View allAll Photos Tagged kitchenware
WEEK 39 – Covington Kroger Closing, Set 2
At the back of that same kitchenware aisle we see another of the local flair photos posted along the wall, near where the lunchmeat corner transitions into the straight wall of the rear actionway.
If you look closely at the wire kitchenware shelving units on either edge of the photo, you’ll see some photocopied 20% off signs taped to the shelves. I’m not 100% sure if those discounts were to be found at every Kroger that week (it was Labor Day weekend, after all), or if they were here only because of the store’s impending closure – if so, this area would represent one of the few merchandise categories to have special markdowns.
(c) 2021 Retail Retell
These places are public so these photos are too, but just as I tell where they came from, I'd appreciate if you'd say who :)
T G Green, based at Church Gresley near Burton-on-Trent, were famous manufacturers of kitchen ware - notably the blue and white striped 'Cornish Ware". The pottery closed some years ago, sadly, and the name is now continued simply as a brand. This catalogue cover for the very '30s style 'Streamline' wear dates I suspect from the latter half of the decade.
Finally organized all the vintage housewares last night! I put all my enamelware (Cathrineholm + Dansk Kobenstyle) all together in a giant rainbow! It *almost* fit on one shelf, had to stick three pieces on the smaller one along with some of my favorite Pyrex. I love seeing this in my sewing room!
WEEK 48 – Carriage Crossing Macy’s, Set V
My only other shot of the kitchenware department is this one, from within the department itself, taking a close-up look at one of the customer service counters as well as the eponymous sign hanging above it. Okay, well, I guess it’s more accurate to say we’re only looking at the sign – the counter itself is pretty well hidden away behind all of those display fixtures, haha! I’m pretty certain that all of the hanging and directional signage in the store, such as the one we’re looking at here, were added by Macy’s, and that none of that stuff is original to Parisian. That said, it fits in well enough, inoffensive and not clashing with any of the numerous other non-Macy’s elements.
In the background, notice the standalone shelving unit in front of the large picture window – a technique we also saw repeated at the Southaven Gordmans, incidentally, but more importantly, that’s a spot I want you to try and remember for the future. It’s going to be a long while until I get to it, but once I eventually post my liquidation photoset from this store, we’ll see – with that shelving unit as a guide – that this kitchenware department endured some major changes in the time between my visits in 2018 and 2021...
(c) 2021 Retail Retell
These places are public so these photos are too, but just as I tell where they came from, I’d appreciate if you’d say who :)
SET 2 – Pier 1 Closing, Southaven
As part of the whole kitchenware and tabletop ordeal, a lot of Pier 1’s displays on this side of the store consisted of dining tables topped with decorations, similar in vein to what we saw on the opposite side of the store with furniture and chairs topped with, well, decorations. Same logic, but surprisingly fairly different end results, visually speaking!
As I believe I mentioned at one point earlier in this stour, Easter had been about a month and a half before these pictures were taken, but that was smack in the middle of the time the whole US was shut down, so a lot of the merchandise you see here was unsold (and indeed, not even available for sale) from that preceding holiday, such as that bunny on the table on the right.
More from here after our next round of Oxford Kroger pics, so stick around!
(c) 2022 Retail Retell
These places are public so these photos are too, but just as I tell where they came from, I'd appreciate if you'd say who :)
87 Napoli
Venditore di padelle [pan sellers]
Vintage photographic postcard, c.1903, uncirculated, undivided back, published by A. de Simone, edit. Stradi di Chiaia 234, Naples, Italy.
© Casas-Rodríguez Collection, 2009. Some rights reserved.
So we went into upscale Galeria Kaufhof Düsseldorf on the Königsallee. The basement kitchenware court was advertising Chocolatier sweets.
Too much about SHOCKO:
At the very beginning, the company was named Wahana Rejeki Lancar, PD. It was incorporated in 2003 in Bandung, West Java, Indonesia with just one small machine.
On the same year, SCHOKO brand was launched. The brand name was derived from the German term “Schokolade” which means chocolate.
Introduced to food and beverage industry, SCHOKO was armed with only one product which is Special Processed Cocoa Powder.
In 2007, based on the rapid growth of the business and chance to expand the cocoa and chocolate business potentials, the company’s name was changed into bigger scope. It became Wahana Interfood Nusantara, PT.
