Danish Retro (Pt 4)

Welcome to the fourth part of Danish Retro. In this edition we look at some half-page adverts found in comic books in Denmark in the 1960s, 70s and 80s.

Part Three can be seen here


Lagerman Caramel Bars. 1969.


Dandy Chewing Gum. 1970.


Kellogg’s Rice Crispies. Pif Paf Puf (Snap Crackle and Pop). 1967.


Sun-Maid Raisins. 1980.


Kellogg’s Stamp Collector Offer. 1970. Frimærkesamler


Matchbox. 1967.


Cowboys and Indians. 1969.


Corgi Farms. Porsche and Lotus. 1967.


Corgi Batmobile and Batboat and Chevrolet Stingray. 1967.


Corgi Transporter. 1967.


Britains. 1970.


Board Games. 1987.


Disney and MOTU Storybook and Cassettes. 1987.


Disney and MOTU Storybook and Cassettes. 1988.


Playmobil. 1980.

Thanks for looking  🙂

Danish Retro (Pt 3)

Welcome to the third part of Danish Retro.

In this edition we look at a variety of products as advertised in Denmark in the 1970s and 80s. Featuring: Jan books, Famous Five books, Transformers, Action Force, Kinder Surprise, MB Games, Matchbox cars, Matilda dolls, Lego, Tony the Tiger and Coco Pops. Thanks for looking!

Part Two can be seen here


Jan

Denmark. 1976.


Famous Five Books with… skateboarding

Denmark. 1987.


Transformers Panini stickers

Panini Transformers. Denmark.


Action Force

Action Force stickers. Denmark.

Denmark. 1988.


Mon Chhichi

Denmark. 1980.


Kinder Surprise

1988.

1988.

1989.


Superman

Denmark.


MB Games

MB Games. Denmark. 1988.


Matchbox

Denmark. 1980.


Matilda Doll

Denmark. 1980.

 


Lego

Denmark. 1978.

Denmark. 1980.


Denmark. 1981.


Kellogg’s Frosties

1988.

1984.

1986.


Coco Pops

1988.


 

Danish Retro (Pt 2. Playmobil)

Welcome to the second part of Danish Retro.

In this edition we look at 1970s and 80s Playmobil, as advertised in comic books from Denmark.

Big thanks once again to our guest image contributor Jaltesoren. Part One can be viewed here

Denmark. 1989. Image supplied by Jaltesorensen.


Denmark. 1987. Image supplied by Jaltesorensen.


Denmark. 1982. Image supplied by Jaltesorensen.


Denmark. 1978. Image supplied by Jaltesorensen.


Denmark. 1979. Image supplied by Jaltesorensen.


Denmark. 1981. Image supplied by Jaltesorensen.


Denmark. 1978. Image supplied by Jaltesorensen.


Denmark. 1983. Image supplied by Jaltesorensen.


Denmark. 1978. Image supplied by Jaltesorensen.


Denmark. 1981. Image supplied by Jaltesorensen.


Denmark. 1984. Image supplied by Jaltesorensen.


Denmark. 1980.


Look out for another installment of Danish Retro coming soon!

Thanks for looking.


 

Danish Retro (Pt 1. Lego)

“What have you got there?” I asked Wooof this morning, as he emerged from the mail room. “More bills? Eviction notices?”. “Nope,” replied the cat, “it’s a bunch of new ads… all the way from Denmark.”

We’d like to say a big thank you to TVTA reader Jaltesorensen for offering to share with us almost a hundred vintage Danish adverts from the 1970s, 80s and 90s! As a fan of Danish advertising, and with the site peppered with dozens of examples from my own collection, the chance to add even more is a pleasure and delight. So… it’s straight off to work for the office cat and me, as we make for the editing room to post up part one of what will surely be a three-parter of Danish vintage delights.

And we promise this time there’ll be no crazy clown ads to kick things off!

