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Item 171 of 2719

Vintage tin for biscuits by Albert Heijn with an image of a carriage and horses

SKU: BT-3283-21

Vintage tin for biscuits by Albert Heijn with an image of a carriage and horses.

  • Manufacturing date: 1960
  • Manufacturer: Albert Heijn

Description
Rectangular tin by Albert Heijn in the main colour red with a hinged lid. On the lid an image of a coach with a four-in-hand horse and a rider in an Amazonian seat. Romantic scene on a sandy path. In the foreground a dog that rides with the company. The lid has an elevation in the middle and decorations on the edges. The lid is fitted with a so-called needle hinge.

The sides are red with gold-coloured horizontal piping. The dark red background has a light crackle effect. The tin stands on four pyramid-shaped legs and is marked in relief at the bottom with the name "Albert Heijn".

Condition
This tin is in a beautiful vintage condition with traces of use and age-related traces of wear. Pictures are part of the description.

Size

  • Height: 6.0 cm.
  • Length: 15.5 cm.
  • Width: 12.5 cm.

Albert Heijn (supermarket)
Albert Heijn sr. Comes from the Heijn family from Oostzaan. In 1887 he took over from his father Jan Heijn his grocery store in the Kerkbuurt of Oostzaan. Eight years later he opened the first branch in Purmerend and in Zaandam he opened a Central Warehouse in 1899.

The first products under their own brand were sold from 1910. The basis for their own production companies was laid in 1911, also in Zaandam, where roasting coffee and baking cake were started in the kitchen of an old mansion. Factories for rusk, liquorice, coffee, tea, wine and other products appeared along the Zaan. In 1920 the Company for the Exploitation of Factories and Trade was founded. Anton Jurgens of Anton Jurgens' Margarinefabrieken N.V., one of Unilever's predecessors, bought half of the ordinary share capital (which he sold again in 1927 after a disagreement with Mr Heijn). In the same year, son-in-law Johan Hille and sons Jan and Gerrit Heijn took over the management.

Seven years later, in 1927, the store chain celebrated its 40th anniversary. The company now had 107 branches and was awarded the title of Royal Warrant Holder. Anton Jurgens was bought out.

Albert Heijn senior died in 1945 at the age of 80. Three years later, the company went public.

In 1952 Albert Heijn opened its first self-service shop in Schiedam. This is in imitation of Gebroeders van Woerkom, who on November 26, 1946 was the first in the Netherlands to open a self-service shop in Nijmegen, based on an American example.

The current Albert Heijn logo has existed since 1965 and is a design by James Pilditch and John Harris of trademark agency AID. Before that, the concern had a logo in the 1920s in which the A and H were intertwined. At the end of the 1930s, the letters stood side by side with the slogan "for quality" below. After Albert Heijn was appointed purveyor to the court, the coat of arms belonging to this title appeared in the logo of the supermarket chain from the 1950s. From 1966, the Pilditch logo is used, the blue intertwined A and H.

In 1952 Albert Heijn opened its first self-service store in Schiedam.


Some translations come from an automated system and may contain errors.

Country of origin
The Netherlands - Holland

Kind of object
Biscuit tin - cookie tin

Theme
Albert Heijn - tin - packaging

Decoration
four-in-hand (carriage) - horse - rider - amazone

Category
Vintage tins

Publisher
Albert Heijn

Manufacturer
Albert Heijn B.V.

Brand
Albert Heijn

Material
Tin - metal - paint

Particularities
Hinged lid - embossed branding on bottom

Era
1960

Quality
Good vintage condition

Height
6,00 cm

Lenght
15,50 cm

Width
12,50 cm

Shipping method
Parcel post with track & trace

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