Advertising images and
popular culture
Advertising images and brand packaging have altered significantly over the past century, reflecting the changing tastes and
social attitudes of British popular culture and lifestyle. Our
advertising signs provide a fascinating insight into British consumer society and
how we lived then.
Choose from images of classic cars, motorbikes, scooters, Betty Boop, Pears soap, Frys Chocolate and many other
old fashioned classics.The Fry's 5
Boys Advertisement 
First launched in 1866, the Frys Chocolate Cream bar was created by
J.S. Fry and Son Ltd and was the first chocolate confectionery ever to be made on a factory scale.
The famous
Frys 5 Boys advertisement, which you can buy as a
metal sign from Yesterdays World, was originally produced in 1885. The 5 pictures of a boy in different states of emotion went with the advertising slogan
Desperation, Pacification, Expectation, Acclamation, Realisation
its
Frys.
The picture also featured on the label of
Frys milk chocolate when it was launched in 1902. The
Five Boys Chocolate as it became known was eventually withdrawn in 1976.
Pear's Soap - 'The Bath,
his Turn Next' 
Another traditional advertising sign synonymous with
British popular culture is the Pears Soap
sign, entitled Pears Soap The Bath, his Turn
Next, a charming image depicting a young girl holding a wriggling puppy under her arm while her little brother takes his turn in the bath tub.
Pears Soap, which is still known for its traditional oval shape and translucent amber colour, was first introduced in London in 1789 by soap maker,
Andrew Pears. Over the years Pears Soap became one of the first brand name products purchased in American households.
Look at our collection of
genuine packaging at Yesterday's World museum

Our
1930s Grocers display,
at Yesterday's World in Battle,
East Sussex, features hundreds of
pre-war and post-war food tins and
packaging, conjures up fond memories for many visitors. Some of the packaging of brands that you can still buy today, such as
Birds Custard Powder, Marmite and
Oxo Cubes have barely altered in the past seventy years. Who remembers
Sunlight Soap, Robin Starch, Oxydol and
Rinso?
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