Advertising electric lighting
This online exhibition explores electric lighting within the home. It briefly describes life before electricity, early developments in lighting and how the benefits of electricity were promoted.
Electricity may be commonplace to us today but when it was first introduced it had to compete heavily with gas as the main power supply. It did not sell itself; it had to be cleverly marketed to appeal to customers. After the First World War a body known as the Electrical Development Association (EDA) was formed by electrical manufacturers, electricity supply undertakings and the Institution of Electrical Engineers (now the IET).
Its aim was to promote electricity in every possible way by coordinating advertising. The Electrical Association for Women published many adverts in their magazine, The Electric Age, aimed at women to emphasise the attractiveness of electric lighting in the home.
Advertising
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A selection of advertisements from The Electrical Age and the S.P. Thompson Pamphlet collection. Favourite advertising themes included emphasizing the health benefits of good lighting, the comfort it brings to the home, its cost efficiency compared with older forms of lighting such as candles and the strength of the new bulbs and lights as illustrated with the elephant.
Even themes referring to patriotism were popular- 'The lamp that lights the Empire'. Notice how the British Empire is alight with this new technology whilst the rest of the world is left behind in darkness.
