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Author: tovintagelizze

I am a social media marketer, lindy hopper, lover of all things 1920s-1960s, tiki & Rockabilly fan and a vintage clothing collector.

Vintage Views of Scotland: Travel Brochures from the 1930s to 1960s

This weekend, I’m off on a very quick—and I do mean quick—trip to Scotland! First stop: Edinburgh to see a friend’s band, Mark Malibu & The Wasagas, perform. Then it’s off to Glasgow to visit my husband’s cousin, and just like that, we’ll be heading back home. Phew! I’m tired just thinking about it, but it’ll be worth it. I absolutely love Scotland.

For today’s post, I thought it would be fun to dive into some vintage travel brochures from the 1930s to the 1960s, showcasing how Scotland was promoted to tourists back in the day. Let’s take a look at what I found!

Further Reading: Vintage Travel Posters for Glasgow and London & Vintage Travel Posts

Vintage 1950s Scottish Travel Poster- Scotland Fly SAS

Source: Etsy-Blivingstons


Disclosure: Some of the links on my blog from Etsy , eBay are Affiliate Links, meaning, at no additional cost to you, I will earn a commission if you click through and make a purchase. Note: Some items might of been sold after this post goes live.


Vintatge Travel Brochures from the 1930s to 1960s

“I know where I’m going!” 3 Scottish Travel Brochures from the 1950s or 1960s for visiting Ross and Cromarty, Central Scotland and Mull and Iona (avail for purchase here).

Mid Century (1950s/ 1960s) Scottish Travel Brochure-Visit Scotland.
Mid Century (1950s/ 1960s) Scottish Travel Brochure-Visit Scotland-Mull and Iona
Mid Century (1950s/ 1960s) Scottish Travel Brochure-Visit Scotland, Ross and Cromarty

Source: Etsy-VintageCuriosJewelry

1954 tourist brochure for Central Scotland featuring the Edinburgh castle on the cover (avail for purchase here).

1950s vintage travel brochure: 1954 tourist brochure for Central Scotland featuring the Edinburgh castle on the cover
1950s vintage travel advertising: 1954 tourist brochure for Central Scotland featuring photos and illustrations of places you can visit inside.

Source: eBay

Getting Around Edinburgh Pictorial Guide -1950s Brochure (avail for purchase here).

1950s vintage travel brochure for getting around Edinburgh Scotland

Source: Etsy-whokeepsthisstuff

“Scotland for the Holidays: The Central Highlands”. Travel brochure published c. 1930’s, Edinburgh by McCorquodale & Co. The second image features a railway schedule by the London Midland & Scottish Railway (avail for purchase here).

1930s travel brochure for visiting Scotland. "Scotland for the Holidays: The Central Highlands". Travel brochure published c. 1930's, Edinburgh by McCorquodale & Co
"Scotland for the Holidays: The Central Highlands". Travel brochure published c. 1930's, Edinburgh by McCorquodale & Co. The inside features a train schedule.

Source: eBay

1960s Scotland Tourist Brochure with lovely illustrations of Highland dancers, bagpiper and the castles of Scotland on the cover (avail for purchase here).

1960s Vintage Travel Brochure for Scotland.
Vintage 1960 Travel Tourist Brochure

Source: eBay

Late 1940s travel brochure. “Come to Britain for business and pleasure. Highlands of Scotland”. The brochure also included a fold out map (avail for purchase here).

Late 1940s travel brochure. "Come to Britain for business and pleasure. Highlands of Scotland". The brochure also included a fold out map
Visit Scotland! Late 1940s travel brochure. "Come to Britain for business and pleasure. Highlands of Scotland". The brochure also included a fold out map

Source: eBay

3 tourist brochures: Seeing Glasgow by Tram & Bus, 1939. Bonnie Bits o’ Bonnie Scotland, no date. City of Glasgow Guide For the Forces, no date (avail for purchase here). 

