Showing posts with label brand character. Show all posts
Showing posts with label brand character. Show all posts

Saturday, August 28, 2021

340. Brand Stories: GOLDILOCKS BAKE SHOP, 1966

GOLDILOCKS, the old and the new, 1986 and current brand visual identity

In the mid 60s, anyone wishing to enjoy an honest-to-goodness slice of cake for a meatime dessert or a mid-afternoon treat had to wait for mother’s free time to bake one.

EARLY GOLDILOCKS MASCOTS, Source: Goldilocks website

In the Leelin clan, three young housewives’ favorite pastime was baing cakes and pastries. Encouraged by the mounting orders from relatives and friends, their hobby evolved into a small enterprise. On May 15, 1966, a modest  store was opened by sisters Milagros Leelin Yee and Clarita Leelin Go, with sister-in-law Doris, in a small space in an unpretentious apartment row on Pasong Tamo, Makati.

1985 GOLDILOCKS 20TH ANNIVERSARY PRINT AD

A third sister, Maria Flor, suggested that they name the enterprise "GOLDILOCKS”,  after the fairy tale character. The intention was to make it easier for children and their mothers to remember the bakeshop's name, and also because it suggested luck and prosperity. The store was manned by a staff of 5, who took turns in shaping dough, filling in shopping bags and loading goodies for deliveries. In time, the name GOLDILOCKS was associated with “home-baked” confections and pastries , and when one wanted cakes, one thought of GOLDILOCKS.

1990s GOLDILOCKS BRAND CHARACTER

A GOLDILOCKS image was created in the mid-1980s with the help of the store’s ad agency—a standing figure of a girl with golden locks. In the mid-1990s, an industrial design agency streamlined the character, using just GOLDILOCKS' face and a unique font specially created for the GOLDILOCKS brand name. 

The character was altogether dropped, and now, the GOLDILOCKS shop is represented by its monogram G in script, encased in a circle of turquoise shade.


SOURCES:

Adapted from Goldilocks 20th Year advertorial, “Your Good Taste Made It Happen”, Sunday Times Magazine, 11 May 1986.  p. 23.

Goldilocks photo: https://www.goldilocks.com.ph/our-story

Alex R. Castro, “10 Memorable Classic Characters From Local Ads”, spot.ph

Saturday, May 29, 2021

325. Brand Stories: DUTCH CLEANSER, 1905

OLD DUTCH CLEANSER..Chases Dirt! Makes Everything Spic ;n Span!

Would you believe that the original company that gave the world the cleansing product  known as OLD DUTCH CLEANSER was engaged in the slaughter of animals? Cudahy Packing Co. had a pumice mine in Meade County, Kansas and the white pumice powder was sourced  to clean up the floors of Chicaco slaughterhouses. This led Cudahy Packing Co. to explore the marketing and promotion of a white powder cleanser with the trademark  OLD DUTCH CLEANSER, first used in Sept 1906 and registered in 1905. 

DUTCH FOAMING CLEANSER, 1955

It was so named because Holland was reputed for the impeccably  clean habits of its citizens, a tradition of cleanliness that was visualized in the a picture of a Dutch Lady driving dust and dirt away with a stick. This led to the creation of its slogan OLD DUTCH CLEANSER—Chases Dirt, Makes Everything Spic ‘n Span. In early product packaging versions, the face of the Dutch Lady remained unseen, but subsequent improvements were later made—showing her with a younger, friendlier face.

DUTCH FOAMING CLEANSER, 1958

In its time, OLD DUTCH CLEANSER was considered  innovative, and the scouring power of the pumicite powder  greatly facilitated household cleaning. Pumicite powder was first mined in Kern County, California and was used by other products like Comet and Bon Ami. 

DUTCH CLEANSER, 1956 print ad

Beginning in 1923, pumicite for OLD DUTCH CLEANSER was sourced in an underground mine along Garlock Fault, in the remote Mojave desert, where it naturally occurred. It  produced 120,000 tons of cleansing powder, until its closure  in 1947. Cudahy sold OLD DUTCH CLEANSER to Purex on April 24, 1955.

BARBARA PEREZ FOR DUTCH CLEANSER, 1964

The product was already available in post-war Philippines and was advertised on print in the 1950s. It was sold under the brand name DUTCH FOAMING CLEANSER and came in a cylindrical cardboard packaging that also doubled as a dispenser.  It ads claim that “it does the work of all” –as DUTCH FOAMING CLEANSER cleans everything from tiles to walls and even plates!

