- washing machines -2
- cars - 76 (of which 18 in the series "Be Modern - Buy Chrysler" and 7 in "Modern living" series by Lincoln)
- toothbrushes - 1
- cookers/ranges - 1
- silverware/flatware - 4
- fashion - 9
- car parts or accessories, motor oil -2
- furniture - 1
- Elsie, the Borden cow ("Women are much more modern than men") - 1
- cookware -3
- tableware, glasses - 3
- flooring - 1
- ships, aeroplanes, transport - 3
- cosmetics - 3
- personnel ads - 1 ("healthy work for modern women")
- food - 3 ("modern packaging")
- beverages - 1
- cigarettes -2
- bathrooms - 1
- soap - 1
- refrigerators - 1
- radiators, heaters - 2
- hardware - 1
- lamps - 1
- cleaning - 1
- packaging (cellophane) - 1
- beer - 1
- radio - 1
- sewing machines - 6 (5 of which a series by Singer)
- curtains - 1
- detergent - 1
- professional coffee machines - 1
As you can see, most products occur only once or twice, and often it is not the product that is labeled 'modern', but the packaging (cellophane) or the potential buyers ("modern people buy beer").
Cars and fashion are the top runners, followed by small household items such as cookware, flatware etc.
Our source material may have been slightly biased towards cars, but not enough to explain the 76 - 61 ratio of cars versus all other products.
Obvious categories that are completely missing are insurance, banking, telecommunications, computers(!) - apparently there's no such thing as a "modern computer" :-)
Food and beverages are a difficult category, because how can you label a food as "modern"?
'Modern people eat potatoes' or 'A modern potato for today's healthy dinner' - it just doen't sound right.
When I started collecting, I used very broad categories to store my collection:
- Food, drink and smoking
- Transport
- Health and body
- Fashion
- In and around the house
- Everything else
- 6
- 78
- 6
- 9
- 30
- 3
[1] Modern Living series, for more info follow this link
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