Wants You was a British world war I recruitment poster Universal History Archive / Getty Images. ... That face U.S. illustrator Flagg used Leete’s design as the basis for his poster.
The top 30 finalists for this year’s competition were chosen last week and the exhibition of these posters will be held at No Vacancy for a week - the winner will be announced at the opening on the ...
The design was given an extra nod of recognition at the start of the year when the Royal Mint announced that it would feature the poster design on a commemorative £2 in honour of the First World ...
In a new book, James Taylor claims that his research shows that the iconic Lord Kitchener image image was never used for official recruitment purposes and not widely produced as a poster.
The illustrator's work also compared favourably with official recruitment posters of the time. As Richard Slocombe, senior curator of art at the Imperial War Museum, explains: "Poster design was a ...
In fact it first appeared as a front cover design for the London Opinion magazine on 5 September 1914, created by illustrator Alfred Leete, with the magazine later printing its own posters.