#20 Remember, lad, accuracy is important!

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#20 Remember, lad, accuracy is important!

A sly, cartoonish profile fills the frame, its head hinged open like a cupboard door to reveal shelves lined with colorful bottles. The warm, poster-like background pushes the viewer’s eye straight to that surreal “mind,” where labels and shapes suggest a private inventory of drink rather than thoughts. In the corner, Cyrillic text adds a clear hint of the print’s cultural world, placing the artwork in the tradition of graphic propaganda and satirical illustration.

“Remember, lad, accuracy is important!” reads like a wry lesson in measurement, record-keeping, and the everyday habits that can quietly take over. The humor lands in the precision of the drawing: the bottles are arranged neatly, almost lovingly, as if order itself could excuse excess. That tension between tidy presentation and troubling subject matter is what makes this image so memorable as a historical artwork.

For readers interested in vintage poster art, social commentary, and the visual language of public health messaging, this piece offers a sharp example of how illustration can moralize without a single realistic scene. It also works beautifully in a WordPress gallery about historical prints, Soviet-era graphic design, or the long history of campaigns against alcoholism and vice. Even without a named artist or a printed date, the composition speaks loudly—accuracy, after all, is the point, and the bottles tell their own story.