The Second Lesson the Teakettle Taught Us
- 1946
Color print advertisement for Dowell Incorporated, a subsidiary of the Dow Chemical Company. The advertisement features an illustrated depiction of a man intended to evoke Scottish inventor, mechanical engineer, and chemist James Watt (1736-1819) contemplating a steam kettle. A second, more modern kettle sit on a stove top at the center of the advertisement, with an image of an industrial plant reflected in its stainless steel surface. The accompanying text references the inspiration Watt drew for his steam engine from the kettle and details "another great lesson the teakettle has taught," namely the need to dissolve and eliminate water-deposited scale through the use of Dowell solvents.
Notably, the image is attributed to artist, illustrator, and inventor Arthur Herschel Lidov (1917-1990), who created cover art and illustrations for many national publications, including Time, Fortune, and The Saturday Evening Post.
Property | Value |
---|---|
Creator of work | |
Artist | |
Format | |
Genre | |
Extent |
|
Language | |
Inscription |
|
Subject | |
Rights | Public Domain Mark 1.0 |
Credit line |
|
Institutional location
Department | |
---|---|
Collection | |
Physical container |
|
View collection guide View in library catalog
Related Items
Cite as
Dow Chemical Company. “The Second Lesson the Teakettle Taught Us,” 1946. Advertisements from the Dow Chemical Historical Collection, Box 7. Science History Institute. Philadelphia. https://digital.sciencehistory.org/works/pr76f4234.
This citation is automatically generated and may contain errors.