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Get Nostalgic With 18 Christmas-Themed Magazine Ads From the 1950s

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Santa Claus, his reindeer and a tree surrounded by gifts are some of the Christmas season’s most iconic images—and, as advertisers have long known, they’re also some of the best ways to get shoppers in a spending mood. So it’s no surprise that December issues of TIME tend to be full of seasonal advertisements featuring those Christmas symbols.

Now, decades after they were first published, these ads have taken on the rosy glow of classic Americana. And they also offer a window into how businesses of the 1950s pictured an idealized holiday season: jolly, prosperous and white in more ways than one. Among the images are a Norman Rockwell-painted Plymouth ad, a classic Coke-drinking Santa, a sexist Santa hocking detergent and even a festive two-page spread touting cans.

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Post-War Ads from 1945

An ad that appeared in the Aug. 20, 1945, issue of TIME. Plastics from the chemical company Monsanto are sold to G.I.s for the "decade after Victory, [when] your 'Castles in the Air' will become Homes in America."TIME / Monsanto
An ad that appeared in the Aug. 20, 1945, issue of TIME. As a group of G.i.s returns to find that those on the home front have done their part, Caterpillar Tractor Co. encourages civilians to keep buying War Bonds with "no slacking off until the evil thing that threatens our homes has been wholly vanquished."TIME / Caterpillar Tractor
An ad that appeared in the Aug. 20, 1945, issue of TIME. The Douglas DC-6 plane is touted as "First home...in war or peace."TIME / Douglas
An ad that appeared in the Aug. 20, 1945, issue of TIME. Wartime research that went into the General Motors Aeroprop propeller will benefit civilian aviation too, this ad explains.TIME / General Motors
An ad that appeared in the Aug. 27, 1945, issue of TIME. The postwar return to full production at factories will be an opportunity for businesses, and "foresighted wiring in postwar plans" will keep those factories efficient.TIME / Anaconda Wire & Cable
An ad that appeared in the Aug. 27, 1945, issue of TIME. Civilians are encouraged to rely on air transportation even as military aviation winds down. TIME / The Airlines of the United States
An ad that appeared in the Aug. 27, 1945, issue of TIME. A G.I. returning to his office job is celebrated by grateful colleagues...who thank him by putting his desk near the soda machine.TIME / Pepsi
An ad that appeared in the Aug. 27, 1945, issue of TIME. "As soon as war conditions permit," Kodak promises, full-color film will be once again available for civilian use.TIME / Kodak
An ad that appeared in the Aug. 27, 1945, issue of TIME. A two-page spread from Buick reminds readers that returning G.I.s deserve cars that are "nice to come home to" even as the war work continues. TIME / Buick
An ad that appeared in the Aug. 27, 1945, issue of TIME. Once radio are fully available at peacetime production levels, this ad warns, demand will be very high—so better to order in advance.TIME / Emerson Radio
An ad that appeared in the Aug. 27, 1945, issue of TIME. The record-keeping needs of war were addressed by Diebold office equipment, this page reminds readers, and the problems of the reconversion period can be thus solved too.TIME / Diebold
An ad that appeared in the Sept. 3, 1945, issue of TIME. Hire a veteran, says this public-service announcement paid for by BF Goodrich, to improve your business' morale and discipline.TIME / The B.F. Goodrich Company
An ad that appeared in the Sept. 3, 1945, issue of TIME. If Army and Navy hospitals—as well as "airmen whose faces are susceptible to frostbite"—use Remington Electric Shavers, why wouldn't those men keep using the same shavers after the war? And if it takes a little while for civilian production levels to increase, the ad notes, the wait will be worthwhile.TIME / Remington Electric Shavers
An ad that appeared in the Sept. 3, 1945, issue of TIME. Exide Batteries honors the Navy and Merchant Marine, while reminding readers that the ships on which those men served contained many battery-powered tools for which dependability was crucial.TIME / Exide Batteries
An ad that appeared in the Sept. 10, 1945, issue of TIME. The medical ultraviolet glass lamps made by Corning that are shown in this ad aren't actually weapons, but the company uses a wartime analogy to compare them to an "ack-ack gun" that could be used against disease.TIME / Corning
An ad that appeared in the Sept. 10, 1945, issue of TIME. What does a sewing machine and a radio program of 1890s standards have to do with the war? This ad for a Tobe Filterizer that prevents household electronic equipment (like the sewing machine) from causing radio static is touted as a way that "your post war home can have both."TIME / Tobe
An ad that appeared in the Sept. 17, 1945, issue of TIME. Though this chocolate advertisement doesn't call out the war specifically, the man giving a woman his hat and a Whitman's Sampler has clearly recently returned from the service.TIME / Whitman's
An ad that appeared in the Sept. 17, 1945, issue of TIME. "If it hadn't been for the war and shortages," this ad declares, "lots of families might never have learned how many different kinds of those good Campbell's Soups there are!"TIME / Campbell's
An ad that appeared in the Sept. 17, 1945, issue of TIME. This tribute to veterans plays on a little boy asking his father for an explanation of the lapel pin given to honorably discharged veterans—and promises that "as [servicemembers] go on to final victory they have first call on Camels."TIME / Camel
A Caterpillar ad from the Dec. 18, 1958, issue of TIMECaterpillar / TIME
A Columbia Records ad from the Dec. 10, 1951, issue of TIMEColumbia Records / TIME
A Manhattan ties ad from the Dec. 10, 1951, issue of TIMEManhattan / TIME
A Plymouth ad from the Dec. 24, 1951, issue of TIMEPlymouth / TIME
A Coca-Cola ad from the Dec. 24, 1951, issue of TIMECoca-Cola / TIME
An All ad from the Dec. 8, 1952, issue of TIMEAll / TIME
An American Airlines ad from the Dec. 7, 1953, issue of TIMEAmerican Airlines / TIME
A Miller ad from the Dec. 14, 1953, issue of TIMEMiller / TIME
A Diamond Chemicals ad from the Dec. 6, 1954, issue of TIMEDiamond Chemicals / TIME
A Cadillac ad from the Dec. 5, 1955, issue of TIMECadillac / TIME
A Kodak ad from the Dec. 3, 1956, issue of TIMEKodak / TIME
A Hormel ad from the Dec. 3, 1956, issue of TIMEHormel
A Continental Can Company ad from the Dec. 3, 1956, issue of TIMEContinental / TIME
A Bell Telephone ad from the Dec. 10, 1956, issue of TIMEBell Telephone / TIME
A Remington razor ad from the Dec. 10, 1956, issue of TIMERemington / TIME
An IBM ad from the Dec. 23, 1957, issue of TIMEIBM / TIME
A Champion Papers ad from the Dec. 21, 1959, issue of TIMEChampion Papers / TIME
An in-house ad for TIME Magazine from the Dec. 14, 1953, issueTIME

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Write to Lily Rothman at lily.rothman@time.com