Feature Points
- VINTAGE PRINT REPRODUCTION: Historic reproduction of 1936 NYC Storekeeper Food Safety Public Health WPA Poster. Printed on archival-grade paper that resists fading and discoloration for over 100 years. Perfect for home, office, or gallery display.
- PREMIUM GALLERY PAPER: Heavyweight fine art paper with non-reflective matte finish eliminates glare while delivering museum-grade appearance and lasting durability.
- PROFESSIONALLY RESTORED: Each image is digitally restored by our art specialists to remove age-related deterioration while preserving authentic historical details and character.
- BORDERLESS DESIGN: Artwork prints edge-to-edge for a seamless, gallery-ready appearance. Ships protected in rigid tube packaging to prevent damage and ensure perfect condition upon arrival.
- MADE IN USA: Our multi-step restoration process and quality control ensure each print meets professional standards. Every reproduction is individually inspected before shipping.
Additional Information
Created between 1936 and 1937, this educational poster taught children about food safety and community health through the Federal Art Project's public education initiatives. The design features a storekeeper character emphasizing sanitation standards, addressing widespread concerns about contaminated food supplies when economic pressures tempted merchants selling questionable products while inadequate refrigeration threatened public health.
The New York City Board of Education commissioned WPA artists producing classroom materials teaching nutrition, hygiene, and civic responsibility to immigrant children whose families often lacked health education. These posters served dual purposes: educating youth while indirectly reaching parents through lessons children brought home, multiplying impact of public health campaigns targeting communities with limited English proficiency.
Depression-era food safety represented critical concern as poverty drove consumption of marginal products while malnutrition weakened immune systems. Educational campaigns emphasized merchant responsibility and consumer awareness, building expectations for cleanliness supporting regulatory enforcement efforts. The cheerful imagery made serious health messages accessible to young learners, establishing foundational understanding about sanitation shaping lifelong behaviors and community standards.
This instructive poster serves as a reminder of Depression-era public health education and vital roles storekeepers played in neighborhood welfare. It transports viewers to classrooms where art taught citizenship, making it a unique piece of American educational history and WPA legacy.