Wahana Interfood Nusantara, PT. provides services in the fields of product development which enable us to cater different customer needs and respond to the varying customer preferences.
Our products are manufactured under premium brand of SCHOKO and various premium brands for overseas.
Now, SCHOKO products are present for food manufacturers, food services and retailers in nearly 33 provinces in Indonesia and many countries around the world.
As part of our expansion plans, we had also focused on world-wide markets.
In Indonesia, SCHOKO has become one of the most competitive premium cocoa and chocolate brands. Until now SCHOKO is also known as the first Indonesian brand that produces an array of premium chocolate powder drink product.
174:365
I wanted to see how many different colored 501s I have! The answer is a lot. These four are my favorite.
Friendship, Daisy, Turquoise, and Horizon Blue :)
My wife sometimes uses this small, glazed, hand-crafted pottery bowl for serving condiments at the dinner table.
Taken for the "Macro Mondays" theme of 12/4/2023: TABLEWARE.
Kitchen print for all Scandinavian design lovers and admirers of Stig Lindbergs kitchenware.
Make your Kitchen shine with this print featuring selection of best Lindbergs patterns, Bersa, Spisa Ribb, Adam & Eve and Karneval.
As a piece of cutlery or kitchenware, a fork is a tool consisting of a handle with several narrow tines (usually two, three or four) on one end. The fork, as an eating utensil, has been a feature primarily of the West. In the American style of fork etiquette, the fork is held with tines curving up; however, in continental style, the fork is held with the tines curving down.
BRONZE Medalist - TECHNIQUE: SHALLOW DOF Daily Theme Contest - September 2009. Color Photo Award - PREMIER.
Some of my last finds. I had to stop my thrifting rhythm a little because my home is getting smaller!! But I couldn't believe my luck when I saw these Pyrex beauties!! And two patterns that I adore!
To sum up:
- Pyrex "Dots" orange bowl
- Pyrex "Rainbow Stripes" yellow bowl
- Arcopal "Crazy Flowers" casserole
- Arcopal "Sunflower" plates
- Le Creuset Fondue pot
My mom collects 50's Kitchenware! Who would have thought we would collect from the same era, well I guess it is the cutest one :)
The Craftsman section peeks out from behind kitchenware and some small kitchen electrics in the foreground, at the Wolfchase Sears in east Memphis. This batch is another of the pre-liquidaption pics, with this one actually being another from back in 2014. I wasn't sure if the person seen in this photo (down the aisle on the right) was real, or some sort of display (which seems unlikely). At any rate he was smiling, so I just blurred the photo for privacy, as opposed to removing the head (via Photoshop, not literally :P) this time! This guy was probably amused to see someone taking photos in a store whose days were likely numbered, though neither of us knew that for sure back in 2014.
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Sears, 1996-built (projected closing by year end 2018), Germantown Pkwy. at Hwy 64, Memphis
SET 4 – Goodman/Getwell Kroger, Post-Remodel
As we look out across the back actionway from our current perch within the kitchenware department, we see that the frontmost portion of this section is occupied not by further kitchenware items but instead by some dump bins of promotional and/or sale items. This seems like a good use of space in two ways: one, Kroger likes to have its sale stuff in highly visible, highly trafficked spots near the grand aisle anyway, and two, the low height of the dump bins allows for some pretty good sightlines – this shot serving as a good example of that (I hope!), with additional pics to come in the future as well.
(c) 2023 Retail Retell
These places are public so these photos are too, but just as I tell where they came from, I'd appreciate if you'd say who :)
One of a kind hand-made and glazed ceramic bowl that kozy created for our exhibition "End of Summer Never Ends" at Giant Robot in Los Angeles. 4 inches tall by 13 inches diameter.
The wine area is one of the many little sections I didn't get a photo of on my early November 2016 visit to the Union Ave. Kroger. But the kitchenware section is another area that looks fairly large, given the somewhat smaller size of the store.
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Kroger, 2016-built, Union Ave. at S. Idlewild St., Memphis
The old Judge kitchenware offices in Wood Lane Cradley Heath. The Judge looks suitably unimpressed.
Copyright Geoff Dowling; all rights reserved
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