A vintage advertisement of a young girl enjoying Mackintosh toffees is this week's prompt image from Sepia Saturday - cue for me to look at different ways shops encourage us to buy their products, from vintage ads to imaginative signs.
Enjoying the good things in life:
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If you over indulge you may need these:
Or take a breath of fresh air at the seaside at my birthplace of Blackpool, in north west England.
Or take a ride - and ignore the housework.
Or you could go shopping - and get ideas to brighten up our beleaguered High Streets.
Modern signs in my home village of Earlstoin the Scottish Borders.
Two shops on the Island of Mull off the west coast of Scotland, where Highland Cattle roam freely and are a popular sight to see.
A bookshop sign on the Iona reflects the Celtic history of this tiny island, off the southwest coast of Mull in the Inner Hebrides. It is only 1.5 miles wide by 3 miles long, with a population of around 120 permanent residents, but everyone talks about the magical nature of this seat of Scottish Christianity where St. Columba founded his Abbey in 563AD. Later it became a place of pilgrimage and learning, and over 40 of Scotland's early kings were buried there.
Below an array of shop signs in Austria - optician, travel bureau and hatter.
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Not forgetting once a pleasure but now frowned upon
And finally a sign with a family connections.
The billboard proclaims "Grey's Cigarettes as "just honest to goodness tobacco." It was painted by my father-in-law John Robert Donaldson, directly onto the board, because of a shortage of paper. immediately after the war. Standing alongside is his son Ian who followed him into his signwriting and decorating business.
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Sources
- My own photograph collection with many of the vintage advertisments taken at the Beamish Open Air Museum in north east England where, on a 300 acre estate, it recreates life from around 1880 to the 1950s.
- Pixabay which offers royalty free images.
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