The period after the Second World War ended was particularly strange in Britain: there was a sense of an opportunity to build a new, better future, one that was modern rather than old.
The graphics of the period beautifully capture this fascination with the modern (although, it's true, they built on a heritage stretching back to the Southern Railway's electrics):
Being a train geek, obviously I've picked out a bunch of posters and booklets from the railway to illustrate this point.
They usually emphasise the same things: speed, cleanliness, modernity...
No foul steam smoke here, all clean diesel (sic) and electric power.
The experiments with new liveries were also about trying to capture this mood:
This final pair of images for me sums things up perfectly -- a booklet explaining the benefits of the West Coast electrification project:
But let's look close-up at the audacious choice of cover illustration:
Graphically brilliant. I love the ephemera of that period.
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3 comments:
More, more, more please! Men, trains and architecture make a fine mix: those old posters are sheer unadulterated delight. I'm not a film buff, as far as I know they're still showing the Sound of Music on every screen in our nearest multiplex!
I like those old posters especially the Glasgow "blue trains" and the close up of the then new class 86's Pantograph.
hi again
we seem to be mirroring again - i just (well, not so long ago) posted on the history of the carriages of the paris metro (http://nickwallacesmith.blogspot.com/2009/12/curiously-one-of-my-most-potent-early.html)
i like the sex/rest-of-life mix
again, will be back
best, nick
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