Bring back some good or bad memories


Showing posts with label ads. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ads. Show all posts

November 6, 2020

30 Amazing Postcards Show Chocolate Advertisements in the Early 20th Century

The history of chocolate began in Mesoamerica. Fermented beverages made from chocolate date back to 450 BC. Originally prepared only as a drink, chocolate was served as a bitter liquid, mixed with spices or corn puree. It was believed to be an aphrodisiac and to give the drinker strength.


Today, such drinks are also known as “Chilate” and are made by locals in the South of Mexico. After its arrival to Europe in the sixteenth century, sugar was added to it and it became popular throughout society, first among the ruling classes and then among the common people.

In the 20th century, chocolate was considered essential in the rations of United States soldiers during war.

The word “chocolate” comes from the Classical Nahuatl word Xocolātl, and entered the English language from the Spanish language.

Here below is a set of amazing postcards that shows chocolate advertisements from between the 1900s and 1920s.

“After all - Bournville Cocoa is the best!”

Black Magic Chocolates

Bovril Chocolate

Cadbury's Chocolate

Cadbury's Chocolates





November 3, 2020

Banana and Ham Hollandaise, From McCall’s Great American Recipe Card Collection, 1973

Never have bananas been so helpless as in this 1970s monstrosity. Originally published in McCall’s Great American Recipe Card Collection from 1973, this oddity finally marries bananas to ham, with a slathering of lemon juice, mustard and hollandaise sauce for a piping-hot, potassium-rich nightmare straight out of the oven.


Ham and Bananas Hollandaise is a dish perfectly attached to the era in which it was invented, as America was staring down its bicentennial and was feeling insecure thanks to the Vietnam War quagmire and ever-present gas shortages.

This dish and others during that same time like Crown Roast of Frankfurters, Hot Tuna and Egg Buns and Spaghetti-O Jello, was the culinary equivalent to mid-life crisis—super embarrassing for everyone except the poor soul locked in the deeply emotional turmoil of advancing age. Now, Ham and Bananas Hollandaise only resides in old, sticky recipe books and in the haunted memories of your grandparents as a misguided attempt to impress dinner party guests.

Here’s ingredients from Vintage Recipe Cards:
6 medium bananas
1/4 cup lemon juice
6 thin slices boiled ham (about 1/2 lb)
3 tablespoons prepared mustard
2 envelopes (1 1/4-oz size) hollandaise sauce mix
1/4 cup light cream
1. Preheat oven to 400F. Lightly butter 2-quart, shallow baking dish.
2. Peel bananas; sprinkle each with 1/2 tablespoon lemon juice, to prevent darkening.
3. Spread ham slices with mustard. Wrap each banana in slice of ham. Arrange in single layer in casserole. Bake 10 minutes.
4. Meanwhile, make sauce: In small saucepan, combine sauce mix with 1 cup water, 1 tablespoon lemon juice, and cream. Heat, stirring, to boiling; pour over bananas. Bake 5 minutes longer, or until slightly golden. Nice with a green salad for brunch or lunch. Makes 6 servings.




October 26, 2020

The Photoscope, a Photobooth Sans Booth From 1904

Self proclaimed to be one of the most interesting and novel inventions at the St. Louis World’s Fair of 1904. And it was...


This photoscope (a photobooth sans booth) would take a photograph, develop it, and produce a picture in a minute. All for a nickel. It was a big hit at the fair. 200 in operation at the St. Louis Exposition.

Here are more ads of this device from 1904.






October 25, 2020

The “1900” Gravity Washer, a Six-Minute Washing Machine That Every Woman Will Have When She Knows It

This state of the art washing machine boasted that a woman could do a load in six minutes by simply sitting and turning the crank handle. To encourage sales, mail order catalogs allowed potential buyers to order one at no cost and test it in their homes for a month. The upscale combination washer-dryer model included a hand-operated wringer.


Six minutes, by the clock, and your tubful of dirty clothes is spotlessly clean. And by using hardly a tenth of the strength that you must expend washing any other way.

In its day, the Gravity Washer was considered a labor-saving device! The very simple but effective mechanism found under the drum provided a back and forth, oscillating motion while at the same time causing the drum to move vertically up and down. The source of power was typically the woman of the house. The operator would sit beside the machine and, using the handle on the side of the drum, would rotate the drum back and forth. If you were to examine the movement of the water as it circulated through the clothes in the tub, you would see little difference when compared with a modern day machine.

The biggest difference would be the source of power—electrical power with temperatures and times regulated by small computer chips, versus the common sense, manually-operated machines of the 1800s. Around 1920 the washer got an upgrade with the addition of an electric motor under the drum area. While this provided a more convenient power source, it also created a significant danger. Leaking water often caused a short circuit and, sadly, fatal injuries were not uncommon.

