I π vintage tea and biscuit tins. With pretty designs or distinctive logos, rusty edges and battered lids, they take me back to those olden days before plastic became ever-present and persistent in our lives. I can imagine my grandmother prising the lid off a tea tin and scooping out the leaves for the teapot!
Many such tins were on display in the kitchen of an old cottage at the historical museum we visited recently. Some once held iconic products, like Arnott's biscuits, Weetbix and Uncle Toby's rolled oats, that we can still buy today.
(It is no longer an Australian-owned company.)
Weetbix were first produced in the 1920s.
Images of Australian animals decorated tea tins.
A flowery design on an old sugar canister.
A display of old tins on a shelf.
(Doors, windows & lids shaped like rooftops.)
The Uncle Toby's company was founded in 1861 as Parsons Bros.
(Nestle acquired Uncle Toby's in 2006.)
Before pre-packaged goods, like these from yesteryear and those we find at the supermarkets today, my great-grandmother would have done her shopping at the local grocer. Bulk foods, kept behind a long wooden counter, would have been measured out according to the order she made with the grocer. She may have brought her purchase home, wrapped in brown paper and tied with string...how times have changed!
Meg
p.s. If you'd like to take a walk down memory lane, to the shops of old, this link may interest you:
I especially enjoyed reading about Bickmore's General Store, at Kurri Kurri, on pages 21 & 22. There's a photo of the shopkeeper behind a long wooden counter!