Shopping in the 1960s
With
the arrival of more money in people's pockets to spend on both
essentials and luxuries (first in the United States from the late
40s and then in other industrialised countries from the mid 50s)
shops and shopping were transformed.
In the 1960s, an increasing choice of branded products filled
supermarket shelves, amongst them frozen and chilled items such as
ready-made meals, yoghurt and desserts (for most homes now had a
refrigerator).
Brands were often aimed at children and promoted on TV by
popular cartoon characters. Breakfast cereals provided an instant
meal for hungry kids and busy mums.
New products for the 1960s included Fairy Liquid (1960), J
Cloths, Pledge aerosol (for 'real wax beauty instantly as you
dust'), Blue Band margarine (which could be spread straight from
the fridge), Colgate Fluoride toothpaste (1964) and Smash instant
mashed potato (1968 - although the Martians in the TV commercials
didn't land until the early 70s).
With employment high and most enjoying a reasonable income, the
early 1960s saw a growth in consumerism, and as Britons began to
travel to the Continent on package holidays, many brought back a
taste for Continental cuisine and wanted to experiment with
ingredients like pasta, aubergines, green peppers, herbs and
garlic.
Gradually a few shops began to respond to this demand, and in
1964 the first of Terence Conran's Habitat shops opened to provide
the correct utensils.
It
was during the 1960s that the shopping mall took off as a
retailing phenomenon, particularly in the United States.
In 1960 there were 4,500 malls in the US, and they accounted
for approximately 14% of the country's retail sales; 15 years
later the relevant figures had leapt up to 16,400 malls and 33%.
In the US, the first shopping mall (the Northland Center) had
appeared in 1954 in Detroit and this new type of shopping centre
had proven extremely popular.
Not only did the United States have the space to build such
vast complexes but also people had the cars to get to them.
Following in the tradition of the general trading store, the
mainstay of the mall was the general food store, of both chain and
individual units: by 1966, 95% of food was sold through such
stores.
In the US and other countries, self-service became an
increasingly popular and cost-effective means of retailing, helped
not only by improved refrigeration and dehydration, but also by
improved packaging materials, such as cheap polythene.
Self-service supermarkets meant that packs had to appeal to the
shopper rather than to the grocer, and packaging began to feature
attention-grabbing design.
In Europe, the possibility of building vast shopping malls was
a less serious proposition in the 1960s, some countries,
especially France, preferring hypermarkets instead. These were
self-service supermarkets which, like the malls, were usually
positioned on the outskirts of town.
Small-scale
versions of the US mall did materialise (especially in Britain) in
the form of shopping precincts, particularly in the new towns
which were springing up around the major cities, but these were
designed for the pedestrian rather than the motorist.
New American style supermarkets opened up all over the UK, and
for many people, shopping was becoming a weekly instead of a daily
excursion.
In Britain, Tesco, Safeway, Fine Fare and many other stores
became household names. Most notable of these was Sainsbury's who
ensured quality throughout the selling process.
Many of these supermarkets offered shopping 'stamps' as an
incentive to buy more goods. Stamps were given to the customer
according to how much was spent in the shop, and when you had
collected enough stamps, you could exchange them for gifts chosen
from a catalogue.
Many British homes in the 60s and 70s had several items around
the house which were bought with Green Shield or S&H Pink
Stamps - Chinaware, ironing boards, kitchen appliances . . . Lots
of people collected the stamps because it felt as though you were
getting something for nothing. The stamps were so popular that
shops had to try to out-do each other by offering double or triple
stamps!

Old-fashioned 'corner shops' found it difficult to compete with
the new supermarkets. As a result, some corner stores began to
stock different types of food which couldn't be bought in the
supermarkets.
By the 1970s, many shops also had mail order catalogues. For
example, in Britain, Habitat and Mothercare. Housewives could also
buy products in the comfort of their own homes at shopping
'parties', such as Tupperware.
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