1930s vintage travel brochures for visiting Scotland. Seeing Glasgow by Tram & Bus, 1939.
Bonnie Bits o' Bonnie Scotland, no date. City of Glasgow Guide For the Forces, no date.
1930s vintage travel brochure for Glasgow Scotland from 1939.
1930s vintage travel brochure-Bonnie Bits o' Bonnie Scotland.
1930s vintage travel brochure for the forces visiting Glasgow Scotland.

Source: eBay

September 1955-“What’s on, Where to go in Glasgow”. Fun Mid-Century illustrations in this brochure (avail for purchase here).

1950s vintage travel brochure-September 1955-What's on, Where to go in Glasgow. Fun Mid-Century illustrations in this brochure.
September 1955-What's on, Where to go in Glasgow.
September 1955-What's on, Where to go in Glasgow. Fun Mid-Century illustrations in this brochure.

Source: eBay

I want to end this post with a wonderful photo album I found on Etsy, that showcases a 1950s couple trip to Scotland, July 23rd-31st 1955 (including their travel itinerary). Not many photos are show in the listing, but I’m sure whoever picks it up as a collectable piece will enjoy all the vintage images inside (avail for purchase here).

1950s vintage photo album of a couples trip to Scotland in 1955 featuring an image of their Itinerary.
1950s vintage photo album of a couples trip to Scotland in 1955
1950s vintage photo album of a couples trip to Scotland in 1955 featuring an image of a pretty woman in a plaid skirt sitting amongst the heather in Glencoe

Source: Etsy-WutheringBooks

Question Time: Have you ever travelled to Scotland? If so where did you go and what was your favourite place? Share any thoughts on this topic in the comments section below.

Further Reading: Vintage 1950s Travel Brochures & Pamphlets

Thanks for dropping by!

Liz

Snack Time Nostalgia: Vintage Potato Chip Ads You’ll Love

I’m not sure what your go-to junk food is when a craving hits, but for me, it’s definitely potato chips. All Dressed—a classic Canadian flavour—is my absolute favourite. If they weren’t so bad for you, I’d probably eat them every day!

Inspired by this salty craving, I thought it would be fun to dive into some vintage potato chip ads from the mid-century (1940s-1960s). So let’s jump in!

1960s vintage photo (march 1964) of two 1960s women with 1960s hairstyles enjoying chips and dip in a 1960s living room

1960s vintage photo (March 1964) of two women with 1960s hairstyles enjoying chips and dip in the living room. Source: Etsy-therescuedphoto


Disclosure: Some of the links on my blog from Etsy , eBay are Affiliate Links, meaning, at no additional cost to you, I will earn a commission if you click through and make a purchase. 


Brief History of the Potato Chip

I was planning to start with a quick high-level overview, but after diving into a few articles, I realized that the story of who invented the potato chip is more complicated than it seems. I know my readers will want to explore that fascinating history in more detail later so I recommend checking out the insightful piece on the origins of the potato chip over at History.com, after your done here.

1940s-1960s Potato Chip Advertisements

“Dressed for fun”. Red Seal Potato Chips, from the Denver Post, May 6, 1962.

1960s vintage advertisement for Red Seal Potato Chips, from the Denver Post, May 6, 1962.

Source: Pinterest

Win your very own Elvis Presley Record when you buy ‘Rock ‘n’ Roll Potato Chips! 1950s vintage ad (note: I did not write eBay on the image, that was the seller).

1950s vintage ad: Rock 'N' Roll Potato Chips! Win an Elvis Presley Record.

Source: eBay

3 small 1946 newspaper ads for Red Dot Potato Chips – “Ta-To the Clown recommends” (he was the company mascot).

1940s vintage advertisement / Print Ad: 3 small 1946 newspaper ads for Red Dot Potato Chips - "Ta-To the Clown recommends"

Source: eBay

1950s vintage ad for Jane Parker Potato Chips, “Best of All!” sold at A&P. The ad features ideas on how you can use the chips. At snack time, they make tempting appetizers, and at mealtime they can be a “change of pace in place of potatoes”. For example, “Fish ‘n’ Jane Parker Chips.

