I bought some nice woolly mitts in C and A in Basel at the weekend. The kind where you can sort of peel back the top bit to expose fingers for doing things.
I worked in the basement at the Oxford St store and you are right number please it was always dark down there...my first job in the mornings as a junior was removing all the dust sheets (we had to cover all the clothes at night with white sheets) and then cleaning the floor to ceiling column mirrors all for a wage of £4.10s.
C & A was one of my favourite stores, I wish we still had them. When I was in my teens, I lived with my grandma, and she`d take me to C & A in Manchester, to their bargain basement, that`s where most of my clothes came from. It was always very dark down there, not all bright and cheerful like upstairs. Oh, how about flour in muslin bags? My mother cut them open for us to take to school as hankies.
mrsmopp I knew they had them on the continent I wonder how different they are now... I worked there for 4yrs and yes KatyK I remember being called Miss ---- all the time.
I think you do see rabbits and chickens in country butchers with all their feathers etc intact...
Is it the same as the old stuff from the sixties? Will go and have a look tomorrow.
(That will be three things I've now bought on Ana's recommendation - chin de-hairer, egg spoons (lovely), and now hopefully thin tinsel. I will look upon you as my personal shopper Ana.
Rabbits and chickens hanging by their feet in butchers shops, complete with fur, feathers and heads. Rabbits eyes would be looking at you. They had a big gash down the belly where they had been gutted. Pigs heads in shop windows with an apple in the mouth.
Thin tinsel. Pretty without the garishness of the stuff they sell today. Very glad I held on to all of mine, even if some of it is starting to go bald.
My mum used to wear a turban. Other things I remember are diamond mesh stockings, hair lacquer that came in a sachet and you had to pour into a squeezy bottle (it made your hair as stiff as a board), loose potato crisps and loose biscuits which came in a big tub (you always hoped you would get them from a newly opened tub or they might be stale). Tanith - I also worked in C&A on a Saturday for fourteen shillings. We had to call each other 'Miss whatever' and we were never allowed to sit down! I was surprised to see a C&A in Seville last year.
Loving this thread. Tanith - my first job was in the Berkshire Hosiery factory. I started just as they were starting to manufacture tights and as you said American Tan was the most popular shade. For five years I either had free tights (for testing purposes) or paid very reduced prices in the factory shop. Came as a shock when I had to pay full price.
I worked in C & A when I left school they are long gone now but I believe they are still alive on the continent. Anyway I used sometimes work on the underwear counter which included stockings etc.. I can remember the first time we got 'tights' (pantyhose in the USA)in, in the 60's oh my the shop girls were all sloping off their counters to come and see the new 'in' thing, it was such freedom from the stockings and suspenders and of course we could wear shorter skirts with tights on... I don't think they still do 'American Tan' but it was the most sort after colour for years...
Home & Colonial was a magic place to shop, my nan used to send me. She would say "get a quarter pound of sugar and make sue it's not damp, get a slice of corn beef and make sure it's not all fat, and a sliced loaf and squash it to make sure it's not stale"
In Ilfordthere was a shop called Fairheads that was just like a big Pollards. They sold all the really old fashioned stuff. They had those canisters right up until the 90s I think. Sadly it closed down about 3 years ago, it was a true piece of living history.
Yes the burning hair smell Shabby, I had forgotten that.
Etheltbags1 - the pinging sound that the cannisters made use to fascinate me. Maybe it is just my memory playing tricks on me - but shopping seemed to be much less rushed then.
I loved the old fashioned haberdashers that my mum shopped in and the specialist grocers where you could buy just what you wanted - no one looked at you if you asked for two ounces of cheese. Maybe that was because in the it was such a short time from WW2.
I remember the change cannisters that flew around on a wire overhead, Lapwing, they used to scare me when I was small as I thought they were going to fall on me, but as I got older I used to watch in fascination. We have a museum near where I live and they have them in the shop there and I just love to visit and watch them fly around.
If you presented a £5 note in Woolworths to pay for shopping the supervisor used to be called to check it! Loved the biscuit containers with glass lids in Woolies. In went hand out came biscuits. Large slabs of cake that the lady behind the counter cut up. The purple bags in Home and Colonial that loose sugar, fruit went in.
And another one but I do no remember what they were called - the old fashioned canisters that they had in shops to move money from the tills to the cash offices - some whizzed along on wires and others used compressed air in tubes. Anyone remember those?