Is "Plastics" the Word?
- 1944-Mar-27
Color print advertisement for Dow Plastics. The advertisement shows a composite illustration of historical figures, include a glassblower, two figures in the style of ancient Egyptian art, and a man in a lab coat working with machinery. The accompanying text traces the change over time in the meaning of the word "plastic," from an adjective to a noun used for a specific material. The text also describes the different qualities of several Dow plastic products, including Saran, Styron and Ethocel. This advertisement appeared on the inside cover of the March 27, 1944 edition of Newsweek. It is part of a series of advertisements titled "Five Minute Forum on Plastics." Notably, the advertisement was produced during World War II and bears the Company's wartime tagline "Dow: Chemicals Indispensable to Industry and Victory."
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Dow Chemical Company. “Is ‘Plastics’ the Word?,” March 27, 1944. Advertisements from the Dow Chemical Historical Collection, Box 9. Science History Institute. Philadelphia. https://digital.sciencehistory.org/works/xq8y9u8.
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