Design Stories: Exploring Everyday ThingsMain MenuViking Roamer RM-315 RadioBlackberry Bold 9000CGE KE 860 Electric KettleGeneral Electric’s 1966 Mixer Gift SetTorcan 886P Desk FanBaby Champ 5110 RadioCGE Hair DryerNorthern Telecom DisplayphoneAmin Asgari, Jason Taylor, Jocelyn ZinSamson Dominion Ten-Ten HairsetterPedro Amaral, Markiyan Palisa, Maria PerriShayna Adivib7dacecf2514976340c9fee58413be50a837e99dMatteo De Sanctis2c7f0439bc7dbbce394cd0e83390508c4316e0f9Dylan Fleuelling724bd216cf74182c9eb4bf85f4606a9f90300f43Sanyukta Ghag97f13f26df5104f991a5c78bb41d5501520945a0Ipun Kandola03d267ee57ad9e450b2bdf7607c2a096f9e5b707Minjoo Kim49e4f45a5b4fbe8b16e096b51064bd70ed6cdfc2Jessica Lo7d943c8a531bf17a92d4ce73f45508d35571048bSam Loiselleb0bb424f55ffc54d35c4c41f04a27d6f1914a83aLuciana Loucel Morales3d71928b274e19c31fb29bde4fc89cfab59747ebShriya Mujumdar401f34f51ff8386c5fd4b09a5def6038ca96da55Binh Nguyen77159e04ccf5c117d1aafcf7d72182271cfe4379Madeleine North1716571a300e1e377a3f5a2800d66ac1abe953e4Hannah Palmier Blizzardb85a64743cf09ec2b4e0c037a864f93027666ab3John Emmanuel Sanchez33ea7858c1ccddd4c50514af2ce70aadfb85d654Veronika Straka4da98006d10b69194fdb4d8ffa5ee51bb82dc8e6Jersey Louise Stuart51967f8e0c22fbade42e8a48d7cf0a44ab625751Michelle Tieu6e71ec02b710e08ac76005bc08f9bbf8e71f73c6Shane Toyama9b06201b77bf32b849e009b2cbd92a7602c6bc69Kesha Upadhyay31af8fb220a8946dc1166ecfdd2597f5dd8d003cJillian Warneraab1e08d9b244e0aed9e36e52219fd40328c6753Amavi Weerakoon806c26de54e888d00f80819bd6ef5040b78ac4c6Jan Hadlawusers/jhadlaw1e125e7557d6dc997197c765699eef9bff624103
TF The portrayal of a family in an advertisement
1media/Family_Ad_thumb.png2025-03-18T18:36:39-04:00Melanie Chang1f514d4c7dec2021a36745d3c040a1d0cac65edf1354Portrayal of a family in a 1948 advertisement.plain2025-03-29T12:34:34-04:00Advertisement, 1948, Shawinigan Water & Power, https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/business-history-review/article/leisure-jobs-recreating-family-and-social-life-in-canadian-electric-utility-marketing-19201970/82467F68C230D87F3C26A69C552F1094Melanie Chang1f514d4c7dec2021a36745d3c040a1d0cac65edf
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1media/Gray_Bg.pngmedia/BC_Electric_Railway_0603_1916.png2025-03-18T17:00:59-04:00Marketing of Electric Utilities In Canada12plain2025-03-19T02:14:27-04:001920 - 1979Analyzing the Torcan fan by looking at how electric utilities were marketed in Canada at the time through print media reveals significant societal values.
1920s
In the 1920s, sales for electricity increased as a result of decreasing power rates and people’s perception of electricity. This was greatly influenced by advertisements which marketed electricity as efficient, emphasizing the potential for saving costs and making more time for leisure. Such advertisements suggest that these electric utilities would enable intimacy between husbands and wives by reducing the household labour often taken on by women. Thus, not only are the advertisements mediators, but the fans are represented as mediating relationships between people as well.
1930s-1940s
These themes continued into advertisements in the 1930s to 1940s, with a greater emphasis on the idea of progress in technological advances. Convenience, comfort, and reduced fatigue were highlighted in advertisements, shifting people’s perception of daily life from constant labour to the ability to enjoy family life with electric utilities.
During and after the war, the role of women in the household and their involvement in consumer organizations likely influenced advertisements of household appliances and vice versa. In the 1940s, the Wartime Prices and Trade Board created the Consumers Branch which was established and run by Canadian women voluntarily. Housewives would report violations of price ceilings to the Women‘s Regional Advisory Committees, which also conducted surveys with such housewives about the stocks of household appliances. Based on their needs, the committees pushed for metals housewives deemed as urgent to be produced. Their purchases also reflected their role as homemakers and responsibility to find “suitable” household goods that balanced the needs of family members. These housewives are described to make purchases that “further the relationships of the household” over the “publicly acknowledged qualities”. With their involvement in the market and in households, the marketing of household products was likely geared towards women’s needs pertaining to cost and stability.
1950s-1970s
During the 1950s to 1970s after the war, the marketing of electric utilities shifted to the promotion of larger homes. By increasing the scale of the use of electric utilities, advertisements suggested that the scale of leisure and happiness within families would also increase. These advertisements shaped the image of family and people’s consumption practices and ideas regarding leisure time as they provided images of what typical family and social activities could look like with electric utilities. Apart from advertisements, other media channels mediated the perception of the typical home. This is exemplified in a campaign called the Hydro-Québec’s Medallion Home Program, which detailed the optimal temperature for each room in a typical house.