Een Wereldmerk Coca-Cola Een Nederlandse Industrie / A Global Brand Coca-Cola in the Dutch Industry, Brochure, c. 1950s

Information

Since 1928, Coca-Cola was sold in the Netherlands, its production stopped during the war and it returned to the Dutch market in 1946.

Details

Linked Information

Een Wereldmerk Coca-Cola Een Nederlandse Industrie / A Global Brand Coca-Cola in the Dutch Industry, Brochure, c. 1950s
Een Wereldmerk Coca-Cola Een Nederlandse Industrie / A Global Brand Coca-Cola in the Dutch Industry, Brochure, c. 1950s

 

Een Wereldmerk Coca-Cola Een Nederlandse Industrie / A Global Brand Coca-Cola in the Dutch Industry, Brochure, c. 1950s
Een Wereldmerk Coca-Cola Een Nederlandse Industrie / A Global Brand Coca-Cola in the Dutch Industry, Brochure, c. 1950s

 

Een Wereldmerk Coca-Cola Een Nederlandse Industrie / A Global Brand Coca-Cola in the Dutch Industry, Brochure, c. 1950s
Een Wereldmerk Coca-Cola Een Nederlandse Industrie / A Global Brand Coca-Cola in the Dutch Industry, Brochure, c. 1950s
More graphic design artefacts
From the design archive:
From the design archive:
From the design archive:
From the design archive:
More graphic design history articles

Members Content

The best poster designs from Die besten Plakate des Jahres 1956 with a translated foreword by Jakob Rudolf Welti. Featuring the work of Herbert Leupin, Carl B. Graf, Carlo Vivarelli and Emil Ruder.
The Cuban film poster conveys the spirit and ideals of the Cuban revolution. A time of political change, an uprising that ended the brutal dictatorship of Fulgencio Batista. The Danish Film Institute have a collection of Cuban Film Posters from the past 50 years.

Members Content

One of my standout collected pieces is Erberto Carboni’s Crociere 1937 “Italia” Brochure, created for the Societa di Navigazione’s 1937 cruise schedule.
Ken was born in 1929, in Southampton and grew up in a small market town in North Devon. He was a principled man, with strong values and views against the hyper-consumerism we live with today. Ken studied at the London Central School of Arts and Crafts in the 1950s and was taught by Herbert Spencer, Anthony Froshaug and Jesse Collins. Whilst at the School he studied alongside designers Ken Briggs, Alan Fletcher and Colin Forbes.