1950s vintage ad for Jane Parker Potato Chips from 1952 featuring an illustration of a 1950s house wife hold bags of chips and ideas on how to use the snack for mealtime and snack time. Sold at A&P.

Source: Pinterest

Bell Brand Potato Chips ad 1956. “if it’s Bell-it’s swell!”

1950s vintage print ad: Bell Brand Potato Chips ad 1956 featuring a basket of chips with a salad on the side. Fun retro food ad.

Source: eBay

1961 Blue Bell Bar-B-Q Potato Chips featuring a really fun chip package. So much cooler then bags in my opinion.

1960s vintage advertising for Blue Bell Bar-B-Q Potato Chips featuring an image of a 1960s family having a BBQ with the son putting the chips in a bowl.

Source: Pinterest

Blue Star Potato Chips ad from 1946.

Fun Fact (according to the Museum of CripsLiz note: I could not 100% confirm this but it’s cool if it is true):

As well as distributing their own label crisps, Blue Star Foods supplied crisps to Leonard Japp Sr, who ran a Chicago-based snack food distribution business, supplying small Chicago grocery stores with a wide variety of goods.

Eugenia Japp, Leonard’s wife, came up with the concept of placing recipes on the packaging to give consumers ideas of how to use and adapt their products. America was in the midst of the Depression, and Eugenia Japp was especially interested in helping housewives stretch their food budgets. One of the recipes she developed, printed on Blue Star Foods packaging, became an American classic: Tuna Noodle Casserole with Crumbled Potato Chips on Top.

1940s vintage advertisement (1946) for blue star potato chips featuring an illustration of a 1940s woman with a bag of chips

Source: Museumofcrisps.com

“You’ll get a bang out of ’em!”. 1956 Laura Scudder’s Potato Chips advertisement. The image of Laura feels very “Betty Crocker” to me. Do you agree?

1950s vintage advertising: 1956 Laura Scudder's Potato Chips advertisement. Featuring an illustration of a bird lighting fireworks.

Source: eBay

“Have some chips-they’re scrumptious”.

So this next 1953 ad is not for a chip brand but to advertise Cellophane by Du Pont. The vintage ad then goes into the ways that chips are “extra-wonderful in cellophane”.

According to the Hagley Museum…..

As DuPont began to diversify its product line beyond gunpowder and explosives and into products like Cellophane in the early twentieth century, the company had a need for more advertising. DuPont established an Advertising Division within the Sales Department between 1907 and 1909, which was reorganized into a separate Advertising Department in 1921.

1950s vintage advertising-1953 ad for DuPont Cellophane featuring a cute 1950s kids holding a bag of Potato Chips.

Source: Hagley Museum

So I know I don’t usually venture into the 1970s on my blog, but I could NOT pass up this 1971 print ad from Arnotts Potato chips featuring a mail in for a “Free Recipe Book” featuring….

“Taste-tempting dishes made with Arnott’s Potato Chips”. Enjoy a “Spicy Meat Ring” with crush chips (recipe at the bottom of the ad). There is also “Chocolate Chip Crackles” & “Pork & Vegetables Chinese Style” featured in the retro recipe book. Yum???

1970s vintage advertising: 1971 print ad from Arnotts Potato chips featuring a mail in for a "Free Recipe Book" featuring....

"Taste-tempting dishes made with Arnott's Potato Chips". Enjoy a "Spicy Meat Ring" with crush chips (recipe at the bottom of the ad). There is also "Chocolate Chip Crackles" & "Pork & Vegetables Chinese Style" featured in the retro recipe book.

Source: Pinterest

Do you have a favourite chip? Or are you more sweet snack person? Share any thoughts on this topic in the comment section below.

Further Reading: Vintage Advertising 1920s-1960s (archived) & Vintage Food Posts (archived).

Thanks for dropping by!

Liz