
1923 People's Drug Store Prohibition Washington DC Georgetown vintage black and white photograph Window Curtain
A black and white photograph captures the storefront of People's Drug Store No. 5 in 1923 Washington DC Georgetown, its window display crowded with packaged goods and promotional signage including Coca-Cola branding, while bold text across the top proclaims "We Always Sell the Best." The composition documents a moment frozen in time during Prohibition, presenting the commercial life of an early twentieth-century American drugstore with documentary clarity and nostalgic weight. At home in a workspace celebrating American history or vintage retail culture. A single woven-polyester panel, printed to order with a four-inch rod pocket and white reverse. Hang real art in the window, not a big-box print.
A black and white photograph captures the storefront of People's Drug Store No. 5 in 1923 Washington DC Georgetown, its window display crowded with packaged goods and promotional signage including Coca-Cola branding, while bold text across the top proclaims "We Always Sell the Best." The composition documents a moment frozen in time during Prohibition, presenting the commercial life of an early twentieth-century American drugstore with documentary clarity and nostalgic weight. At home in a workspace celebrating American history or vintage retail culture. A single woven-polyester panel, printed to order with a four-inch rod pocket and white reverse. Hang real art in the window, not a big-box print.
Original: $59.00
-65%$59.00
$20.65Description
A black and white photograph captures the storefront of People's Drug Store No. 5 in 1923 Washington DC Georgetown, its window display crowded with packaged goods and promotional signage including Coca-Cola branding, while bold text across the top proclaims "We Always Sell the Best." The composition documents a moment frozen in time during Prohibition, presenting the commercial life of an early twentieth-century American drugstore with documentary clarity and nostalgic weight. At home in a workspace celebrating American history or vintage retail culture. A single woven-polyester panel, printed to order with a four-inch rod pocket and white reverse. Hang real art in the window, not a big-box print.























