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MINT ORIGINAL 2003 'THE MAGAZINE' ADVERTISING POSTER FILLMORE ARTIST LEE CONKLIN

$ 7.91

Availability: 27 in stock
  • Size: 13 x 19 INCHES
  • Modified Item: No
  • Condition: mint/near mint
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Seller
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • Item must be returned within: 30 Days
  • Original/Reproduction: Original
  • Restocking Fee: No
  • Format: POSTER

    Description

    This is a MINT condition original poster advertising the 30th anniversary of "THE MAGAZINE", a truly unique retailer specializing in vintage magazine, posters, ephemera and erotica.  A brief history of The Magazine will be copied and pasted below.  Design by the legendary Fillmore psychedelic art master, the inimitable LEE CONKLIN...MEASURES APPROXIMATELY 13 x 19".   CONDITION NOTES:  ITEM IS MINT.  Buyer pays shipping. See MANY similar items in my other auctions.
    The Magazine, a specialty retailer in the heart of San Francisco
    dealing in back-date magazines, ephemera and erotica, opened in the Spring of 1973. The owner and proprietor, Trent Dunphy, began with the front half of a small shop at 839 Larkin Street (currently the home of The Shooting Gallery alternative art space) with magazines standing in cardboard boxes on saw-horse tables. The original idea was not only to offer back issues of popular magazines to readers, collectors and aficionados of print media but also to provide a place where fans of erotica of all stripes could find a wide range of old and current material. And, it provided a place where magazines and books could be traded as well as bought or sold. Over the intervening years, as used bookstores steadily reduced the space they once allotted to old magazines, this little shop flourished. After its first decade, the shop moved south one block to 731 Larkin Street and occupied two storefronts for the next ten years. Finally, in 1993 the shop moved to its current location at 920 Larkin Street between Geary and Post in a handsome old shopfront which had been the optometry shop of Dr. Maurice Weiss for more than sixty years.