Vintage Poster Archives
Deutsche Luft Hansa 1926 | Hans Vogel Airline Poster
Deutsche Luft Hansa 1926 | Hans Vogel Airline Poster
This service is currently unavailable,
sorry for the inconvenience.
Pair it with a frame
Frame options are for visualization purposes only.
FRAME STYLE
MATTING SIZE
BUILDING YOUR EXPERIENCE
powered by Blankwall
Take a few steps back and let your camera see more of the scene.
powered by Blankwall
Was this experience helpful?
A uniformed ground crew member extends a welcoming gesture to passengers boarding a Deutsche Luft Hansa aircraft, set against a bold alpine landscape of blue mountains and golden sky.
Designed by Hans Vogel around 1926 for Deutsche Luft Hansa, this poster depicts the pioneering spirit of early commercial aviation. The airline, founded in 1926, was Germany's national carrier and represented the cutting edge of passenger air travel in Europe.
Vogel's composition balances the human element of aviation service with the grandeur of flight over terrain. The brown uniform and cap bearing the Lufthansa name signal professionalism and reliability in an era when air travel was still novel and adventurous.
This archival print appeals to aviation enthusiasts, collectors of German design history, and anyone drawn to the optimistic aesthetic of 1920s travel advertising.
Couldn't load pickup availability
Share
A uniformed ground crew member extends a welcoming gesture to passengers boarding a Deutsche Luft Hansa aircraft, set against a bold alpine landscape of blue mountains and golden sky.
Designed by Hans Vogel around 1926 for Deutsche Luft Hansa, this poster depicts the pioneering spirit of early commercial aviation. The airline, founded in 1926, was Germany's national carrier and represented the cutting edge of passenger air travel in Europe.
Vogel's composition balances the human element of aviation service with the grandeur of flight over terrain. The brown uniform and cap bearing the Lufthansa name signal professionalism and reliability in an era when air travel was still novel and adventurous.
This archival print appeals to aviation enthusiasts, collectors of German design history, and anyone drawn to the optimistic aesthetic of 1920s travel advertising.