Even though modern washing machines bear little resemblance to the Model 1900 Gravity Washer, the basic process is the same. Warm water is circulated around and through the clothing, soap is introduced to float the solids from the fabrics, and gravity pulls the particles downward so they can be rinsed away.










Here are some ads of the “1900” Gravity Washer from the 1900s:




(via Greene-Dreher Historical Society)




Fetching Is Your Dior: Christian Dior Ad With Lisa Taylor by Chris Von Wangenheim, 1976

These photographs of Lisa Taylor with a Doberman biting her diamond-clad wrist in the 1976 “Fetching is Your Dior” advertisement is arguably one of the most the most iconic image in Chris von Wangenheim’s body of work.


Wangenheim’s knack for scandal ensured that the advertisement would be one of the most talked-about fashion ads of the decade, rivaling Richard Avedon’s Calvin Klein jeans campaign featuring a fifteen-year-old Brooke Shields in media scrutiny and public outrage. But the “Fetching” image may have a more nuanced meaning that what first appears.

Says Ralph Gibson in Gloss book by Roger Padilha and Mauricio Padilha, “I actually think it is about the protesting of hypocrisy and the establishment. If you attempt to deconstruct the actual symbolism of that image you would see a mad dog’s voraciousness for the value of diamonds.”

In the 1970s, photographer Chris Von Wangenheim (21 February 1942 – 9 March 1981) radically challenged the public taste with high fashion photographs capturing the zeitgeist and cultural changes of the era.

Chris was one of the photographers who could single-handedly make a model’s career. The world’s early supermodel, Gia Carangi, was one of them. He made dramatic portraits of such beauties and divas as Bianca Jagger, Grace Jones, and Diana Ross.

His dark photographs were emblematic of the time—an era that encompassed Deep Throat, the sexual revolution, punk, and porn—and continually challenged the viewers’ taste by its stylized depictions. His images appeared in every top fashion publication—including Vogue, Harper’s Bazaar, Vogue Italia, and Interview — and he produced unforgettable campaigns for Dior and Valentino until he died in a car accident at age 39.

“I realized that getting my picture was more important to me than the discomfort of someone, not understanding or someone’s opposition to my goals.” – Chris Von Wangenheim








October 23, 2020

Cutting Your Bangs at Home With the Help of Scotch Tape!

Have trouble getting an even trim on your young lady’s bangs?

Try this: Place a strip of cellulose tape over the bangs before trimming. Then, cut just above the tape. You will be assured of a straight trim, and the snipped hair will cling to the tape.




Here’s some of the results:






October 8, 2020

The Story Behind Album Cover of ‘The Who Sell Out’ (1967)

The Who Sell Out is the third studio album by the British rock band the Who. It was released on December 15, 1967 by Track Records in the UK and Decca Records in the US.

A concept album, The Who Sell Out is structured as a collection of unrelated songs interspersed with fake commercials and public service announcements. The reference to “selling out” was an intended irony, as the Who had been making real commercials during that period of their career, some of which are included as bonus tracks on the remastered CD. Along with fake commercials the album cover features fake advertisements with all four band members selling out and pushing some products.

The front cover for the album The Who Sell Out.

The back cover for the album The Who Sell Out.


The cover is divided into panels featuring a photograph by David Montgomery of each of the band members, two on the front and two on the back.

On the front is Pete Townshend applying Odorono brand deodorant from an oversized stick. Odorono was an actual liquid underarm deodorant used by women during the second world war and The Who got in a bit of hot water when their manager asked Odorono for money for product placement.



Roger Daltrey is also on the front cover and he is sitting in a bathtub full of Heinz baked beans and holding an oversized tin can. Daltrey claims to have caught pneumonia after sitting for a long time in the bathtub, as the beans had been frozen. Heinz was very annoyed at the cover until someone pointed out how much free advertising they were getting.



On the back cover Keith Moon is applying Medac acne cream from an oversized tube.



John Entwistle joins Moon on the back cover in a leopard-skin Tarzan suit with a blonde woman in a leopard-skin bikini in one arm and a teddy bear with the other. An ad for the “Charles Atlas Workout” is mentioned in one of the album’s fake commercials.



There are multiple versions of this album cover depending on the country of origin. Notably, the Australian release substitutes Medac for Clearasil on Keith Moon’s photo. And on the Canadian issue the Isometrics Workout is mentioned rather than Charles Atlas Workout on John Entwistle’s photo.

The Who Sell Out has received widespread acclaim from critics, some of whom viewed it as the Who’s best record. It has also frequently been featured on all-time lists of the best albums, including Rolling Stone magazine’s “500 Greatest Albums of All Time”.

