Vintage Propaganda Posters
Wall art for the walls of the awake.
Each piece drawn from the visual language of suppressed history — Apollo Studios, the Daily Shepherd, the enclosed world.
Printed on museum-quality matte paper sourced from Japan.
The Etherfolk Propaganda Collection documents what official messaging looks like when the official story doesn't hold.
Each piece is rendered in the visual language of 19th-century authority — the broadsides, the public health campaigns, the government notices that assumed compliance because they were designed by the people who enforced it. The aesthetic is period-accurate. The argument is current.
Vintage propaganda posters for walls that ask questions.
Printed on museum-quality matte paper sourced from Japan.
Ships worldwide.
A Victorian anatomical cross-section of the human head, museum-mounted on a brass display plinth. Where the brain should be: a circuit board. Each region is labeled with clinical precision — Compliance Relay, Skepticism Filter, Doubt Suppressor, Obedience Interface. A gloved hand enters frame from the right, pointer directed at the Consensus Node. The plaque reads: Fig. I. Homo Sapiens 2.0.
For a Smoother Experience. Autonomy Optional.
Rendered in the style of a 19th-century anatomical engraving — deep navy ground, aged cream, rust red, and muted gold. Circuit node corner ornaments frame the composition. Part of The Archive, Etherfolk's collectible poster series examining what was built, what was buried, and what was installed in its place. Printed on premium Japanese matte paper. Ships flat, ready to frame.
They have always wanted to know where you are.
How many of you there are.
What you own. What you owe. What you are worth to the ledger.
The Census is a vintage propaganda poster that treats government data collection with the visual seriousness it deserves — the aesthetic of official authority rendered in the style of a 19th-century broadside, the kind of document posted in public squares when compliance was not optional and the state made no effort to disguise what it was doing.
The design does not editorialize. It documents.
The document makes the argument.
Printed on museum-quality matte paper sourced from Japan.
— Museum-quality matte paper
— Paper thickness: 10.3 mil
— Paper weight: 189 g/m2
— Paper sourced from Japan
— Multiple sizes available
Part of the Etherfolk Propaganda Collection.
Count carefully. They do.
The set was dressed at 6 a.m.
The astronaut hit his mark at 9.
By 10 the footage was in the can.
One Small Step is a vintage propaganda poster documenting what the record shows when you look at it without institutional permission. A staged lunar set — the painted backdrop, the film equipment, the director's chair, the stagehands who never appeared in the final cut. The astronaut mid-shoot, waiting for the call.
Rendered in the visual language of the era's official imagery — the colors, the composition, the confident graphic authority of something that was never meant to be questioned. The Apollo Studios treatment makes the argument without raising its voice.
Printed on museum-quality matte paper sourced from Japan.
— Museum-quality matte paper
— Paper thickness: 10.3 mil
— Paper weight: 189 g/m2
— Paper sourced from Japan
— Multiple sizes available
Part of the Etherfolk Propaganda Collection.
The footage was faked. The poster is real.
The line forms on the left.
The headline says what it always says.
The caduceus gleams on schedule.
Safe and Effective is a vintage propaganda poster rendered in the visual language of 19th-century public health messaging — Victorian figures in an orderly queue, official scrollwork, the kind of institutional confidence that doesn't invite questions because it was never designed to. The imagery is period-accurate. The headline is familiar. The combination is the point.
Printed on museum-quality matte paper sourced from Japan.
— Museum-quality matte paper
— Paper thickness: 10.3 mil
— Paper weight: 189 g/m2
— Paper sourced from Japan
— Multiple sizes available
Part of the Etherfolk Propaganda Collection.
Trust the process. The process has always been there.
Vintage Propaganda Poster AccessoriesPropaganda on the streets
A suited sheep reads the morning paper at a gentlemen's breakfast — the headline, as always, reads Propaganda. The room fills with more of the same. A framed wall reminder instructs: Obey. Consume. Sleep. Repeat. Satire in the tradition of 19th-century editorial engraving, rendered in deep navy, rust red, aged cream, and muted gold.
Details:
• 100% polyester
• Bag size: 15″ × 15″ (39 × 39 cm)
• Capacity: 2.6 US gal (10 l)
• Maximum weight limit: 44lbs (20 kg)
• Dual handles made from 100% natural cotton bull denim
• Handle length: 26″ (67 cm), width 1″ (2.5 cm)
The director's chair reads Apollo Studios.
The clapperboard reads Apollo 11 . Take 1.
Through the cracked studio door — the real moon, untouched, indifferent, outside.
This card documents what the record shows when you look at it without being told what to see. A Hollywood soundstage. Stagehands adjusting lights in the rafters. A production that ran on a deadline set not by science, but by a space race that had already been decided.
Inside left: The footage was faked. The candles on your cake are very real. Happy Birthday.
Inside right: blank for your own message.
Back: the Etherfolk manifesto — so whoever receives this gets introduced to the archive too.
— Size: 4 x 6 inches (101 x 152 mm)
— Heavyweight 350 g/m2 paperboard
— Toner-based printing, rich and cinematic
— Blank inside right for your own message
— Comes with a complimentary envelope
Part of the Etherfolk Hidden Histories Collection.
For everyone who noticed the shadows were wrong.
About the CollectionPropaganda has been around for as long as those in power needed to control the people. The propaganda collection exposes the manipulative messages we receive.
Until you make the unconscious conscious, it will direct your life and you will call it fate.
— C.G. Jung