Second in a series of books featuring advertising by era, All-American Ads of the 50s offers page after page of products that made up the happy-days decade. The start of the cold war spurred a buying frenzy and a craze for new technology that required ad campaigns to match. The nuclear age left its mark all over the advertisements, with a spotlight on planes, rockets, and even mushroom clouds. Shiny, big, beautiful cars abound, styled to keep up with the space age. Editor Jim Heimann, in his essay “From Poodles to Presley, Americans Enter the Atomic Age,” explains: “Car designers came up with exaggerated tail fins for automobiles to express this new accelerated speed.” Modernist home interiors look slick and shiny with their molded plastic furniture and linoleum floors. While clothing and furniture styles look strangely contemporary–a testament to our current obsession with vintage–some things have definitely changed. A baby sells Marlboro cigarettes! Also included are chapters on movies, food, and travel. –J.P. Cohen
Customer Reviews
1950’s American History As Seen Through Advertising:
Massive, beautifully produced, and very insightful in it’s appraisal of 1950’s American consumerism, this tome is perhaps the best collection of 1950’s advertising ever assembled. Tons of beautiful illustrations and (in some cases) graphic design that are now relics of the past. In my opinion, this book should only have been published in harcover, due to its weight and number of pages. Sadly the hardcover is impossible or nearly impossible to find, unless you go for the abridged version issued as “The Golden Age of Advertising- the 1950s.” This whole series of books which now span most of the 20th century are a great reference, and an important documentation of American history in visual form.
The Golden Age of Advertising:
We were recent house guests of a couple who have decorated some areas of their beautiful home with a 50’s theme. We gave them this book as a thank you for hosting our family. It was a unique gift, and one they will enjoy for years.
All-American Ads of the 50s:
Probably the best ad book I’ve ever seen! Worth every penny it costs and believe me, it doesn’t cost THAT much - not for a book like this! I was born in the 50s (in Russia) and Russians wouldn’t even dream (or didn’t even hear!) of products which are in this book - advertised in the US in the 50s. I’m now waiting for my All-American Ads of the 60s to arrive from Amazon - I spent my childhood in the US in the 60s and I can’t wait to meet my “good old friends” - the American products - as advertised in the 60s. I’m hoping to collect the whole series of these fabulous books. Thank you very much, Jim Heimann and Benedikt Taschen -the guys who made this wonderfull series possible. Alexander Romanov, Moscow, Russia.
Nostalgia City:
I loved this book! As a child born in the mid-50’s, many of these ads fortunately carried over to the 60’s when I was both better able to comprehend as well as recall them. It was also nice showing the book to our children, as it gave them a glimpse into some of what our own childhood’s were like. If anyone reading this wants to take a trip back to a simpler, safer, saner era, this book is your “Time Machine”. All for around $25 bucks too!
You are what you eat - or wear - or buy …..:
There are many reasons to look backwards. For one, it may help to figure out where one is by looking at where one has been. For another, one might rethink where one is going by looking at the ideals and goals of the past. One might assess societies as a whole in some grand way, such as its military budget or the outcome of elections, but for us common folk, there is no way to tell what is on our minds better than a look at what we are buying. This book is an absolutely fascinating compendium of the culture of the 50’s - of our desires, our habits, our values, as told in its advertisements. On one level it is an amusing recollection of what we once thought was cool. On another it is a profound study of the sociology of America in a time of idealism and innocence. I saw many, if not most of these ads myself when they were originally published.
That being said, I must add that the recollection of the feelings I had at that time is not entirely comfortable. On this other level, that of gut feelings, the book can be is a compendium of an appeal to the senses, to a culture of need, of having. One must look pretty deep to find any spiritual values here, and I think that the conspicuous absense of any moral sense is what is most interesting about it. Perhaps the most important lesson to be learned by those of us who look back is that the promises of those who offer us happiness by just one more purchase are really empty. Read this and be nostalgic, amused, reflective, and, just maybe, a little sad.

