#28 Illustrated front cover from The Queenslander, May 31, 1928

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#28 Illustrated front cover from The Queenslander, May 31, 1928

Bold, sweeping lettering for “The Queenslander” crowns this illustrated weekly, priced at 6d and dated May 31, 1928, setting the tone for a magazine that knew how to announce itself from the newsstand. A postal-style stamp mark in the corner and the crisp layout of masthead, date, and decorative borders give the cover a lived-in authenticity—part advertisement, part artwork, part time capsule from interwar Australia.

Dominating the design is a striking purple panel promoting a western-style attraction: “Broncho Bert,” billed as “Horseman Supreme!!” in “The Devil Buster,” with the urgent promise of “To-night” and “A Super Feature.” The illustrated performer—hat tipped low, boots planted wide, chaps flared—leans into the era’s love of spectacle and bravado, while the high-contrast ink work and theatrical typography recall the energy of stage posters and show bills.

At right, a second figure stands with his back turned, a coiled rope hanging at his side, as though watching the advertised hero from the wings. That simple compositional choice turns the cover into a little narrative: anticipation, performance, and the allure of the frontier imagined for city readers. For collectors, researchers, and anyone interested in Queensland print culture, this front cover from The Queenslander offers a vivid example of 1920s magazine illustration, marketing language, and popular entertainment aesthetics.