Tag Archives: Travel

15 Beautiful Typographic Vintage Travel Posters

11 Apr

Bergamo

I’ve compiled a group of  15 Beautiful Typographic Vintage Travel Posters below for your enjoyment and to add some graphic inspiration to your day.  I love the classic hand-painted and hand-drawn element these posters have along with the minimal copy.  The focus is on the travel destination, which is as it should be!

As always, feel free to add your own favorites from around the web in the comments section, or in our Wow It’s a Light Bulb Flickr Group!

Enjoy!

Cunard-Line-Boston-to-Europe- Vintage Travel Poster

Courtesy of poweredbytofu

Egypt vintage travel poster

Courtesy of sweet_bettie67

Finland vintage travel posters Fish creating the shape of a plane.

Courtesy of jeffreydelkin

Royal Blue to the South West and West Vintage Travel Poster

Courtesy of LarkingAbout

Germany (1935) Vintage Travel Poster with zeppelin

Courtesy of Susanlenox

Northwest Orient Airlines Poster 1950s Vintage Travel Poster

Courtesy of stevechasmar

Suisse par avion vintage travel poster

Courtesy of Jomo

Hamburg to the South 1935 Vintage Travel Poster

Courtesy of Kodak Agfa

Marseille Vintage Travel Poster

Courtesy of poweredbytofu

München 1931 Vintage Travel Poster

Courtesy of Susanlenox

Bergamo vintage travel poster

Courtesy of TeddyBoy

Air Afrique Vintage Travel Poster

Courtesy of Jomo

Vintage travel postcard - from Emerald, Wales

Courtesy of Jassy-50

For party travel hire a coach Vintage Viking Travel Poster

Courtesy of LarkingAbout

Cairo by Air vintage travel poster

Courtesy of Kodak Agfa

  • Share/Bookmark

Last Day in San Francisco

6 Apr

DSC05583

Our last day in San Francisco, we hopped onto a cable car, went to Fisherman’s Wharf and then Chinatown.

The San Francisco cable cars are so much fun to ride on. We caught it on Market Street, right at the turntable. they still make the cable car tracks change by hand. The car comes to the end of the line, where it gets onto a turntable, at which point two men come and push the car in a circle. When the car turns in a half circle around it stops on the tracks that go in the opposite direction.The ride itself is so much fun, albeit crowed. It its a series of ups and down on the hilly San Francisco streets. You can also see many of the traditional San Fran stops and landmarks from the car.

DSC05499 300x225 Last Day in San Francisco

DSC05505 300x225 Last Day in San Francisco

Once the car came to an end we ended up on Hyde Street pier.This is one of my favorite San Fran stops. It looked more like an actually pier than like Disney World, which is what I felt Fisherman’s Wharf looked like. It was was a windy, cold day, so Alan and I decided  to warm ourselves by drinking an Irish Coffee. We walked in the Buena Vista resturant, were it turns out that there is the best Irish Coffee in all of the west. It was amazing. The rest of the morning consisted of walking between the pier and eating delicious seafood.

DSC05538 225x300 Last Day in San Francisco

DSC05509 300x225 Last Day in San FranciscoIrish Coffee

DSC05537 225x300 Last Day in San Francisco

DSC05517 225x300 Last Day in San FranciscoAlan and his new friend

DSC05568 225x300 Last Day in San FranciscoOld man and the sea

In the late afternoon we headed to Chinatown. Unfortunately, we didn’t have a lot of time to spend there are ended up just taking a quick walk through, and taking some fun pictures.

DSC05588 225x300 Last Day in San Francisco

DSC05589 300x225 Last Day in San Francisco

DSC05583 300x225 Last Day in San Francisco

  • Share/Bookmark

Japantown-Sarah’s perspective

27 Mar

DSC05438

The afternoon of our first day in San Francisco was spend both lost wandering the city streets for hours and Japantown.  On our way to the MOMA earlier in the day Alan and I had wandered through an area of town known as the tenderloin district. Not a fun place to be! It is full of crazier than usual homeless people and has the unmistakable smell of urine. Needless to say Alan and I were determined to avoid this area on our way to Japantown. This led us miles out of the way and through some lovely neighborhoods. I have to say my feet have never been in as much pain, as at the end of the that day.

Ok, moving on to Japantown. Japantown is much smaller than Chinatown but is lovely none the less. It is all basically centered in a square with a pagoda and a Japanese mall.  When Alan and I got ,to Japantown the first thing we wanted to do was sit somewhere and eat sushi and have a drink. We came across a really cute and reasonable priced restaurant.  Since we were so famished from our walk, we ordered an appetizer of lotus roots. Have you ever eaten these? They are delicious. As was our sushi, and our giant beers.