DUTCH CLEANSER IN A NEW PLASTIC CANISTER, 1968

By the 1960s, the brand name was simplified to DUTCH CLEANSER, and had actress-mother Barbara Perez as endorser. In 1968.  DUTCH CLEANSER was relaunched in a new plastic canister with a tapering top., and by that time, it was “the largest selling cleanser in the Philippines”.

SOURCE:  DUTCHPH FB PAGE

DUTCH CLEANSER is still around, today and its product line includes bleach, classing cleanser, power cleanser with micro-scrubs, among others. In 1985, the household and consumer products business of Purex Industries, Inc. was acquired by Greyhound Corp. and was combined with Greyhound's Armour-Dial to form The Dial Corporation, which, in April 2004, was acquired by Henkel. In March 2, 2011, it was announced that Monheim and Henkel — which sells Vernel liquid detergent, Perwoll special detergent and Dutch Cleanser, among others — signed a licensing contract to manufacture DUTCH CLEANSER in the Philippines.

 SOURCES:

Purex Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Purex_(laundry_detergent)

Old Dutch website: https://www.olddutch.ca/en/

Dutch[h FB page: https://www.facebook.com/dutchph

Wednesday, September 2, 2020

294. Brand Stories: Nestlé MILKMAID, “Marca Señorita”, 1856

MILKMAID EVAPORATED MILK, AD, 1929

The milk known in the Philippines for many years as “Marca Señorita” because of its female brand character, was a product of a dairy company founded by two American brothers, George Ham Page and Charles Page, from Dixon, Illinois.

MILKMAID SWEETTENED CONDENSED STRIP AD, 1929

 Their story began in 1865, when Charles, who was the U.S. Vice Consul of Trade was posted in Zurich, where he marveled at the sight of endless green meadows populated by grazing cows. He saw the potential of producing a new kind of processed milk that was clean and pure, and did not spoil easily due to the addition of sugar. 

MILKMAID EVAPORATED MILK AND ITS USES, 1929

Developed by Gail Borden in the 1850s, the canned “condensed milk” was supplied to American Civil War soldiers in the battlefield. Charles’s brother, George, had learned the process of making condensed milk himself,  from the Gail Borden plant in the U.S. The two brother, thus, joined their heads together, to form the Anglo-Swiss Condensed Milk Company a year later, in Cham, Switzerland —the first condensed milk company in Europe—and the future international dairy giant was born.

MILKMAID EVAPORATED MILK AT ITS BEST, 1929
The condensed milk product took the world by storm. By  1868, the brothers’ Anglo-Swiss company was selling over  374,000 cartons of condensed milk, driven largely by demands from Great Britain and its colonies. With the death of Charles in 1873, George took over the helm and by 1891, the company had 12 factories in Europe and the US which exported their famed condensed milk worldwide, under the “MILKMAID” brand.

BEAUTIFUL MILKMAID BABIES OF 1929, Philippine Free Press, 1929 

Meanwhile, in another part of Switzerland,  German immigrant Henry Nestlé had started making waves with a new milk product produced by his Vevey plant. Introduced in 1867, Farine Lacteé, an infant feeding formula, became a huge marketing success. It was just a matter of time that Nestlé expanded its product line and emerged as a rival of the Anglos-Swiss Dairy Company. Despite the competition, both companies thrived due to their shared passion for producing milk products of the highest quality and standards.

1937 SEARCH FOR HAPPY, HEALTHY BABIES, conducted by MILKMAID

While talks of a merger were initially opposed by George Page, his death in 1899 paved the way for the two companies to finally join forces, and in 1905, a deal was sealed with the creation of the Nestlé and Anglo-Swiss Condensed Milk Company.

As early as 1895, Nestle products like Bear Brand, were being marketed in the Philippines. It was only in 1911 that the sales office of Nestle and Anglo-Swiss Dairy Company was put up here, along Calle Renta in Binondo.

1938 SEARCH FOR HAPPY, HEALTHY MILKMAID BABIES

By the 1920s, there were already 3 milk processing plants in the country led by San Miguel’s Magnolia. To keep up with the growing demand for milk, these plants began importing European milk and reconstituted them locally. It was in this way that Bear Brand and MILKMAID became widely available in the Philippines, becoming household names.

MILKMAID was  highly promoted in the Philippines, and both its evaporated and condensed milk versions were advertised in print ads published in local magazines.

Curiously, because of the bucket-carrying milkmaid trademark illustration that identified the product, Filipinos began referring to MILKMAID as “Marca Señorita” (mark of a Miss), as Spanish was still a major language in the Philippines then. In other countries where it was sold , MILKMAID was translated in the native languages—La Lechera (Spanish), La Laitière (French), Die Milchmädchen (German).