(via Feel Numb)




October 7, 2020

Mark Eden Bust Developer, a Vintage Device That Promised to Transform “Flat Bustlines Into Firm and Shapely Fullness”

The Mark Eden bust developer was a device and regimen sold by the Mark Eden company of San Francisco, California, that promised to enlarge a woman’s breasts. Jack and Eileen Feather, California based figure salon entrepreneurs, were the promoters of the device. The product was widely marketed in women’s magazines during the 1960s and 1970s, making claims such as, “For thousands, Mark Eden has transformed flat bustlines into firm, shapely fullness.”


The product consisted of a regimen of exercises using a clamshell-like device with a spring to provide resistance. The device and the regimen were never illustrated or described in the advertisements, which instead usually contained pictures of women showing their breasts. To the extent that the product had any effects at all, it worked by enlarging the pectoral muscles and latissimus dorsi, which could increase the circumference of the exerciser’s bustline without actually enlarging breasts.

The Mark Eden bust developer was sold in two different versions, the only difference being the wording on the accompanying booklet. The earlier book was so much more effusive in its claims, something it later had to tone down under threat of mail fraud.
“So many women who have been literally ‘flat as boards’ have achieved higher, fuller, lovelier bustlines in a remarkably short time with the Mark Eden method. And a woman whose bustline is suddenly transformed from the average or below average to a richer fuller development receives more for her efforts than just a larger reading on the tape measure. She is subtly transformed as a woman. There is an incomparable difference in the entire feminine line, shape, and grace of her whole figure. Her very presence takes on a new and subtle glow of womanliness, of sex-appeal, and yes, of glamour that is undeniable and unmistakable.”

Starting in 1965, the United States Postal Service repeatedly attempted to shut the Mark Eden business down, claiming that its advertising was false and misleading. The Postal Service first ruled that the claims made for the Mark Eden bust developer in its advertising constituted mail fraud in 1966, ruling that the claims made in the original Mark Eden advertising “far exceed puffing”, and that the advertisements contained “material misrepresentations”, given that “there is substantial evidence that the representations as set out in the attached copy of the advertisement involved in this case are false;” and “they are the kind of representations that would invite women to buy the device.”

Protracted litigation between the Mark Eden business and the Postal Service was the result, leading to a consent decree and a modification of the language of the advertisements, which the Postal Service later claimed had been violated. The Mark Eden corporation then brought suit against the Postal Service, and won an injunction forbidding the Postmaster from impounding the device and funds received from its sale; this decision was affirmed on appeal in 1970.

The Mark Eden bust developer was one of several body and exercise products marketed by Feather, who also sold various other slimming and body modification products such as “Slim-Jeans”, an “Astro-Trimmer”, a “Sauna Belt”, and in the 1980s, the Cambridge Diet.

Finally, in 1981, Feather was indicted on 11 counts of mail fraud. In settlement of this case, in 1983 the Mark Eden bust developer disappeared from the market, along with Feather’s other body image products: the Mark II Bust Developer, the Astro Trimmer, the Astro-Jogger, the Sauna Belt Waistline Reducer, Slim-Skins, Vacu-Pants, Vacuum Pants, Hot Pants, Trim Jeans, and Dream Wrap. Feather was made to pay a $1.1 million fine.










October 4, 2020

Bizarre Halloween Costumes for Global Culture Junkies From the 1920 Sears Catalog

It has classic Negro masks like Sporty Mose (sorry, collar and tie not included), Old Uncle Joe, and Aunt Dinah (a Negress outfit not complete without this mask!). Oh, and if you really want to go hog wild you can get one of the full body suits — there’s the Ridiculous Yellow Kid, the Japanese Lady, and the Negro Minstrel Suit (suitable for hometown shows, no less).


It was completely normal to dress as a cultural stereotype for Halloween. Suburban streets thronged with black-wigged Geishas and be-turbaned Sultans. Uncle so and so brought back a sombrero from that weekend jaunt to Tijuana? Go as Juan Valdez! (Never mind the fact that Colombia isn’t Mexico.)

Obviously this sort of thing is no longer OK, even if well-intentioned. You can’t go as a nebulously iconic something from the foreign culture of your choice. But you can still use your interest in travel and culture to inspire a perfectly appropriate costume idea.

(via The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit)




October 2, 2020

Cool Ad Photos of Proper Dispensing to All Carbonated Beverages in the 1950s

Proper dispensing is final step which makes all your investments in soda fountain equipment and material pay out. Here is the correct way to dispense many of the drinks you serve at the fountain. Coca-Cola is used as an example, but the same principles apply to carbonated beverages of all kinds.

A set of cool ad photos shows the proper dispensing adding the customer-appeal of taste and quality to all carbonated beverages in 1954.

Proper dispensing adds the customer-appeal of taste and quality to all carbonated beverages

Always use a clean, thin-blown glass–and preferably the standard glass for Coca-Cola

Use a full measure of syrup–one-sixth the maximum content os the standard glass

Add one standard scoop of finely chipped ice. Avoid lump ice and ice like snow

Draw off the warm water standing in the draft arm and carbonated water line







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