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Category: vintage History

Vintage Canada Roundup. Happy 150th Canada!

Vintage Postcard: Greetings from Canada

This Saturday marks Canada’s 150th Birthday and I’m so excited to be celebrating this special day with friends and family. It’s going to be a fantastic celebration.

In honour of Canada’s birthday I wanted to do a roundup of awesome Canadian vintage posts, images and items focusing on the years between 1940 and 1969 (my blogs favorite timelines).

Let the roundup begin!

Vintage Canada poster from the 1930s
Source: Flickr

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: If you click on any of the items featured below and they are not available, don’t fret! Hit the search button and see what else is on the websites. There are 1000’s and 1000’s of items being listed daily.


One of the main symbols of Canada is the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP/The Mountie) and this rare 1950’s vintage needle sewing book with a Mountie on it, is a pretty outstanding find.

1950's Canada RCMP mounted police memorabilia needle book
Source: Etsy
Vintage Canada: 1950's Canada RCMP mounted police memorabilia needle bookinside
Source: Etsy

The Bill Lynch Show a carnival that was the largest in Canada during the 1940s.

Further Reading: A blog post I did all about the “Bill Lynch Travelling Carnival Show

1940s poster for Bill Lynch Canadian Carnival show

1954 Spring & Summer “Canadian Bride-The Bride Book”.

Summer is the perfect time to get married and if you really want to share the day, Canada Day is the day to do it on.

Further Reading: Vintage Wedding Blog Posts (archived).

1954 Spring & Summer Canadian Bride - The Bride's Book. The cover features a bride in a 1950s wedding dress.
Source: Etsy

A good vintage tie is always something one should have in their closet and if it has a bit of Canadiana on it, even better. Here is a 1940’s vintage men’s tie featuring beautiful Jasper National Park Alberta.

Vintage 1940s Necktie Jasper National Park Alberta- 1940s Men's Fashion.
Source: Etsy

Saskatchewan Golden Jubilee scarf, 1950s.

Vintage Canada: Saskatchewan scarf 1950s
Source: Etsy

Vintage 1941 Montreal, Quebec Felt Banner (love this!).

vintage 1941 montreal felt banner
Source: Etsy

Interesting articles on Canada’s history (click on the links to be taken to the posts):

Molly Bobak’s War-For a time it had seemed that the only Canadian woman to be officially appointed as a war artist during World War II might not make it overseas at all. Article by Philip Jensen

1940s Vintage Photo: Lieutenant Molly Lamb painting, June1945 Canadian History
Source: National Archives of Canada / PA-113711

Spy School Secrets-The True Story Behind Camp X (where Ian Flemming, aka the creator of James Bond was one of the students). Text by Kayak: Canada’s History Magazine for Kids.

Camp x 1940s canadian spy camp
Image by Matt Dyck

The Mad Men of Expo 67 in Montreal Canada by Julie Barlow and Jean-Benoît Nadeau.

expo67vintageadvertising

The Women of Canada’s Heritage Minutes: 1900’s to the 1940’s by the Vintage Inn Blog (I went a few years earlier on this post).

Viola Desmond Heritage Minute

Clark’s Dairy milk delivery in Ottawa – Aug. 1959.

1950s Vintage Photo of Clark's Dairy milk delivery in Ottawa - Aug. 1959 featuring a woman in 1950s fashions and the milkman on his delivery.
Source: Flickr

Restaurant at Uplands Airport 1960 (Ottawa). Isn’t it so cool looking?

Restaurant at Ottawa, Canada Uplands Airport 1960. The vintage 1960s image features a diner with waitress and guests in 1960s fashions.
Source: Flickr

The original Mile “0” signpost in Dawson Creek, B.C., 1947.

1940s Vintage Photo: The original Mile 0 signpost in Dawson Creek, B.C. 1947

Two men and two women play a game of croquet at Braemar Lodge on Lake Ellenwood, Nova Scotia, 1950s.

Two men and two women play a game of croquet at Braemar Lodge on Lake Ellenwood, Nova Scotia / Deux hommes et deux femmes jouent une partie de croquet à l'auberge Braemar au lac Ellenwood (Nouvelle-Écosse)

Snowshoe Tournament, 1948.

1940s Vintage Photo of a Snowshoe Tournament in Ottawa, 1948.
Source: Flickr

1950’s Toronto featuring a TTC Bus and people walking on the street and waiting to get on. Cool photo!

1950s Toronto vintage image of a TTC bus with people

Sarnia, Ontario 1960. This is the city I was born and raised in till I moved to Toronto in my late 20’s.

Vintage Postcard Image of Sarnia Ontario, Canada main street in the 1960s. Postcard showcases classic cars

This post clearly did not touch on all of Canada (it’s so vast) but I hope you enjoyed what I did bring forward. And to all my Canadian Friends & Readers…HAPPY CANADA DAY!

FURTHER READING:

Liz

‘All The Ways We Blow Dry Our Hair’-Vintage History of the Hair Dryer

Last week a dear friend of mine passed down a Vintage Lady Schick Hair Dryer that was her grandmothers. It’s in mint condition and will take my 8-10 hours of setting time for my hair to way less (not tested it yet but I’m hoping an hour tops!).

vintage lady schick hair dryer

While I held this wonderful gem in my hands, I got to thinking that I actually had no idea about the history of hair dryers (not even one tiny fact). So for today’s post we will be having a brief history lesson (to fix my lack of knowledge) and then a roundup of vintage ads and images. Enjoy!

Vintage Image of a Vintage Hair Salon 1950s.
Source: Huffington Post

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

The Hair Dryer-Vintage History, Images & Advertisements

Brief History of the Hair Dryer:

1890’s the hairdryer is invented by Alexandre Goldefroy, and consisted of a bonnet that attached to the chimney pipe of a gas stove. It was however big and bulky and not at all portable. PRIOR to this, woman were using vacuum cleaners to dry their hair, so this really was an improvement (I think).

1890s photo of an early hair dryer
Source: racingnelliebly.com
vintage hair dryer ad from the 1890s.
Source: racingnelliebly.com

1911-Armenian American inventor Gabriel Kazanjian was the first to patent a blow dryer in the United States (Source).

1915 (around)– Handheld dryers begin to appear on the market and became small enough to hold in your hand (thanks to companies like U.S. Racine Universal Motor Company and the Hamilton Beach Co).

1920s hand held hair dryer
1920s-1925 Hair Dryer Source: Phrontis – Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0,

Downfalls of the 1920’s Hair Dryers:

They were often heavy, weighing in at approximately 2 pounds (0.9 kg), and were difficult to use. They also had many instances of overheating and electrocution. Hair dryers were only capable of using 100 watts, which increased the amount of time needed to dry hair (the average dryer today can use up to 2000 watts of heat) (Source).

The 1950’s gave birth to the bonnet hair dryer, a small portable dryer connected by a tube to a plastic bonnet, as well as the rigid hood dryer, most frequently seen in today’s salons (Source).

1950s hair bonnet hair dryer advertisement - 1950s Vintage Ad
Late 1940s vintage image of a hair salon featuring large hair dryers and women drying their hair.

Since the 1920s, development of the hair dryer has mainly focused on improving the wattage and superficial exterior and material changes. In fact, the mechanism of the dryer has not had any significant changes since its inception. One of the more important changes for the hair dryer was the idea to make it out of plastic, so that it is more lightweight. This really caught on in the 1960s with the introduction of better electrical motors and the improvement of plastics.

1960s plastic hair dryer

In the 1970s, the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission set up guidelines that hair dryers had to meet to be considered safe to manufacture. Since 1991 the CPSC has mandated that all dryers must use a ground fault circuit interrupter so that it cannot electrocute a person if it gets wet. By 2000, deaths by blowdryers had dropped to fewer than four people a year, a stark difference to the hundreds of cases of electrocution accidents during the mid-20th century. (Source).

Vintage Ads & Vintage Images

1938 American Hairdresser Magazine Ad.

1938 vintage advertisement for hood hair dryers
Source: Wearing History

Even men got under the hood.

vintage hair salon with woman and men - getty images
Source: Huffington Post

1960s Ronson Hood N’ Comb Hair Dryer ad.

Vintage Hair Dryer1960s vintage ad.
Source: The Little Red Squirrel

When one needs to get out of the house quickly, you take matters into your own hands.

Vintage Photos of Hair Dryers
Source: Vintage Everyday

1960s General Electric Medallion Hair Dryer.

Vintage 1960s Hair Dryer Ad - 1960s General Electric Medallion Hair Dryer.
Source: Etsy

1950s “Turbinator” Hair Dyer ad.

1950s vintage hair dryer advertisement -1950s "Turbinator" Hair Dyer ad.
Source: Pinterest

My hair would never look like this, if it was dried in the “Fresh Desert Air”.

vintage hair dryer advertisement- 1960s/ 1970s

1951 Sears Spring / Summer Catalog page featuring an ad for a Beauty Shop right in your own home! Complete 7-piece set that includes a ‘Heavy-duty Dryer’.

1951 Sears Spring / Summer Catalog page featuring an ad for a Beauty Shop right in your own home!  Complete 7-piece set that includes a 'Heavy-duty Dryer'.

Source: Christmas.musetechnical.com

1920s photo of a woman getting her hair dried with a very fancy hair dryer.

1920s woman having hair dried vintage image

I would be scared if this was what was drying my hair. 1930s vintage image.

1930s vintage hair dryer image
Source: Vintage Everyday

Germany,1977 ad. I can’t stop laughing.

vintage hair dryer german advertisement from the 1970s
Source: oobject.com

Question time: Do you own a vintage hair dryer that works? If you don’t currently own one, would you? Share your thoughts in the comments below.\

FURTHER READING:

Liz