MILKMAID gained more popularity with its ingenious promotions, including launching the search for the happy, healthy babies of the Philippines back in the late 1920s, that was regularly held till the 1930s. It encouraged parents to send photos of their bouncing, beautiful babies, and selected winners had the photos published in the leading magazines of the day.

Another promotion engaged MILKMAID users to save and collect labels to be used to get porcelain tableware marked with the brand logo. The set-building promotion included plates, saucers, cups, milk pitchers that were avidly collected by housewives for their homes.

WINNERS OF THE HAPPY, HEALTH BABIES CONTEST OF 1938

In 1955, Filipro, Inc. acquired the license to produce and market MILKMAID locally, and which later became the local Nestlé company here.  MILKMAID cans had “A Nestlé Product” printed on the label.

1956 MILKMAID 'PEPE AND PILAR' PRINT AD
A WINNER FOR BABY'S HEALTH, 1955

With the surge in prices of goods in 1959, the government stepped in to form the National Marketing Corporation (NAMARCO) to procure, buy, and distribute such commodities in short supply, with a special non-recurring dollar allocation from the Central Bank. MILKMAID was one such product endorsed by NAMARCO.


THE HOUSEHOLD FAVORITE FOR MORE THAN 50 YEARS, 1962

Throughout the 50s and 60s decade, MILKMAID advertising continued, and its position in the market was firmly entrenched,until the rise of new evaporated brands in the country like Liberty and Darigold.  Despite its core loyal users, MILKMAID started looking  more traditional as modern canned milk brands with new formulations gained their foothold. 

'SENYORITA" AND GROWING CHILDREN, 1960
GROWING CHILDREN AND SENYORITA GO TOGETHER, 1960 .

In the 1970s, MILKMAID regained prominence with the “grow Tall, Little Man” campaign, topbilled by then-chils superstar, Nino Muhlach.

THEIR HEALTH IS PRECIOUS!",MILKMAID AD,  1961

In 2007,  Nestlé gave Alaska Milk Corp. the license to manufacture and sell its MILKMAID sweetened condensed milk in the Philippines. Alaska Milk Corp, was acquired by  FrieslandCampina  in 2012, but the plant continues to produce MILKMAID, but no longer carries the Nestlé name. MILKMAID today is promoted as an ingredient for modern confections, sweet treats,  dessserts, and bakery items.


MILKMAID, under Nestle (L) and under FrieslandCampina (R)

SOURCES:

Thursday, October 10, 2019

245. Brand Icon: Republic Flour Mills’ PAPA PICCOLINO



In 1968, the country was introduced to PAPA PACCOLINO a jolly, portly Italian chef with his trademark mustache. He was the brand character for a new line of “Real Italian” boxed pasta products for dishes and soups.

PAPA PICCOLIMO, 1968 AD
 
PAPA PICCOLINO NOODLE AD,1968

 It was by Republic Flour Mills (now RFM Corporation), which ventured into flour manufacturing in 1957, even though wheat wasn't being grown in the Philippines.

LISTEN TO THE SONG THAT INSPIRED
THE BRAND NAME OF PAPA PICCOLINO

The name  PAPA PACCOLINO was reworked from the title of a 1953 hit song, “Poppa Piccolino", sung by Diana Decker The brand was active throughout the rest of the '60s, its line expanding to include soup varities and pizzas.
 
PAPA PICCOLINO SPAGHETTI AD, 1972

PAPA PCCOLINO SPAGHETTI & MACARONI, 1960S, source: Pinterest

Papa Piccolino appeared practically in all print materials, but the novelty wore off as the '70s rolled in. PAPA PACCOLINO was replaced with a real endorser, host-singer Pepe Pimentel, who more or less exuded the same chirpy, friendly vibe as the cartoon character.


PAPA PICCOLINO ENDORSED BY PEPE PIMENTEL, 1973

SOURCES:
DIANA DECKER-POPPA PICCOLINO (1953), uploaded by GoldenOldiesOn45RPM,June 8 2010.

Monday, April 29, 2019

218. Plop-plop, Fizz-fizz, Oh what a relief it is!: ALKA-SELTZER Print Ads, 1956-57

ALKA-SELTZER, 1956 PHILIPPINE AD.

The most well-known  effervescent antacid and pain reliever in the 50s—ALKA SELTZER—became available in the Philippines as an imported product in the late 1920s, but it was only around 1951 that it was actively promoted. Made by Dr. Miles Medicine Co. of Indiana, U.S. in 1931, ALKA-SELTZER had 3 active ingredients—aspirin (for fever and pain), sodium bicarbonate (antacid) and citric acid (for effervescence)
 
SPEEDY appears in this 1957 Alka-Seltzer ad.

