News   GLOBAL  |  Apr 02, 2020
 8.5K     0 
News   GLOBAL  |  Apr 01, 2020
 39K     0 
News   GLOBAL  |  Apr 01, 2020
 4.7K     0 

collations

New Member
Member Bio
Joined
May 28, 2010
Messages
51
Reaction score
1
well, let's start with some coca-cola storefronts ...

318 Parliament St - September 1979

002-018-n015.jpg


229 Church St - September 1979

002-018-n027.jpg


437 Jones Ave - April 5, 1999

009-125-cn029.jpg


966 Kingston Rd - April 28, 2003

012-046-cn017.jpg
 
Followed by some red letters on a yellow background ...

Classic Variety - Queen St W - March 14, 1999

009-121-cn003.jpg


Honest Variety - Queen St W - March 28, 1999

009-125-cn016.jpg
 
very cool idea for a thread! there are countless great storefronts around the city, many of them still looking as if they are 30-40 years in the past. hope you'll be posting more, should make a nice little project for summer...
 
and here's a few kit-kat fronts ...

205 Brock Ave - February 28, 1999

009-119-n011.jpg


1148 Queen St E - April 30, 1999

010-011-cn013.jpg


Roncesvalles Ave - September 27, 2009

DSC_1848v2.jpg
 
and here's a few kit-kat fronts ...

205 Brock Ave - February 28, 1999

009-119-n011.jpg


1148 Queen St E - April 30, 1999

010-011-cn013.jpg


Roncesvalles Ave - September 27, 2009

DSC_1848v2.jpg


i wonder why Kit Kat became the bar of choice when it came to signage. what about Caramilk or Crispy Crunch? Oh Henry? out of all the bars available it seems like Kit Kat was the only one that was promoted that way. maybe Toronto was a real "Kit Kat type of place".....
 
407d7f58.gif


Dundas west of Bathurst, a few weeks back. not a variety store now--but it had been. you can barely see the 7UP sign on the left and right end of the sign. the sign overall is a great handpainted palimpsest--besides the 7UP logo, you can see the remnants of the lettering marking the buildings earlier incarnations as both barber shop and jewelry store.

by the way, collations: did you ever photograph the NW corner of Dundas and Bathurst in the 1980's? there is a hideous design build medical center on the corner now (avec Tim Hortons), but it used to be home to a very picturesque and rundown set of Victorians facing Bathurst, one of which housed an ancient variety store....
 
i wonder why Kit Kat became the bar of choice when it came to signage. what about Caramilk or Crispy Crunch? Oh Henry? out of all the bars available it seems like Kit Kat was the only one that was promoted that way. maybe Toronto was a real "Kit Kat type of place".....

It seems that chocolate bar signage took its place as the "my-store-is-the-same-as-you-store" signage after the abolition of point-of-purchase cigarette advertising. That signage, which was mostly Export "A", with some Player's (and a bit of Du Maurier), had replaced the previously omni-present Coca-Cola signage that had dominated Toronto's commercial streetscapes for decades, (with some infiltration by Pepsi and other brands).

Kit Kat, a Nestle brand, emerged almost overnight to dominate corner store signage in Toronto. Nestle also put up other signage, such as some Nestle's Crunch signs, and some generic Nestle signs such as these ...

976 Queen St E - March 30, 2003

012-037-cn022.jpg


1210 Bloor St W - September 27, 2009

DSC_1786v2.jpg


Others also got into the variety/corner store sign game at the same time. Here's two Kraft Food's Cadbury Adams Group attempts, with their Trident Gum storefronts ...

533 Manning Ave - November 1, 1998

009-110-cn004.jpg


242 Annette St - October 18, 2009

DSC_1987v2.jpg


And here's an example of a Mars Inc generated Mars bar storefront, a corner store, with both sides presented here ...

Mt Pleasant Rd - November 28, 2009

DSC_2362v2.jpg


DSC_2366v2.jpg
 
407d7f58.gif


Dundas west of Bathurst, a few weeks back. not a variety store now--but it had been. you can barely see the 7UP sign on the left and right end of the sign. the sign overall is a great handpainted palimpsest--besides the 7UP logo, you can see the remnants of the lettering marking the buildings earlier incarnations as both barber shop and jewelry store.

Yes, this is an astounding palimpsest of a storefront!!!

760 Dundas St W, photographed February 28, 1988, when Eugene's Jewellery was still in business, with the clock in place over the entrance ...

007-093-n009.jpg


And later, after Eugene's closed for business, June 24, 2001 ...

011-021-cn015.jpg
 
by the way, collations: did you ever photograph the NW corner of Dundas and Bathurst in the 1980's? there is a hideous design build medical center on the corner now (avec Tim Hortons), but it used to be home to a very picturesque and rundown set of Victorians facing Bathurst, one of which housed an ancient variety store....

Apparently, thedeepend, I did!!!

The north-west corner of Bathurst St and Dundas St W, July 1980 ...

002-087-n026.jpg


002-087-n023.jpg
 
Speaking of Lottario, we mustn't forget the modern genre of variety store whose primary advertiser is OLG--a rather depressing cutting-to-the-chase, that.

IIRC Bi-Rite may actually have been a small chain--the Bi-Way or Bargain Harold's of its really grotty time (which was obviously nearing its end at the time these shots were taken).

Note on the PCC streetcar to the left: an ad for that then-new prepaid-transit concoction known as the Metropass...
 
Apparently, thedeepend, I did!!!

The north-west corner of Bathurst St and Dundas St W, July 1980 ...

002-087-n026.jpg


002-087-n023.jpg

wow, thank you for those! i had forgotten about the By-Rite Store. for some reason i have always really missed this little strip. it was one of the last truly ramshackle corners in the heart of downtown. its great to see it again.....
 
Last edited:
533 Manning Ave - November 1, 1998

009-110-cn004.jpg

the name of this place always perplexed me.
why stop with with just OJJJ's? why not OJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJ's?
the skies the limit really, once you start down that road.
i always assumed that it actually used to just be OJ's, until about oh, 1995 or so....

d8294176.jpg
 
Those variety store photos are a wonderful collection and an insight to one of our cultural treasures.
I'd love to see a series showing the interiors of these places. They're usually jam-packed with the necessities of real life.
A question: Do the advertisers (Coke, Kit-Kat, Nestle, Trident, Mars) provide the store signs for free?
 
Hope you don't mind if we play along a bit... Here's a Coca-Cola storefront on Dundas just west of Sherbourne, Sept 22, 2006:

drink-coca-cola.jpg


(Originally shown on my photo-blog, here.)

The participation is welcome! Please post more!

Here's an earlier version of this storefront from August 11, 1997. I'm not sure if the store was operative at the time, given the seeming omnipresence of the locked front gates, but the sign is still in place overhead ...

009-041-n004.jpg
 

Back
Top