Cue editing room sounds…

… sounds like…

Sturr… sturr… nummer…

Sturr… sturr… nummer…

Sturr… sturr… nummer…

 

Bubble Gum. Denmark. 1987. Image supplied by Jaltesorensen.


Smarties. Denmark. 1991. Image supplied by Jaltesorensen.


Oops, sorry, we accidently lied about the clown adverts.

Moving on, part one of our Danish Retro will focus on Lego.

Denmark is the home of Lego, and we begin with two ads for Fabuland sets. According to the good folk over at Brickipedia Fabuland was a Lego theme that ran from 1979 to 1989. The theme included sets depicting the land of Fabuland, and introduced us to characters built of humanoid bodies with animal heads.

Fabuland by Lego. Denmark. 1979. Image supplied by Jaltesorensen.


Fabuland by Lego. Denmark. 1980. Image supplied by Jaltesorensen.


Next up,

Wizards, pirates, knights, Robin Hood, the wild west, and other sets…

Lego medieval / fantasy sets. Denmark. 1986. Image supplied by Jaltesorensen.


Lego pirate sets. Denmark. 1989. Image supplied by Jaltesorensen.


Lego pirate sets. Denmark. 1991. Image supplied by Jaltesorensen.


Lego knights / medieval sets. Denmark. 1987. Image supplied by Jaltesorensen.


Denmark. 1985.


Denmark. 1984.


Lego knights / medieval sets. Denmark. 1987. Image supplied by Jaltesorensen.


Robin Hood.

Was ever there a legend that took from the 1%, and gave to the many not the few?

Lego Robin Hood. Denmark. 1988. Image supplied by Jaltesorensen.


Lego wild west sets. Denmark. 1976. Image supplied by Jaltesorensen.


Lego sets various. Denmark. 1982. Image supplied by Jaltesorensen.


Denmark. 1980.


Denmark. 1978.


Rumfart!

Stop giggling at the back. Rumfart means space exploration.

As some of our readers know, Wooof and I groove on space exploration. Anything space-y is always a bonus at TVTA. Lego released some amazingly cool space sets throughout the 1980s. I mean, just look at the care taken to create the following dioramas.

Lego space sets. Denmark. 1987. Image supplied by Jaltesorensen.


Lego space sets. Denmark. 1988. Image supplied by Jaltesorensen.


Lego space sets. Denmark. 1983. Image supplied by Jaltesorensen.


Denmark. 1981.


Lego space sets. Denmark. 1989. Image supplied by Jaltesorensen.


Denmark. 1988.


We end part one of Danish Retro with two ads from a Lego line I had never heard of.

If only Lego made jewellery…

Well, they did. Briefly. Brickipedia says the line was called Scala, and featured jewellery and beauty accessory sets which were primarily aimed at younger girls.

Lego Scala. Denmark. 1979. Image supplied by Jaltesorensen.


Lego Scala. Denmark. 1980. Image supplied by Jaltesorensen


That’s all for now. Look out for Danish Retro part two coming soon!

Thanks for looking.


Late editorial: No vintage clowns were harmed in this TVTA Danish special. Suggested reading: A State of Denmark by Raymond Derek (1970). News recap: Bargain Basement Brexit Britain Windows XP Govt Greatest Hits 2017 Now That’s What I Call Shite featuring the hit twoones “in strong and stable we trust”, “We will screw you over”, “Give us your money tossers” and “the people have decided!”. Elsewhere, a ferret-headed North American bod in a suit nods in approval. Elsewhere, France fends off its own populist onslaught. Elsewhere, guns that shoot with a mushrooming finality point their muzzles around the globe. Sport: Remains in a state of corruption and greed. Foxes of England beware… you will not be gassed as your badger brethren, but will be hunted down in the name of traditional sport. Weather Report: The sun still shines, the oceans move, and the winds continue to blow… imploring us to harness their power. Long-range forecast: grim but with bright spells, and a high pressure of hope. Words of the day: In. Give. Don’t.