After sushi we went exploring in the mall, coming away with some great incense, and these amazing kiwi flavored gummies. Here are some shots of our Japantown adventure.

DSC05441 225x300 Japantown Sarahs perspectiveThere were tons of Cherry blossoms in bloom.

DSC05431 300x225 Japantown Sarahs perspectiveInside the sushi restaurant. We were eating at an odd hour of the afternoon, so we basically had the restaurant to ourselves.

DSC05446 225x300 Japantown Sarahs perspectiveThe pagoda

DSC05438 225x300 Japantown Sarahs perspectiveAll the signs were in Japanese

  • Share/Bookmark

San Francisco MOMA- Alan’s Perspective

25 Mar

Sky Light at the SF MOMA

My first look at San Francisco with Sarah was one of awe.  I had seen photographs and shows on the travel channel, but was unprepared for the sheer size of the city.  Not only the size, but how cool and “vintage” the city looked.  After a short drive (hahah 9 hours from San Diego through rush hour traffic in LA) we crossed into the city.

Once we settled into our hotel, located right in Union Square, Sarah and I set out on foot to photograph the city and check out all the cool sites San Francisco has to offer.

Our first stop was the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, which was farther than it looked in relation to our hotel map.

The design of the exterior of the building is a beautiful example of Modernist architecture and the interior is no exception.  Wide open spaces, coupled with columns, an open skylight, and a skybridge made this experience very awe-inspiring.

The SF MOMA from a distance

The SF MOMA from a distance

Sky Light at the SF MOMA photograph

Sky Light at the SF MOMA

They have some very cool exhibits , but of particular interest to me, as a photographer, was a fantastic exhibit called “The View From Here”.

Just as photography has been instrumental in shaping California’s popular image, the state — and San Francisco, in particular — has played a key role in the history of photography as an art form. Reflecting this unusually symbiotic relationship, SFMOMA was one of the first museums in the country to treat photography as an equal to painting and sculpture. In celebration of the museum’s 75 years of engagement with the medium, this exhibition explores the variety and vitality of California’s photographic tradition from the 1840s to the present. Drawn from the SFMOMA collection, it includes Gold Rush-era daguerreotypes and early panoramas of San Francisco, pictures by members of the influential Group f.64, street and documentary photographs, conceptual work from the 1970s, and contemporary photographs. Artists include Ansel Adams, Lewis Baltz, Dorothea Lange, Ed Ruscha, Larry Sultan, Carleton Watkins, Carrie Mae Weems, and many others. – from the SF MOMA exhibit.

By the end of our journey up the four floors of the building, we were absolutely exhausted and stopped to have some coffee on their rooftop garden. We then set out for our next adventure.  Getting lost on the way to Japantown!

  • Share/Bookmark

San Francisco MOMA-Sarah’s Perspective

23 Mar

DSC05409

Our first day in San Francisco Alan and I went spent the morning wandering the streets and going to the Museum of Modern Art. The MOMA is located within a nice little clusters of museums in a park. Beautiful architecture, very modern lots of clean lines and glass, as well as one very old looking church. I loved it. The weather was nice and warm great for wandering getting lost in the streets and the park.

If you are ever in San Francisco you should be sure to stop by the MOMA, they have a huge collection of pieces, including Picasso, Matisse, Ansel Adams and many others.Also, be sure to check out The Bridge by Joseph Stella. It is my favorite piece, I love the colors, the painting is done in white, blue, and black.

At the end of our MOMA jaunt Alan and I headed up to the Garden Terrance to drink some coffee. I highly recommend this, you get to rest our feet and sit outside among some fun sculptures. Alan and I drank Iced Louisiana Style Coffee. It was delicious! What it is, is its coffee that had been brewed the day before and left to sit overnight, then some chicory flavoring is added as well as some milk,very refreshing. Here are some pics from our streets of San Fran + museum adventure.

DSC05369 225x300 San Francisco MOMA Sarahs PerspectiveMany of the streets had colorful murals painted onto them

DSC05367 300x225 San Francisco MOMA Sarahs PerspectiveI loved the buildings, the city has so many colorful hues.

DSC05392 225x300 San Francisco MOMA Sarahs PerspectiveIn the park, with all of the museums. I love the angles in this shot.

DSC05393 300x225 San Francisco MOMA Sarahs PerspectiveA shot of the rooftops. The building with the huge round window is the SFMOMA.

DSC05409 300x225 San Francisco MOMA Sarahs PerspectiveAlan pointed out that our iced coffees looked like eyes, so we made a face

  • Share/Bookmark