Smoking is prohibited - Enamel sign - Enamel






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Original Bulgarian enamel industrial sign from the 1970s, 20 × 30 cm, 533 g, reading “Пушенето Забранено” (Smoking is Prohibited) with double‑sided mounting holes and in excellent condition.
Description from the seller
Vintage Bulgarian Socialist-Era Enamel Sign — "Smoking is prohibited" / "Пушенето Забранено"
A striking piece of Cold War history, this authentic Bulgarian enamel sign dates from the Soviet-era and reads "Пушенето Забранено" — "Smoking is Prohibited" in Bulgarian.
Produced during Bulgaria's communist period (roughly 1944–1989), these enamel signs were mass-manufactured. Decades later, very few survive in this condition.
Bold graphic design — the diagonal red-and-white layout is instantly recognizable as socialist graphic design, balancing function with ideological aesthetic
Enamel construction — fired at high temperature onto steel, making it virtually fade-proof and far more durable than paper or plastic signage of the era
Authentic aging — minor chips and patina confirm genuine age, not a reproduction
Double-sided mounting holes — original hardware points intact
Cyrillic typography — the chunky, authoritative lettering style is characteristic of Bulgarian state printing of the period
Pieces like this were produced for factories, public institutions, transport hubs, and government buildings across the country. As those buildings are demolished or repurposed, surviving signage in this condition becomes increasingly scarce.
Who collects these: Mid-century design enthusiasts, Eastern European memorabilia collectors, interior decorators going for industrial or retro-Soviet aesthetics, and historians. Demand consistently outpaces supply as fewer pieces surface each year.
A rare, display-ready artifact from behind the Iron Curtain.
Vintage Bulgarian Socialist-Era Enamel Sign — "Smoking is prohibited" / "Пушенето Забранено"
A striking piece of Cold War history, this authentic Bulgarian enamel sign dates from the Soviet-era and reads "Пушенето Забранено" — "Smoking is Prohibited" in Bulgarian.
Produced during Bulgaria's communist period (roughly 1944–1989), these enamel signs were mass-manufactured. Decades later, very few survive in this condition.
Bold graphic design — the diagonal red-and-white layout is instantly recognizable as socialist graphic design, balancing function with ideological aesthetic
Enamel construction — fired at high temperature onto steel, making it virtually fade-proof and far more durable than paper or plastic signage of the era
Authentic aging — minor chips and patina confirm genuine age, not a reproduction
Double-sided mounting holes — original hardware points intact
Cyrillic typography — the chunky, authoritative lettering style is characteristic of Bulgarian state printing of the period
Pieces like this were produced for factories, public institutions, transport hubs, and government buildings across the country. As those buildings are demolished or repurposed, surviving signage in this condition becomes increasingly scarce.
Who collects these: Mid-century design enthusiasts, Eastern European memorabilia collectors, interior decorators going for industrial or retro-Soviet aesthetics, and historians. Demand consistently outpaces supply as fewer pieces surface each year.
A rare, display-ready artifact from behind the Iron Curtain.
