Back to All Events

“Plug It In, Turn It On: 70 Years of Kitchen Appliance Manuals”

  • Los Angeles Central Library--Mark Taper Auditorium 630 West 5th Street Los Angeles, CA, 90071 United States (map)

We read them, save them, or toss them—but how do kitchen appliance manuals reflect cooking trends, language, typography, visuals, and changing times? Find out when historian and bookseller Liz Pollock presents an illustrated lecture on appliance instruction manuals that came with the many different types of Gas and Electric kitchen appliances—from Air Conditioners to Yoghurt Makers. 

 

Pollock’s Power Point presentation examines the historic role of these appliances in the American home. The directions are essentially early examples of technical writing; the product’s designers and experts explained in a sequence of steps how to accomplish the desired result. 

This will be an opportunity for today’s bibliophiles and graphic designers to study the typography, designs and color combinations used in past advertising campaigns. Highlights include when directions in Spanish first appeared in the mid-1970s.

A detailed listing of Gas and Electric Appliances, including manufacturers and dates, arranged in chronological order, will be handed out at the talk.

Liz Pollock has owned and operated The Cook's Bookcase, Santa Cruz, Calif., since 2007, specializing in unique books and ephemera on cookery and wine. cooksbookcase.com

 

 

Central Library parking: 524 South Flower Street Garage. Saturday $1 flat rate with validation (9:30 a.m. - 5:30 p.m.). Take your parking ticket with you. Parking validation is available at the library's Information Desk (first floor). The validation is a barcode imprinted on the parking ticket. Credit card or debit card payments can be made at the exit gates. Cash payments can only be made in machines at the P-1 level of the parking garage before returning to your car.

Previous
Previous
April 8

“L.A.'s Community Cookbooks: Overview & CHSC Project”

Next
Next
June 10

“Food Writing Unfolded" by Bonnie Benwick