When advertised, ALKA-SELTZER was indicated for the relief of headache, fever and pain, acid stomach, indigestions and hangovers. It was one of the most advertised products in the world, and its commercials were among the most popular. 

Speedy, created in 1951 as the product mascot, was also one of the most recognized advertising character in history, and was extensively used in magazine ads that saw print in the Philippines,

The memorable "Plop, plop, fizz, fizz" ad campaign made its appearance in the Philippines featuring the animate mascot and a hit jingle. 

It was conceptualized by Paul Margulies, a Madison Avenue creative executive, and father of actress Julianna Margulies. The vintage 60s ad showed 2 ALKA-SELTZER tablets dropping into a glass of water instead of the usual one, which caused sales to double.  In 1976, the campaign was successfully revived, with jingle sung by Speedy.

WATCH THE ALKA-SELTZER TV AD HERE:
published by Steve Stout, 23 Apr. 2007

By the time Miles Laboratories was bought by Bayer in 1979, ALKA-SELTZER had disappeared from botica shelves, It is now only available as an imported product, which one can now order online.


 SOURCES:
Alka-Seltzer TV Commercial. uploaded by Steve Stout, published on April 23, 2007.   https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bxjb2UJZ-5I
Alka-Seltzer Just a reliefe Away, pinterest.com

Tuesday, September 18, 2018

183. Brand Icon: WHITE CASTLE WHISKY GIRL, 1974

CARMI MARTIN, WHITE CASTLE GIRL, 1984-1986

One of the most unforgettable brand ambassadors for a product beginning in the 1970s was not your usual prim and proper college girl type (like Miss Magnolia), or your  fashionable ladies from high society  (like the Rustan’s VIP Council)—but rather a woman in a red bikini.

To make for a dramatic entrance, the WHITE CASTLE GIRL galloped into our TV living room astride a white horse, hair blowing in the wind, as the image of a castle loomed in the background. TV audience—especially male viewers—could not help but stayed glued to the screen as the strains of the catchy jingle, “White Castle, White Castle Whisky, White Castle Whisky ang bilhin”, followed her 30 sec. ride into the hearts of the drinking class. 

MR. JULIUS LIMPE
CEO, Destiliria Limtuaco
WHITE CASTLE 5 Years Old Whisky had always been a national favorite for many years, the product of Destileria Limtuaco, the country’s oldest distillery. The business was founded by 36 year old Amoy immigrant Lim Tua Co, who put up the distillery within 2 years of his arrival in the Chinese enclave of Binondo.  One of his earliest successes  is the medicinal wine, Sioktong.

Unfortunately, Lim Tua Co—who adopted the Christan name Bonifacio—died in 1887. So too, did his only son, Carlos, his heir apparent. A nephew, Lim Chay Seng took over the business in 1926, and shifted the production from Chinese drinks to Western spirits. Thus--WHITE CASTLE WHISKY came to be. It would become one of the company’s flagship brand, blended and aged to perfection in oak barrels, to give the whisky smooth, full-bodied taste, aroma and golden color.

WHITE CASTLE GIRL, EVANGELINE PASCUAL (1974)
Picture courtesy of: JOSE BENIGNO SALVADOR

The business flourished when his son, American-educated James Limpe took over the helm in 1937, a position which was passed on in 1958 to son Julius Limpe, a business graduate the University of Indiana. Julius became an expert blender of all sorts of liquor and spirit, which he patented and produced,  while steering Distileria Limtuaco to its pre-eminent position in the industry.

WHITE CASTLE GIRLS, AGNES RUSTIA (1975) & PEACHY VENERACION (1978)
SOURCE: www.limtuaco.com

To him also goes the credit for creating the imagery of the WHITE CASTLE GIRL. After all,  Mr. Julius Limpe was also an artist, so he also put his creativity to work in WHITE CASTLE WHISKY marketing and advertising. He conceived of a narrative that was fairy-tale like—a princess in a red bikini chanced upon a group of men while on a bareback ride on the beach astride her white horse.


WATCH "WHITE CASTLE WHISKY" CLASSIC 1978 TVC HERE:
(Source: ADman 1909,  Jul. 19, 2007)

To distract the men who had taken fancy on her, she brings out a bottle of WHITE CASTLE and drops it on the sand, diverting the men’s attention to the drink. The ruse worked and the princess in the red bikini rides safely back to her castle with a red turret. Sylvia Licauco had the honor of being the first White Castle Girl

WHITE CASTLE GIRL, TETCHIE AGBAYANI (1982). SOURCE: www.limtuaco.com

Along the way, the “princess” element was dropped, which, in a way was alright, as the first WHITE CASTLE GIRL to appear in a promotional material—i.e. calendar-- was a beauty royalty—Evangeline Pascual, Miss Republic of the Philippines 1974 and Miss World runner-up. It would seem that Miss RP automatically became a WHITE CASTLE GIRL, as in the case of Agnes Rustia and Peachy Veneracion.

