Poster consists of forty-three portraits of well-known personalities (singers, actors, athletes, etc.) and quotations from each expressing thoughts on AIDS and AIDS prevention.
Depicts the faces of two men who appear to be greeting or speaking to each other. A condom also appears near the name of the AIDS campaign listed at the bottom corner of the poster.
Photograph depicting a man with his arm around one woman, turning to look suggestively at another woman. They are both holding cocktails and she appears to be inviting his attention.
Line drawing spelling out the word "Tooor"(actually "Tor," meaning "goal," as in German football), with the three o's represented by overlapping red condoms.
Translated additional poster text:Do not be seduced by false arguments: Condoms are still the best protection against HIV and other sexual diseases. And that is reason enough to stand up for safer sex.
Poster depicts the legs of several men, some standing in front of and some behind a wrought iron fence. The men are wearing shorts, leather pants or jeans and leather chaps. The suggestion is that they are having anonymous sex.
Poster depicts two nude men who look as if they are about to make love. The caption "Protection from love" implies that they need to use condoms in order to prevent infection.
A syringe appears in a no symbol, a condom appears in a blue yes symbol, and both symbols appear as worn stickers, one of which is slightly peeled off. The title words appear above these within a rectangle which also appears as a worn sticker with its corner peeling off.
A color image of the needle end of a hypodermic syringe. The syringe contains a brownish liquid, and the needle itself has a knot in it. One drop of liquid has come out from the end of the needle, and it forms the "o" in the word "stop." The message emphasizes that one way to stop AIDS is to never share needles.
This "Steck" cartoon depicts a naked woman and a naked man, with their arms around each other, seated on a hilltop, gazing upward with a started look on their faces. Snow is falling around them, but they are sitting under the "protection" of a condom, which is keeping them safe from the snowfall, and safe from the darkness, as light is eminating down from the condom above. Since the snowflakes can be suggestive of sperm, the couple can be thought of as being kept safe from the transmission of AIDS through the use of a condom.
Poster depicts a wall covered in graffiti. The graffiti text says that AIDS concerns everyone and suggests that everyone should only want to have sex with a condom.
Picture of two gay men; one is shirtless, with his jeans pulled down to expose his buttocks, and the other is kneeling before him and kissing his nipple. The "A..." in the title is most likely meant to stand for the German word Arsch (in English, ass or butt).