Few more new small appliances for the collection.

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

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Jon,

thanks for the info. We thought around 1980 but as I said the blue threw me. Least we got it confirmed.

Last week I found the box my Mums Moulinex mixer belongs to along with a new unused stand, blender goblet and blender convertor. No mixer or beaters sadly so Il have to wait until Mum has a new one or decides to part with it. Shes had it since Sept 1982 as a wedding present. Despite being used often it still looks new!

Matt and Louis, I love the styling, would this perhaps be a 1960s model? I have yet to use it or even plug it in, I dont think I will use it but it makes a great decoration piece for sure.
 
I'm guessing that GE Light'n Easy iron to be 80's at least up to 83 when the sold off to Black and Decker. I see them now and again in the thrift stores. The Dazey Seal a Meal is a little earlier into the 70's but they were on the market for quite a long time throught the 60's 70's and possibly the 80's. Philips and Food-saver brought out better models by then.

Love the Chefette, very mod styling
 
A Philips mixer from the early '60s...

I recently inherited this from my mother. I still know the store where she bought it.

mielabor++4-7-2010-15-41-44.jpg
 
Theo

That is the mixer that Philips introduced in 1959. I have two of those, both with a grey top. My mother had one, also grey. My grandmother had one with a green top. Yours is totally original, including the original plug and the wisks with the small round things that are supposed to cover the holes of the mixer.
 
I have used it many times as a small boy for whipping cream and making cakes :-). I also have the recipe booklet that came with it. Unfortunately my mother discarded the original box several years ago to make more room in her kitchen cabinet.

My mother regretted that she didn't have dough hooks, but I wonder if they were available for this mixer.

What I find remarkable about this mixer is the fact that the cord is still so soft and flexible and not sweating plasticizer.
 
This model didn't come with doughhooks. I don't think the motor would be able to handle dough. There is only one speed and it is too fast for handling dough I think. You need a slow speed for it with a hand mixer.

Your cord is in better condition than many others I have seen. Apparently your mother took very good care of this mixer.

My grandmother kept hers also in the original box. IIRC it was red and black with drawings on it. She discarded it when the mixer broke down. She then bought a new mixer, a Philips again I think, or perhaps a Ruton. It was the next model after the model Rob here found.
 
Fanny Cradock Invites

Every time i see this Philips mixers I am reminded of the harridan of 1950s & 1960s British cooking - Fanny Cradock, as it seemed that in all her programmes she used this model mixer, as you can see from the link below, about 1.20 in.

This clip is from a programme is from 1970 - it was familiar to me as it was re-shown in 1986 as part of the BBC 50th Anniversary (television) and I recorded it then, although it has again been repeated in the last couple of years. If you have time watch the rest of the clips as she walks around describing her new kitchen (Hygena in their hayday before the brand was bastardised by MFI) - the recipies are not bad either!

Al

 

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