
When I first saw
Emily Turner's retro lolly prints I was immediately struck by childhood memories of running down the street to the ice cream van!
The simplicity of the illustrations with the red and blue print gives them a wonderful nostalgic feel, I'm sure having one on the studio wall would make it feel like Summer every day.



All above prints are available for £20 from
FRANK and
The Print Block (who are having a Christmas sale on December 4 if you're in the area).
https%3A%2F%2Fwww.deliciousindustries.com%2Fretro-lolly-prints-by-emily-turner
Delicious+Industries%3A+Retro+Lolly+Prints+by+Emily+Turner
Love these ads our friends at
Sell! Sell! have just finished for
Fentimans, the makers of botanically brewed beverages to advertising their
Ginger Beer (above),
Victorian Lemonade (below) and
Curiosity Cola (below). They're simple and funny - we'd expect nothing less!
"With this campaign we wanted to do a couple of things - obviously introduce Fentimans to the (still too many) people who haven't heard of them at all, to explain what makes their products special and different to normal soft drinks, and to do it all in a way that felt right for Fentimans. Fentimans are a real family business, dating back to 1905, with a cracking product. So we wanted to kind of get out of the way, and let them speak to people honestly and directly about their product."Find out more
here.
https%3A%2F%2Fwww.deliciousindustries.com%2Fnew-fentimans-ads
Delicious+Industries%3A+New+Fentimans+ads
Antonio, Joanne Landis Carnegie Hall Studio, New York Times Magazine, 1967
Aurore de la Morinerie, Couture I, 2010
Antonio, Karl Largerfeld, Vogue France, 1972
François Berthoud, Loves me Loves me Not, Myla UK, 2001
Mats Gustafson, Red Dress, Yohji Yamamoto,1999 Drawing Fashion - wonderful fashion illustrations collected over 30 years by
Joelle Chariau, owner of
Galerie Bartsch & Chariau (Munich), is currently showing for the first time at London's
Design Museum.
"Drawing Fashion celebrates a unique collection of some of the most remarkable fashion illustrations from the twentieth and twenty first centuries. These original works define the fine art of illustrating fashion, from the collections of Chanel, Dior, Comme des Garçons and Poiret as well as Viktor & Rolf, Lacroix and McQueen."The exhibition has been curated by fashion historian
Colin McDowell. The showcased illustrations span 100 years and are displayed alongside period photography, music and news to show the social, cultural and style changes throughout the decades.
This is definitely on my December gallery list, but there's no rush it's running until 6 March 2011 and for those who want a little more information - tickets are now available for
Stephen Jones in conversation with Colin McDowell, Wednesday 26 January 2011 at 7.30pm. Get your tickets
here.
Images copyright of the artists and/or Joelle Chariau.
https%3A%2F%2Fwww.deliciousindustries.com%2Fdrawing-fashion
Delicious+Industries%3A+Drawing+Fashion
Pirelli scooter - Max Huber, 1957.
Pirelli magazine cover - Giulio Confalonieri and Ilio Negri, 1959.
Pneumatici Pirelli - Agenzia Centro, 1964.
Pirelli magazine page design - Giulio Confalonieri and Ilio Negri, 1959
"il pneumatico che morde la strada'"(the tire that bites the road) ad - Paul Engelmann, 1952.
"per l'inverno il pneumatico inverno", Pirelli brochure cover, 1952.More fabulous
Pirelli graphics from
Pop Design's Flickr. I love 50's and 60's Pirelli's marketing, it's so simple and graphic - very less is more, which I'm a big fan of!
Images copyright Pop Design.
https%3A%2F%2Fwww.deliciousindustries.com%2Fpirelli-wonderfulness
Delicious+Industries%3A+Pirelli+wonderfulness%21
#92 - Vintage paper dice. I love this new addition to the reference box. I think it's from the late 40's or early 50's when there was a shortage of materials.
I'm sure I have another one somewhere, but I can't find it - I'll have to have a root around in the reference box myself and see if it turns up!
https%3A%2F%2Fwww.deliciousindustries.com%2Ffrom-the-reference-box-92
Delicious+Industries%3A+From+the+reference+box+%2392






Really loving these 60's Citroen promotional booklets designed by Parisian studio, Delpire over on
Grain Edit. They were created by the father of Francois-Charles (iconomaque) who worked at the studio in the 60's and were discovered whilst he was sorting through his father's studio.
What a great bit of ephemera to start the day with!
Via Sell! Sell!
Images copyright iconomaque.
https%3A%2F%2Fwww.deliciousindustries.com%2Fcitroen-ephemera
Delicious+Industries%3A+Citroen+Ephemera


#91 - Vintage fasteners. I love these 50's Snap Fastener and Hooks & Eyes cards from
"World Famed", Newey's -
"If it fastens Newey's make it!".
They're only small cards, but they have some great type...

and some lovely print...

