

- Contraption maker packing up movie#
- Contraption maker packing up full#
- Contraption maker packing up code#
Contraption maker packing up movie#
By the ’30s, the image-savvy company was a household brand, sponsoring NBC radio serials (and later hiring Saul Bass, the legendary graphic designer known for his striking movie posters and credit sequences, to create its logo). For years, the Individual Drinking Cup Company of New York - later renamed Dixie - had been popularizing campaigns against common cups, circulating pamphlets that showed skull-shaped mugs chained to fountains. “At the same time, the commodification of drinking water - I’d say that starts right about here.”īy 1911, a Tribune campaign against communal “death cups,” as the paper called them, led to a state ban on “common drinking cups” in civic spaces. “Basically, conditions were perfect for disposable cups,” Flinchum said. ” Paradoxically, the public became more aware of how germs were spread about the time temperance advocates were suggesting public troughs of water as an alternative to a stiff whiskey. Said Russell Flinchum, a design historian at North Carolina State University: “You find concerns among Brits about drinking from the contaminated Thames in the 19th century, but in this country, if you’re looking for water in public, it’s a bucket of water and a ladle, and should you drink from the same ladle as a sick person. The trouble with that - a historical and relative lack of cheap, ready-to-use cups for everyone else. So to distinguish a rich man’s cup from a poor man’s, cups of the wealthy and ruling classes needed to be “made with great labor.” Hence, golden chalices, carved rhino horns and glass tankards. The problem with this, according to the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica’s entry for drinking vessels, is anyone could afford a coconut. The first were likely natural - hollowed-out ostrich eggs, coconut shells, etc. Though to get there, I need to explain a few things about beverage receptacles. Most likely, the cup was part of a natural evolution, created without any clear innovation. “When we bought (Solo) in 2012, we were really frustrated at how little company history and artifacts they had retained,” said Margo Burrage, communications director for Michigan-based Dart. Such as, well: When exactly was the red Solo cup invented and why.

Contraption maker packing up code#
The red cup, says Louise Harpman, New York architect and design expert (whose “Coffee Lids,” a new book with architect Scott Specht, is the history of another Solo-related innovation), became a deeply American tradition, “the opposite of wimpy, a firm handshake that always feels right when you grab it.” Conversely, a Disney screenwriter working on a teen movie once told the Los Angeles Times that the cup is so associated with youthful transgression, “a red-Solo-cup conversation” is filmmaker code for uneasy implications.Īnd yet, according to Dart itself, mysteries remain. J.Since it was created in the early ’70s, the red Solo plastic cup has become synonymous with good times, backyard picnics, frat-house keggers, tailgating. NO SCRUBBING AT ALL!!!! This is my new favorite shower cleaner. The ONLY con I have is that it makes me sneeze while I'm spraying from inside the shower, but I can live with that." - L. Day three I sprayed the remaining spots and the next morning the shower practically looked new. The next morning the blue was gone except for a few spots on the floor tile and the glass looked amazing. The next morning there was a NOTICEABLE reduction in the blue and the glass looked clearer too.
Contraption maker packing up full#
My ambition in life is NOT to be a full time bathroom scrubber! I saw this stuff on a professional house cleaner's TikTok (sorry, don't remember which one) and thought 'what the heck, might as well give it a try.' Oh my goodness, the first day after my shower I sprayed this stuff all over and walked away.

I've tried dozens and dozens of cleaners and scrubbed till my arms ached trying to get ahead of the blue and scumminess. The well water also causes the shower glass to film up quickly. Since my bathroom color scheme isn't on the blue spectrum, this is problematic. Something in my well water reacts with copper plumbing and turns my shower tiles blue.
