Franziska Schlopsnies

In the 1920s, her Art Deco illustrations and covers appeared in, among others, the weeklies Jugend, Simplicissimus, Meggendorfer-Blätter, and Berliner Illustrirte Zeitung.

The son of a Protestant landowner from East Prussia, he studied at the Munich Art Academy with Gabriel von Hackl from 1903.

[3] On 15 September 1910 in Frankfurt Franziska married Albert, who was by then employed as a freelancer at Margarete Steiff GmbH,[4] for which he designed catalogs and numerous dolls and stuffed animals.

[1] After World War I, Franziska Schlopsnies began designing posters for fashion shows, department stores and exhibitions.

[5] Her Art Deco-inspired fashion drawings and caricatures were regularly published in magazines, such as Jugend, Simplicissimus,[6] Eleganten Welt,[7] Berliner Illustrirten Zeitung, Sport im Bild[8] and the monthly Velhagen & Klasings Monatshefte.

Franziska Schlopsnies (1910)
Piety : Cover of Fliegende Blätter of 18 May 1928
Geeignet – Cover of Meggendorfer-Blätter of 2 December 1926