
1993 Beavis & Butthead Poster
1993 Beavis & Butthead Poster. A one-of-one piece from the Keep It Classic vault. This piece is anchored to Beavis and Butt-Head, the Mike Judge-created MTV animated series that premiered March 8, 1993, and ran through November 1997 in its original incarnation.
The era and the subject
Beavis and Butt-Head, the Mike Judge-created MTV animated series that premiered March 8, 1993, and ran through November 1997 in its original incarnation. The 1993 launch year is the show's pre-cultural-saturation window: before the Highway to Hell music-video season, before the 1996 theatrical film Beavis and Butt-Head Do America, and before the heavy mid-nineties merchandising program. Early 1993 Beavis and Butt-Head promotional posters from MTV Networks or licensed poster manufacturers like Western Graphics or Funky Enterprises sit in the foundational tier of the franchise's documented merchandise history. Mike Judge's animation aesthetic from the original Liquid Television-developed shorts was tightened slightly for the series, and posters that carry the original character-design language are a documented sub-category within nineties MTV merch collecting.
Why this category matters
Vintage one-of-one posters are a verification-heavy category. The print stock, the printing technique (offset litho, screen print, digital reproduction), the back-side licensing and distributor mark, and the edge wear together anchor a piece to a specific window. Reproductions are common across licensed character and music properties and the printing technique is generally the most reliable authenticity signal. For more pieces in this lane, see our posters collection.
What to look for in the photos
On a vintage poster, the print stock, the printing technique, the licensing marks, and any edge wear are the core variables. We shoot the full poster flat, the corners (which carry the most wear), the back (which often carries the printer mark and licensing date), and any close-up of fold lines, tears, or staining. Original posters have specific paper weights and printing techniques (offset litho versus screen print versus digital reproduction) that the photos will show. Reproductions are common in licensed character properties and the printing technique is generally the most reliable authenticity signal.
Care and wear
Store flat in an acid-free folder or in a hard tube. Don't roll tightly or fold. Frame with UV-protective glass and acid-free matting if displayed. Avoid direct sunlight (sunlight is what fades vintage poster ink fastest). Humidity is the secondary enemy; store in a stable, dry environment.
How the market reads this piece
The vintage poster market has been mapped in detail by the print-collecting community. Original posters are distinguished from reproductions primarily by printing technique (offset litho, screen print, digital reproduction each have distinctive surface and ink signatures) and by back-side licensing and distributor marks. Music tour posters, film promo posters, and licensed-character art prints from the 1970s through 1990s each have their own reference frameworks within the broader category. The supply is structurally fixed (no new originals can be produced) and the demand has held steady or grown as decorative-vintage and museum-quality framing have become more common in residential interiors. If this category resonates, our poster collecting FAQ is the next stop.
One of one, and what that means here
This is the only one of these we have, and once it's gone we won't have another. That's the structural reality of one-of-one vintage retail: every piece in our vault has its own surviving population of one in this shop. We don't restock vintage. We don't reorder. We don't carry parallel sizes or colorways of the same piece. When a one-of-one piece sells, the slot it occupied in the vault is permanently empty, and the next piece that sits in that category lane will be a different piece with its own history. If this piece is the right piece for you, the photos and the cohort signal say what we know about it. The rest is your call, and we're available to talk through it before you commit.
This piece is also documented on our Instagram archive: https://www.instagram.com/reel/DSJNZGGAe97/.
Browse more from this category at /collections/posters, or visit us in person at 707 East Fremont Street, Suite 1170 in Las Vegas (ground floor, east side of Container Park, just inside the Fremont Street entrance). Our shop is open seven days a week with extended Friday and Saturday hours. Reach out at info@keepitclassiclv.com or call (702) 605-3332 with any specific question about this piece, the cohort it belongs to, or anything in our vault you would like us to pull aside.
Collectors Cabinet
The collectors cabinet at the shop holds whatever did not fit the racks. Magazines, posters, programs, DVDs, promotional odds, miscellanea from vintage that earned its own shelf. Everything here is a single unit, inspected in Las Vegas before listing. If a piece cannot be graded against the in-house scale, it gets a written condition note in the spec sheet below.
INSPECTED IN STORE / 707 E FREMONT, LAS VEGAS
Inspected in Las Vegas on June 2026. Each piece is a single unit, sold as inspected.
KEEP IT CLASSIC
This 1993 beavis & butthead poster originates from archival inventory, represents Keep It Classic[02]'s output, . Each piece in the shop is a single unit, inspected by hand in Las Vegas before listing. The data manifest to the right records the fields on file for this lot; where a field is empty it has been omitted rather than guessed.
INSPECTED IN STORE / 707 E FREMONT, LAS VEGAS
- VENDOR
- Keep It Classic
Creeps, come purchase goods at keepitclassiclv.
14 days from delivery. Buyer pays return shipping. In-store purchases are exchange or credit only.
Every piece in the shop is a single unit. Once it is gone, it is gone.
707 E Fremont Street, Suite 1170, ground floor, east side of Downtown Container Park.














