Don’t know why, but this news makes me a little sad.
Not as sad as losing Radio Shack, but still pretty sad. Maybe it’s a lost youth sort of thing.
Don’t know why, but this news makes me a little sad.
Not as sad as losing Radio Shack, but still pretty sad. Maybe it’s a lost youth sort of thing.
Dude, what are you, a 1970’s housewife?
just kidding you.
Tupoerware always overpriced and we didn’t have it when I was growing up. I still don’t have it and have very few purchased plastic food containers. I do have many of the food containers that I buy with food in them from the deli.
One of the first of the MLM businesses, and certainly fit in with its times. Tupperware parties were fun ways to socialize in the era of the suburban housewives, but not necessarily a frugal way because the guests always felt obligated to buy the items that, as IL said, were overpriced. I was a Mary Kay consultant for a short time. I absolutely hated asking my friends to have parties. The best thing that came out of that experience was when my daughter, about 12 at the time, had a birthday party with her friends and used my kit to make themselves up. That was rewarding for me.
But as far as Tupperware goes, I will always remember the little burp you had to give the bowls, and the retro flower insignia on the pitchers with the little pressure release on the top. I would say R.I.P, but they will probably live on forever in flea markets and landfills all over the world.
"Do any human beings ever realize life while they live it--every, every minute?" Emily Webb, Our Town
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Didn't know you could still buy it. I miss the plastic glasses my grandmother had, if they blew over when I was mowing, no glass to deal with.
I was a bit saddened to hear of it too, since it's such an iconic American brand. We only own one Tupperware item that was given to us by my MIL almost 40 years ago. It's a small container that holds the grated Romano.
I have a small collection purchased from a friend a few decades ago. I have to say that it's lasted. Then again, I guess that's what plastics do. Sort of goes back to "The Graduate" days, "Plastics".
"I spent the summer traveling: I got half-way across my backyard." Louis Aggasiz
Makes me a little sad, too. Memories.... My mother loved Tupperware - the 50s/early 60s stuff. I did not - it always smelled funny to me. We had a lot of large family get-togethers, so she had mostly the large containers that held a bazillion cookies, or huge batches of cereal snack, or dozens of pizzelles - a large flat cookie she made on the stove top, one at a time, with an iron. She also had some storage ones for general use, and the cereal bowls with lids. Funny, I never though it could have been considered expensive, as my mother was the queen of frugal. But really, were there other items like that out there at that time? I do have one of her square containers, still, and I use it to corral the lids to my smaller, cheaper and often free containers, lol. There are lots more Tupperware-type alternatives out there now, and they don't smell funny.![]()
LOL, I guess I got it wrong referring to Tupperware 'glasses'. I believe they were called 'tumblers'.
You've triggered me again, as a teenager my dad was a truck driver and when he was on the road he'd always re-fuel at truck stops which gave away S&H Green Stamps with fuel purchases. He'd bring those home and my Mom would sit at the kitchen table wetting those things with a sponge and putting them into books. Those stamps tasted nasty as well.
"Things should be made as simple as possible, but not one bit simpler." ~ Albert Einstein
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