



Natural Patina: The reverse side exhibits foxing and acidification (spotting) consistent with long term storage of vintage paper/pulp products. Factory Punch Hole: Features circular factory-punched hole at top center. Excellent color retention for a 90+ year old display. Displays the rich color depth associated with early 20th century stone lithography. (See photos for minor edge wear).
Frame: The display is currently framed behind glass. As is typical with survived displays, the original fold-out easel is no longer attached. P lease review the photos and reverse side to make your own determination of age and condition. Because the actual shotgun was only manufactured in in extremely limited quantities approx.5,000-6,000 units during the Great Depression, the corresponding advertising was produced in much smaller batches than for mass-market pumps or semi-autos. The ad represents the intro of the first American-made machine-produced over-under, a major turning point in US firearms history.
The " pillar" shape (20 1/2 x 7 1/2) is less common than standard rectangular signs, making it even more desirable to collectors searching for vertical displays. This is not the common Kleanbore ammo sign; it is the specific 1 932 launch campaign for the Model 32, Remington's rarest production shotgun. Very few of these vertical pillar displays have survived.