-40%
JIMI HENDRIX Jim Marshall Vintage Original GIANT Live Shot Door Poster M- 1987
$ 26.39
- Description
- Size Guide
Description
Original Head-Shop Poster!Journey back in time when you could go down to your local Head-Shop and get your smoking essentials and maybe a POSTER for your bedroom, if you had enough money! This is an ORIGINAL poster from the time! At that time they were around in quantity and easy to find, but now most of the classic Posters are very Out-Of-Print! Until now... 100% Official & Authentic (This is NOT reproduction)!
AS ALWAYS, WE OFFER A 100% Satisfaction Guarantee!
INFO:
Condition:
VG++
Size:
Aprox.
21
" x
62
"
Year:
1987
Poster #:
#POS-01126 (Winterland Prod.)
Origin:
U
.S.A.
Overall Condition:
The poster you see is the poster you will receive! This poster has some slight edge wear with tape, nothing major! Excellent condition for it's age...
CONDITION:
Excellent. The poster has never been used or hung-up. No tape or staple holes. The photo is to give you an idea of what the poster looks like, the actual poster colors are brilliant and clear! Sometimes the posters are very hard to get a photo of if they have been rolled up for years, but we do are best! All of what we sell here at Music Inferno is 100% Guaranteed!
SHIPPING:
We ship WORLDWIDE and all posters are shipped in a plastic tube so your poster will not get damaged! Shipping is USPS First Class Mail to the United States. To all other countries it is via U.S. Post Air Mail. We here at Music Inferno have been in the Mail Order business for over 25 years. We know how to ship your item and have it arrive in excellent condition. Please check out our other auctions & listings. If you see any other posters you like, WE COMBINE shipping on multiple items so you save on shipping costs. We work very hard to give you the best shipping rate. You can check the shipping rate under Shipping “See Details” in the description of our listing. IF YOU HAVE ANY QUESTIONS FEEL FREE TO CONTACT US…
NOTE: I am very sorry, there is NO international shipping on this item!
GUARANTEE:
When you buy from Music Inferno you buy with an experience of over 25 years in the Mail Order business! Our goal is that all of Music Inferno’s customers are happy with what they have purchased! We offer a 14-Day money back guarantee if not satisfied with your purchase. Look at our positive eBay feedbacks. 100% satisfaction guaranteed! Please check out our other eBay auctions & listings.
Thank you!
Conversion Table:
Inches to Centimeters.
12 x 12 inches is approximately 30 x 30cm.
11 x 17 inches is approximately 28 x 43cm.
12 x 18 inches is approximately 31 x 46cm.
18 x 24 inches is approximately 46 x 61cm.
20 x 30 inches is approximately 51 x 76cm.
24 x 36 inches is approximately 61 x 91cm.
For other dimensions please use the following conversion rate:
1 inch is equal to 2.54 centimeters, and
1 centimeter is equal to .39 inches.
American head shops originated in the 1960s in cities with high concentrations of college-age youth, often growing out of independently owned poster or candle stores. Historically, US head shops proliferated on
St. Mark's Place
in
New York City
's
East Village
, in
West Los Angeles
, in
San Francisco
's
Haight-Ashbury
neighborhood, and in
Chicago
's
Old Town
. Sources cite the
Psychedelic Shop
on
Haight Street
in San Francisco as the first head shop in the
United States
.
Operated by
United States Army
veteran Ron Thelin and his younger brother Jay, it opened on January 3, 1966. Four months later Jeff Glick opened "Head Shop" on East Ninth Street in New York City. Also in 1966, The Birmingham Balloon Company opened at 113 Fry Street Denton, Tx.
The oldest surviving head shop in Britain is Head In The Clouds, which was opened in Norwich in April 1971 by Martin Wyatt and strives to continue its original layout and "love and peace" ethos.
Head shops served as an important outlet for
underground newspapers
and the
underground comix
of
Robert Crumb
and other counterculture cartoonists, which had little access to the established channels of newsstand distribution. The shops' popularity eventually waned with the aging of that era's
baby boomer
generation, and with the retail mainstream discovering and co-opting aspects of that market niche, such as
acid rock
and
eco-friendly
products.