When GE went green

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

Help Support :

AVACADO COLOR

Beautiful scans David, but avocado as an appliance color was going strong by 1968 and harvest gold was widely available by 1969. The popular copper-tone color was around for much of the 1960s into the early 1980s as was the green and harvest colors.
 
Oh John!

When he says "when GE went Green" he means the inside not the outside. This is the beginning, I guess of the period when beautiful GE Plastisol was yellowed to "[COLOR=#00ff00; font-size: medium]Celery[/COLOR]" and the rack vinyl turned to that Exorcist Pea-Soup color.IMHO a bad decision, but then, as usual, nobody asked my opinion.

 

David, what can I do to repay you for these scans. Now, if I could just be a little greedy and ask you if you have any brochures of washers, dryers and dishwashers from 1960, GE's Golden Anniversary year???? I would plotz, I would.
 
Celery/Avocado

I have to admit that I love all shades of this. I think it looks quite nice, definitely a 70's thing.&#92

 

The lady in the yellow looks like a younger version of my high school Geometry teacher. Actually she probably was around that age in 1972 when she graduated college.

 

-Tim
 
<span style="font-family: georgia,palatino;">Fantastic looking dishwashers.  I have never seen these models.</span>

<span style="font-family: georgia,palatino;">Was this series reliable?  I love the control panel look.</span>

<span style="font-family: georgia,palatino;">Thanks for the scans!</span>

<span style="font-family: georgia,palatino;">Brent</span>
 
Top Loading Portables

What was the year GE and the rest start tapering off production of the Top Loading Portables ?

And would anyone know which manufacturer made TL Portables to the bitter end ?

Thanks, Eddie

Oh Yes, Thank you very much for the scan.
 
...which manufacturer made TL Portables to the bitter end ?

 

<span style="color: #000000;">That's a really good question, especially now that I find I'm finding these models not only fascinating but I think they have their advantages over the front-loaders which have become universal. If anyone would know it would be John LeFevre. I thought they had all been discontinued by the early 1970's but we keep finding them, don't we? I've long held that Consumer's Reports villainized them so much that they ruined what small market remained for them. Also, as well all know, by the seventies, lots of consumers were building new kitchens and even the old guard were renovating kitchens across the country. Most of those new designs dedicated space and budget to built-ins and I don't think ANY built-in top loaders remained available at that point. The extensive choices available up to that point were there to entice a majority of Americans who had nicely built kitchens that didn't warrant an upgrade, where either the homemaker or her family cried "Uncle" and decided it would be nice to have a machine available to do the dishes. In that respect the top-loaders were superior in that they demanded much less space to use because you didn't have to account for an extra footprint of available space for the fold-down door. And I still maintain that my beloved Maytag WP-600 held more dishes than any machine on the market. I think that model was gone for good by 1975. I am collecting any and all top load dishwashers at this point just because I think they're nifty. Those old Whirlpool and KitchenAid top-loaders that were posted recently are, for lack of a better word, awesome.</span>

 

<span style="color: #000000;">I know the KitchenAid "Briva"(sp?) didn't last long but I think it would be great if one of today's manufacturers would make a top-loading dishwasher-sink combination like the ones from the Fifties. I like the idea of being able to transfer wet dishes directly from the sink to a tank standing next to it. And the top should be fashioned into a drain board.
</span>

bajaespuma++1-27-2011-11-01-49.jpg
 
GE!

Thanks again for the great posts. So much flexability offered with these models. I just wish they would have kept and enhanced on the potscrubber2 design.
Peter
 
Gorgeous

That Americana TOL is a gorgeous machine. I'd actually own that! (I'd just have the KA next to it.) ;-)

Handsome control-panel--and I love the programmed selector.

I agree that the PS II plus this packaging would have been delicious. Oh, well, everyone needs a shelf for saucers in the bottom rack, right?

*crickets chirp*
 
"GE first offered avocado in 1966....then in 1967 they introduced Harvest (GE never offically called it Harvest Gold)"

 

And then they discontinued Turquoise and the whole American appliance industry started to go downhill . . . must be a connection somewhere!
 

Latest posts

Back
Top