Dutch-o-rama, advertising in the Netherlands

Automatic Washer - The world's coolest Washing Machines, Dryers and Dishwashers

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Talk about Philips. They appeared to have made a vacuum coffee maker.

"The new Philips coffee filter".

"Water in the caraf, coffee in the glass bowl. After the brewing your coffee is kept at the right drinking temperature. Your eighth cup is just as good and fresh as the first. Coffee experts are enthousiastic about the new Philips coffee filter".

The coffee is made at 95 degrees Celcius, so 205 Fahrenheit. The coffee is not boiled so the full aroma is retained.

This ad is from 1965. I had never seen this ad before, nor have I ever come across this coffee maker.

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Here's another DAF ad, this one is from 1966. This was the year of the introduction of the Daf 44. It had an aircooled 2 cylinder boxermotor (850cc).

"Do you like it to have to shift every moment? Ofcourse not! That's why DAF has the Variomatic".

The Daffodil (32) has a smaller motor, 746cc. A year later the Daf 33 was introduced, almost similar to the Daffodil. Both motors had 30 HP.

In 1966 all electric systems were still 6 Volts, later DAF changed to 12 Volts.

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De Gruyter was a bit of an upscale grocery store. They had a lot of housebrand products, which were considered high quality. One of their most sold products was coffee, they had a variety of beans in containers and grinders under them.

In the Netherlands in the sixties the country was still divided in "zuilen" or pillars you could say, every church had it's own schools, sport clubs etc. People also often shopped at shops of their own faith. De Gruyter was catholic by origin so originally mainly catholics shopped there. In the sixties this started to change.

De Gruyter missed the switch to the modern supermarket, they stayed an old fashioned grocery store for too long. They had a stamp system and one of the items you could save for was a Braun standmixer. This is the KM31 that was later redesigned into the KM32. 168 guilders or less with the equivalent in stamps was not a bad price for the complete machine with all the shown attachments.

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Thank you Louis, my favorites are washers too!

And thank you Joe. I had never seen that Kodak ad, it must be from the 70's or so. We never had anything Kodak, my father preferred Agfa camera's and our film projector was an Eumig. IIRC my father found Agfa gave more natural colors than Kodak. And good riddens for Fuji when that came on the market here. lol
 
I didn't post anything about dishwashers yet, so here we go.

Dishwashers remained rather unpopular in the Netherlands for a long time. Some neighbours had them, my mother refused to have one though. The most sold dishwasher in the Netherlands was Bosch for many years. But other brands were available like this ad from 1966 shows. Most dishwashers were freestanding, so with sidepanels and a top, but no casters.

I don't know a great deal about them, but IIRC the KitchenAid was made in France. This is a a freestanding frontloader. It's a very expensive machine. According to the text it has a filter and 25 different models were available, only one mentioned further. The machine keeps itself clean. Cycle: R-R-W-W-R-R-D.

The Westinghouse was available as freestanding model and in two built in versions. Cycle: R-W-R-W-R-R-D.

The advertised General Electric is also a freestanding frontloader, but there is also a built-in version. A water softener is 200 guilders extra. This machine has a chopper. Cycle: R-R-W-R-R-D.

The AEG is a portable toploader. Cycle: R-R-W-R-R. A dry cycle is not mentioned in the ad. A friend of mine grew up with this dishwasher. He always liked that it was a toploader. His mother wasn't very tall, so she wasn't too fond of it.

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It looks like the Bosch dishwashers came onto the market in 1969. At least I couldn't find any ads from before that year. Not sure though, Bosch (or better the importcompany Willem van Rijn) was rather frugal with advertising. They let their dealers do the promotion rather than themselves. Here's a small ad from 1969 in which the three models are mentioned. The BOL is the Tophit with 2 cycles, the MOL is the SA12 with three cycles and the TOL the Topaas with 4 cycles. 150 guilders off on all models.

The ad is a bit bijou as Hyacinth would say. ;-)

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More Philishave, 1966

"Now fantastic deep shaving with the new Philishave appliances (and just as soft as in the old days)".

The circles in the shaveheads were redesigned which gives a smoother result without damage to the skin. New is the Europlug (a small plug with only two pins. Before Philishaves had a bigger Schuko plug IIRC). The TOL model has an extendable trimmer.

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Meer Philishave! Meer!*

 

*More Philishave!  More!

 

(in Hollish**)

 

**While we were vacationing in Mexico years ago, I was listening to the English-language North American service of Radio Netherlands on a shortwave radio.  My younger sister asked "Where's that coming from?"

 

"Holland."

 

"Oh.  Why aren't they speaking Hollish?"

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Daf

Daf cars were never sold here in Australia, but I saw a bottle green one here when I was a kid, must have been a private import.

I have always been fascinated with the Variomatic transmission, it is a work of genius.

After Volvo took over ownership of Daf, the Volvo 360 series was sold here, only with the 5 speed manual transmission. The 300 series was designed for the Daf variomatic transmission, but a 5 speed manual version was developed later. Only the manuals came here. Australia was by then already a big buyer of automatic trans cars, so maybe Volvo thought that the variomatic wasn't up to the harsh Australian conditions? Or maybe it was just that Australian mechanics would have been unfamiliar with Variomatics.

Thanks for the Dutch ads Louis, they are great.
 
1. When I lived in Lent (Nijmegen) as an exchange student, we had an AEG Turnamat, in the garage.

2. All those ads for stores in Leeuwarden. Were the customers allowed to make purchases in Nederlands (Dutch language) or were they required to speak Frisian? ;)

3. Growing up in USA, I knew the Norelco brand of small electric appliances quite well, and did not realize that Norelco was the North American division of Phillips, until I saw the same Norelco products in Holland---badged as Phillips...which was the parent company of course. "Norelco" is a portmanteau of (I think) "Northern ELectic Co." or "North American Electric Co."

Same thing happened on my first visit to Sweden. In USA we had Electrolux vacuum cleaners, which was a US company formed by a Swedish immigrant in the 1920s. The company was legally/financially separate from Swedish Electrolux, and most importantly, it held the exclusive rights to use the name "Electrolux" in USA. Imagine my surprise on my first visit to Sweden to see all of the products made by Electrolux, besides vacuum cleaners, but of course this was a distinct, separate company from Electrolux in USA. One reason Elux bought Frigidaire was to enter the US market when they did not have the right to their own name "Electrolux" in USA. Later, after the US vacuum company went out of business, Electrolux was able finally to sell its own products under its own name in USA.
 
Fairy Snow - major change of positioning!

That's interesting they Fairy washing powder was marketed as a heavy duty detergent back in those days. It's effectively a baby care product now.

The dialogue is awful - is that meant to be a US accent?! Sounds about as American as fish and chips!
 
Fairy Snow, as far as I can make out, was positioned as a standard powder, to take on the likes of Persil and Daz.

Only later, when enzymes were added to other powders, was Fairy Snow repositioned to become a 'baby care nappy washer'. As far as I know, enzymes never made it into Fairy Snow's formulation. The later 1968 adverts made a big deal of its 'Perborate Plus' ingredients.

Wasn't it more of a soap powder than a detergent?
 

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