Think I feel another collection coming on!
There are 90 more wonderful items tucked away in our reference box - take a look
here.
https%3A%2F%2Fwww.deliciousindustries.com%2Ffrom-the-reference-box-91
Delicious+Industries%3A+From+the+reference+box+%2391
These wonderful Olivetti posters are coming up for auction on the 5 November as part of the
Christie's Travel and Vintage Poster sale. You can view the ecatalogue
here - you won't be disappointed, there are loads of great travel posters, but these Olivetti ones get my bid (or they would if I'd saved a few more pennies this year).
Olivetti Divisumma (above top)
by Herbert Bayer (1953) is lot number 252. It's a linen-backed, lithographic print (71 x 51cm) classed as A- condition with an estimation of £1000-£1500.
Olivetti Elettrosumma 22 (above bottom)
by Giovanni Pintori is lot number 255. This lithographic print (70 x 49 cm) printed by Arti Grafiche M & G Pirovano in 1956 is not backed, but is classed as A condition and has an estimation of £600-£800.
Find more sale information
here.
Happy bidding!
Images copyright Christie's.
Via Quad Royal.
https%3A%2F%2Fwww.deliciousindustries.com%2Fchristies-travel-and-vintage-poster-auction
Delicious+Industries%3A+Christie%26%23039%3Bs+Travel+and+Vintage+Poster+Auction

#90 - Vintage throat lozenges circa 1950. I bought a few of these packages at a boot sale recently and have since found out a bit about the companies.
Bradosol Antiseptic Lozenges are still available today, but these sample packs (above) are from when they were first introduced to the market in the early 50's by CIBA Laboratories, Horsham, England.
CIBA (Company for Chemistry Industry Basel or
Gesellschaft für Chemische Industrie Basel) was a Swiss company started in the 1800's that first opened factories in the UK in 1911. It merged with Geigy in 1970 to create Ciba-Geigy Ltd and in 1996 they merged with Sandoz to form the pharmaceutical giant we know today as
Novartis.
Here's an information booklet selling Bradosol,
"to the Dental Profession".


I also found a sample/specimen pack of
Collozets mouth and throat lozenges (below),
"Manufactured in England by The Crookes Laboratories Limited, Park Royal, London".


I can't find out anything about Crookes Laboratories, but I did find this advert for Collozets from the late 50's...

If you want to see more delicious packaging and ephemera have a root around
here.
https%3A%2F%2Fwww.deliciousindustries.com%2Ffrom-the-reference-box-90
Delicious+Industries%3A+From+the+reference+box+%2390


I was surprised to find these photographs of
Preston Bus Station by
Jonanthan Kenyon this morning on
We Heart. I grew up in and around Preston and know this building very well. I've always loved it's bold architecture and unapologetic scale.
I was saddened earlier in the year to hear it's going to be knocked down as part of Preston's Tithebarn scheme (yet another urban regeneration programme) after it's application to become a listed building failed. It was designed in the late 60's by a Preston-based architect, Keith Ingham who worked at a local company, BDP (ironically the company now running the regeneration programme!) and when it first opened in 1969 it was hailed as the largest in the world.
There's no denying that the building could do with a bit of tlc, but Jonathan's images really capture the beauty of the building even in it's current state.
Long live Preston Bus Station!Images copyright Jonathan Kenyon.
Via Notcot.
https%3A%2F%2Fwww.deliciousindustries.com%2Fpreston-bus-station-by-jonathan-kenyon
Delicious+Industries%3A+Preston+Bus+Station+by+Jonathan+Kenyon





No, I haven't made it up. This week is
National Chocolate Week (11-17 October),
"a time of pure indulgence involving the country's best chocolatiers and chocolate shops holding events all over the UK".
So to celebrate I thought I'd share with you my best chocolatey find - chocolate type (above) from
The Letteroom made using original Dutch moulds. These delicious looking letters are 17cm high and weigh in at 200 grams each. Now that's a lot of chocolate!
Each letter is available in either white, milk, dark or strawberry flavoured chocolate and can be personalised with wording or a pattern. They also sell mini (4cm high)
letters for the less greedy!
Images copyright The Letteroom.
https%3A%2F%2Fwww.deliciousindustries.com%2Fchocolate-week
Delicious+Industries%3A+Chocolate+Week













I love these 40's and 50's coffee tins from
Roadsidepictures' (US photographer, Allen) collection of vintage packaging and advertising on
Flickr. There's so much to look at, this is definitely one of those sets you need a lot of time and a cuppa to really enjoy.
Allen says he's always enjoyed,
"photographing old neon signs, cars, motels, gas stations, roadside attractions and suburban life" - all of which can be seen in his Flickr
sets.
See more vintage packaging
here,
here and
here or have a rumage through our reference box
here.
Images copyright Allen at Roadsidepictures.
Via Notcot.
https%3A%2F%2Fwww.deliciousindustries.com%2Fvintage-coffee-tins
Delicious+Industries%3A+Vintage+coffee+tins
https%3A%2F%2Fwww.deliciousindustries.com%2Fsr692-swissair-the-ultimate-fansite
Delicious+Industries%3A+SR692%3A+Swissair+-+The+Ultimate+Fansite