WHITE CASTLE GIRL, LORNA TOLENTINO, 1982.
SOURCE/ Photo Credit: Jose Benigno Salvador

Two years before her Playboy splash, Visitacion “Tetchie” Agbayani reigned as the 1980 WHITE CASTLE GIRL. Even former child star, actress Lorna Tolentino, rode the bandwagon in 1982, at age 21.

WHITE CASTLE GIRL, CARMI MARTIN, 1984

The WHITE CASTLE GIRL exuded a sexier air with the casting of voluptuous Carmi Martin from 1984-86. From thereon, that bombshell mold was used in the selection process.

WHITE CASTLE GIRL,LYKA UGARTE, 1986. SOURCE: www.limtuaco.com

The pouty beauty Lyka Ugarte, was a perfect follow-up to Martinl she held the for 2 years. Star of ST (Sex Trip) movies Cristina Gonzales snuggled with the white horse in the 1992 calendar.  Glydel Mercado’s topless appearance in 1996. At the turn of the new millennium, the WHITE CASTLE GIRL started to look more provocative with her come-hither poses, as seen from the calendars of Angela Velez, who did several versions from 1999 to the first half of 2000s. The horse became an afterthought.

WHITE CASTLE GIRLS Glydel Mercado (1996) & Angela Velez (1999)
SOURCE: www.limtuaco.com

To drum up excitement, a nationwide search for a new WHITE CASTLE GIRL for 2007 was launched, resulting in the victory of beauty queen Gemma Gatdula. Her reign went awry when she was dethroned; she was replaced by former Wowwowee dancer, RR Enriquez. Current WHITE CASTLE GIRL is actress Meg Imperial.

WATCH WHITE CASTLE GIRL "LORNA TOLENTINO" TVC HERE:
(Source: Liquor Express, posted May 20, 2018)

"If it ain't broke, don't fix it".--this saying might as well apply to WHITE CASTLE advertising. Apparently, the campaign with the WHITE CASTLE GIRL continues to work, and thus endures to this day, give or take a few refreshments. After 4 decades, the girl in the red bikini continues to charge on her white steed, past the white castle with a red turret—as fast as the galloping sales of WHITE CASTLE WHISKY!



SOURCES:
WHITE CASTLE WHISKY CLASSIC PHILIPPINE TVC (1978): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bQT4qU6mlT8, posted by ADman 1909,  Jul. 19, 2007.
LORNA TOLENTINO-WHITE CASTLE GIRL 1982, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=us4DAWw8Mws, posted by Liquor Express, May 20, 2018.
MANY THANKS TO MR. JOSE BENIGNO SALVADOR FOR THE USE OF HIS WHITE CASTLE PICTURES (Evangeline Pascual,Lorna Tolentino, White Castle paper label), PEP.PH  and MR. BORJ MENESES (for Gemma Gatdula's photo)

Tuesday, June 5, 2018

165. Brand Icon: THE ENGLISHMAN of Fibisco Biscuits

THE ENGLISHMAN, still in use in a magazine print ad, 1983.

Filipinas Biscuit Corporation, or more commonly known as Fisbisco, was set up on 23 January 1959. The next year, Fibisco  started producing biscuit brands that would become household favorites—like  Choco-Mallows, Marie, Hi-Ro, Jolly, Butter Crunch and Ginger Snaps.

FIBISCO PRINT AD, 1961

These were collectively marketed as “English Quality Biscuits” as they were produced using English-made machinery, set up by English consultants in the Fibisco Mandaluyong factory. The initial operations was even supervised by an English plant manager.

THE ENGLISHMAN, 1960

As biscuits of fine quality were associated with the English, an “ENGLISHMAN” character was introduced to drive home that point. The white-moustachioed ENGLISHMAN, wearing a smart blue suit, bowler hat and wielding a cane, was featured in print and TV advertising, as early as 1960 .

THE ENGLISHMAN, 1961

For over 20 years, the ENGLISHMAN breezed through the screen as its memorable jingle played:

“Ho, ho, did you know?
The ENGLISHMAN bakes Fibisco Biscuits.
Ho, ho, did you know?
We've got the Englishman here!”.

The ENGLISHMAN, once a familiar figure to Filipino children, may have long been gone, but his Fibisco biscuits are still here!

THE ENGLISHMAN, 1962
SOURCE: