A R C H I V E

Item 1745 of 2719

Vintage Tupperware 'All-in-one' shaker with measure cup

SKU: 1641

Vintage Tupperware 'all-in-one' Shaker / measure cup. 

Retro-vintage Tupperware 'All-in-one' shaker with a dark blue lid with handy pour cap, complete with wheel. This cup is transpatrant and has a slightly roughened exterior with measurements of 50 to 500ml. The slightly roughened exterior provides a good grip. The wheel provides movement in the fluid. Suitable for whipping cream or shaking eggs for an omelette. Also useful when making a dressing or mixing a cocktail.

In good condition with slight traces of use. Efficient Tupperware design!

Fits perfectly in the door of an refridgerator to keep your preparations fresh. 

Tupperware has been creating products for more than 60 years, designed to make everyday life easier.

  • Height: 19,5 cm. 
  • Diameter: 9,5 cm. 

Tupperware is the name of a home products line that includes preparation, storage, containment, and serving products for the kitchen and home. It also includes plastic containers used to store goods and/or food. In 1942, Earl Tupper developed his first bell shaped container; the brand products were introduced to the public in 1948.

Tupperware was developed in 1946 by Earl Silas Tupper (1907–83) in Leominster, Massachusetts. He developed plastic containers used in households to contain food and keep it airtight. The once-patented "burping seal" is a famous aspect of Tupperware, which distinguished it from competitors. Earl Tupper invented the plastic for Tupperware already in 1938, but the product only worked with the emergence of the sale through presentation in a party setting. In 1949, Tupperware introduced the 'Wonderlier Bowl' that gave a start to a revolutionary range of kitchen utensils.

Tupperware pioneered the direct marketing strategy made famous by the Tupperware party. The Tupperware Party allowed for women of the 1950s to work and enjoy the benefits of earning an income without completely taking away the independence granted to women during the Second World War when women first began entering the labor market, all the while keeping their focus in the domestic domain. The "Party" model builds on characteristics generally developed by being a housewife (e.g., party planning, hosting a party, sociable relations with friends and neighbors) and created an alternative choice for women who either needed or wanted to work. Brownie Wise (1913–92) realized Tupperware's potential as a fun commodity. She realized, however, that she had to be creative and therefore started to throw these Tupperware parties. Wise, a former sales representative of Stanley Home Products, developed the strategy. Tupper was so impressed that Brownie Wise was made vice president of marketing in 1951. Wise soon created Tupperware Parties Inc.

During the early 1950s, Tupperware's sales and popularity exploded, thanks in large part to Wise's influence among women who sold Tupperware, and some of the famous "jubilees" celebrating the success of Tupperware ladies at lavish and outlandishly themed parties. Tupperware was known—at a time when women came back from working during World War II only to be told to "go back to the kitchen"—as a method of empowering women and giving them a toehold in the postwar business world.

The tradition of Tupperware's "Jubilee" style events continues to this day, with rallies being held in major cities to recognize and reward top-selling and top-recruiting individuals, teams, and organizations.

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