60 Pcs Mid-Century Americana Junk Journal Kit
Turn Back the Clock to the Vibrant, Technicolor Golden Age of America! 📻🥤
Infuse your creative spreads with the bold, high-spirited energy of a 1950s highway diner using our Retro Pop Americana Advertising Mixed-Media Kit. Perfectly masterminded for junk journalists, moodboarders, and pop-art lovers, this premium collection captures the sun-drenched optimism of classic magazine ads, pin-up graphics, and vintage grocery ephemera.
🍔 The 1950s Diner 4-Texture Vault:
- 📰 10 Sheets Mid-Century Advertising Paper (Non-Adhesive): Your high-contrast foundation. Textured sheets capturing retro soda ads, vintage family milk billboards, and classic typography coupons.
- 🌬️ 5 Sheets Translucent Pop Vellum (Non-Adhesive): Ethereal, frosted sheets capturing old-school cartoons, comic grid layouts, and retro textures. Layer them to add an authentic vintage television filter over your pages.
- ✨ 25 Sheets Golden Era Glossy Stickers: High-fidelity stickers featuring pin-up poster girls, retro classic sports cars, strawberry jam logos, and laughing nostalgic kids.
- 🌾 20 Sheets Nostalgic Diner Washi Stickers: Semi-transparent Japanese paper stickers including cinema tickets, old price tags, and miniature grocery labels that melt effortlessly onto paper surfaces.
Dynamic Size Range for Bold Storytelling:
Ranging dynamically from 1.57 up to a sweeping 4.33 inches (40mm - 110mm), this pack brings bold dimensions to your craft. Lay down a large 1950s magazine print as your base, drape a frosted comic vellum sheet across it, and seal it down with a vibrant pop girl sticker for a spectacular 3D retro collage.
Product Specifications:
- Quantity: 60 Bold Retro Curated Designs per Pack
- Materials: Ad Journal Paper (10) + Pop Vellum (5) + Glossy Sticker (25) + Washi Sticker (20)
- Size Range: Sweeping formats from 1.57" to 4.33" (40mm to 110mm)
- Aesthetic Style: 1950s Americana Diner, Retro Pop Art, Vintage Magazine Ephemera
📻 Crack open a cold soda, turn up the jukebox, and piece together your own mid-century dream.