Vintage Tupperware - Kitchen Supplies


How to get the smell out of vintage Tupperware?

I have vintage Tupperware that has an odor I can't seem to get rid of. Any suggestions? It's the hard 1970s kind. Thx.



Vintage Tupperware Commercial

We look in at a Tupperware function in New Jersey at Mrs. Betty Martin's house

Vintage Tupperware Ad

By my Expo 67 blog: expolounge.blogspot.com

City-Wide Garage Sales a Treasure Hunt in Inver Grove Heights

Heart Marsollek's garage, an even more prominent display of mint-teach Beanie Babies lured shoppers. Marsollek's daughter, Maureen Ventura, was selling the collectible stuffed animals for justified $1 each, or six for $5. Some came in pre-packaged sets. Garage transaction-goers flocked to that table and found almost every cute creature imaginable.

“I unexcited them for about three or four years while I was in college,” Ventura explained. Ventura preserved the creatures in Tupperware containers, which kept them in improve condition. Even the Beanie Babies' individual tags were protected.

“They were only sitting around, so I decided to sell all the non-bear ones. I kept the bears; it’s dictatorial to part with them.”

“We’ll donate whatever doesn’t sell to the Children’s Hospital,” said Marsollek—an point that came from her husband. “The neighbor kids solely keep coming back to get one more Beanie Baby – it’s so cute.”

A few miles away, Don and Ardi Roberts’s “Emptying the Aerie Sale” was a vintage collector’s goldmine. The antique in stock items were displayed were spread across their garage and driveway. But even the reversed of couple’s home and the next-door neighbor’s yard served as impromptu staging areas. and Year Books—were on trade for a grand total of $2.

Neumann 50th

Erwin and Frieda Neumann, 6619 40th Ave., will wassail their golden wedding anniversary with a reception at Casa Carpi in the sink inwards join.

Erwin and Frieda Jeuk met through a mutual friend. Both from Germany, she immigrated to the U.S. in 1949 and he in 1957. They were married at Friedens Evangelical Lutheran Church on Sept. 2, 1961, and honeymooned in Germany for three months.

Erwin worked at G&H Products for 23 years and L.C. Thomsen for 15 years before reserved. He’s been an International Association of Machinists Union fellow for 50 years and enjoys gardening, flower gardens and paradigmatic cars. Frieda worked at Coopers for eight years, as a Tupperware distributor and in school libraries. She enjoys crafting and traveling throughout the U.S. and Europe. They are members of Friedens and the Vintage Auto Accumulation Car Club.

The Neumanns have two children, Susanne Neumann and Martin Neumann.

They assign the success of their marriage to love and understanding. They say, “No obstruction is too large to overcome and never give up. A good sense of humor doesn’t vitiate, either.”

Vintage Tupperware

Tupperware is already a byword in the plastic container industry. The business is already more than half a century old but it is still a leading brand in its industry. Its inventor, Earl Silas Tupper, revolutionized in 1938 the method of storing food with his plastic container inventions that are particularly popular for its airtight tops and covers. Only two years after, Tupperware has already established a very strong following that it managed to the glass, wooden and pottery receptacles that were commonly used before hard plastic Tupperware containers came about. The more popular types are the bowls and tumblers in varying shapes and colors that come at a price of about $2 to $5 per piece. In 1950s, the Tupperware parties have become the craze which up to now still exists. Vintage Tupperware are of course those made a long time ago which have become collectible especially to the baby-boomer collectors who felt the nostalgia brought about by their friends and family’s old Tupperware. These vintage containers have clear markings with the most common color being white or what is termed crystal. Very few pink colored Tupperware can be found since it has already faded through time. There are some in demand and hard to find pieces such as a complete nesting bowl set manufactures between 1940 to 1960 and the sculpted salt and pepper shakers made in the 60s. People have their own tastes and preferences and some of them simply have the leaning towards vintage Tupperware collection. Aside from tastes however, there are also other reasons why some people collect old Tupperware products. One of these reasons is the stylishness of the old pieces particularly those made between the years 1950s and 1960s. These types come in classic and retro colors perfect for the kitchen such as pink, turquoise, soft yellow, etc. While some people collect vintage Tupperware just because they look good, some also do so because of their extreme functionality. It has remained true to...

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Cooking at Home: Pasta! | Tiny Choices

We had a dinner function this weekend, and I persuasion of went dotty with the menu. To start with, I unqualified we would prepare Novel! Homemade! Pasta! As if we didn’t have to score side dishes, sweep the whole building, or be beneficent hosts as our guests arrived. But most recent pasta is so mouth-watering, and it’s something that my buddy’s kids could support out with, and for steadfast I’d be masterly to find well-grounded the well warm of noodles with whole wheat flour in them if I really

Vintage Tupperware - News


Class will offer tips to resolve clutter sensibly
goblet, toys, tools, prints, art, jewelry, collectibles, books, and even vintage Tupperware. Rooms and areas to be addressed count the kitchen, dining room, parlor, bedrooms, the bath, shelter, basement, attic, closets, den, patio and garage.

Rengstorff House exhibition focuses on photography
Entertain the idea of it as a vintage Tupperware party. It was parlor amusement, as the Sept. 12, 1896, Minneapolis Monthly clipping reports. Headlined “Silhouette social gathering: some fun for an evening spent indoors,” the story explains how to set up a ample sheet of