Category: Plastic

Bottled Water

The origins of bottle water can be traced back to the European health spas of the 1700s, which began the practice of giving out some of their healthy waters for patrons to take with them. Following in the logic of supply and demand, the spas began to charge a fee for the pleasure of drinking their waters, creating some of the longest lasting contemporary bottled water purveyors: Evian, San Pellegrino, Perrier, and Vittel, along with several others.  These companies spawned an entire industry and by the early 20th century, Europe was exporting bottled water world-wide.

Perrier drkinking water advertising

"After the Rape...", Fake Perrier Advertising by the French Magazine Hara-Kiri, 1970s

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Drinking Water

“Everything comes from water! And everything is kept alive by water!” – J.W. von Goethe, Faust II, 1833

Water is an everyday part of our lives that we often take for granted, we wash and cook with it without a second thought. Yet, potable water – water that is safe to drink – is a source of regional conflict as several of the world’s most conflict-prone regions, the Middle East and Sub-Saharan Africa, are plagued by water shortages and drought – the UN estimates that 35 – 50 percent of urban dwellers in Africa and Asia struggle to access potable water.

Mineral Water Advertising

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Naugahyde

Nothing better invokes the post war optimism and better-living-through-chemistry ideology of America than the most genuine of fakes, Naugahyde. A PVC coated vinyl fabric unleashed into the American marketplace as a replacement for leather, it followed in a long line of heavily and effectively marketed, laboratory launched imitations: Formica’s eclipsing of marble, Con-Tact paper’s mimicry and obfuscating of wood…

Naugahyde:  The Great Impostor, 1967

Naugahyde Advertising, 1967 (Read Full Copy at Bottom of Article)

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Natural Rubber

A legend says that sometime in the 16th century a Portuguese man was charged with witchcraft after showing samples of cloth, which have been repelled with rubber. When you think about it, rubber really is pretty magic. It seems like rubber is a modern product, but in indigenous people of the Amazon Rainforest have been using it for as long as for 3500 years. Caoutchouc, it’s original name, was made into balls, figurines, bottles, fabric-coating and other products.

Goodyear Advertising 1918

100% Natural Rubber / Goodyear Advertising 1918

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Bakelite

The production of synthetic plastics began in 1907 with the invention of Bakelite by Leo Hendrik Baekeland (1863 – 1944). At the time, there was a thirst for a new material that w0uld fulfill the needs of the latest innovations – radios, electrical insulators and mounts, telephones, car parts, cameras, toasters, vacuum cleaners- any product that required a material that could resist heat, electricity, and be cheaply manufactured through mass production.

Bakelite Camera made by Kodak

Bakelite Camera by Kodak

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Braun Electric Shaver

When buying electric products, a compromise is likely unavoidable. I feel this  way with electronics more than with most other products. This is partly because you never really know what’s inside the shell, and often the shell doesn’t look or feel good to begin with. It usually doesn’t help that they are made out of one of my least favorite materials – plastic.

Braun Micron

Braun Micron (5410), 1976

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