This short advertisement promotes Player’s No. 6 cigarettes as a gift for all your friends at Christmas. To see more from The Irish Adverts Project, click here.
A series of people demonstrate their abilities in a range of sports, highlighting the message that ‘a consistently high standard is a measure of greatness’. The voiceover explains how this is also true of Player’s No. 6 cigarettes. To see more from The Irish Adverts Project, click here.
An advertisement using humorous scenarios to demonstrate how people are changing to Player’s No. 6 cigarettes. To see more from The Irish Adverts Project, click here.
Advertisement introducing the new range of Schweppes Slimline beverages, containing only one calorie per drink. A drink is poured into a glass which gradually changes shape to become slimmer. To see more from The Irish Adverts Project, click here.
Advertisement for Lemon Quix washing up liquid, in which the product is tested against a competitive brand. Two women test the 2 brands at Dublin Airport and Quix is found to provide better value for money. To see more from The Irish Adverts Project, click here.
Advertisement for Quix washing up liquid, in which the product is tested against an unnamed brand. Two women, on board a B&I car ferry, wash thousands of plates and discover that Quix lasts longer than the competing brand. To see more from The Irish Adverts Project, click here.
Advertisement for Quix washing up liquid which takes places on the CIE Express train from Dublin to Cork. Quix is tested against an unnamed brand and is found to last longer. To see more from The Irish Adverts Project, click here.
Advertisement for Kosangas in which a woman cooks food while the voiceover explains the benefits of Kosangas. To see more from The Irish Adverts Project, click here.
An advertisement for Kosangas, in which the various ways people depend on Kosangas are demonstrated. A voiceover explains why: ‘Quick heat, clean heat, quick clean Kosangas’. To see more from The Irish Adverts Project, click here.
Advertisement for Odlum’s cream flour, in which the Odlum’s owl tells a young girl that he has taken one of her mother’s buns as he was testing that the baking was perfect. To see more from The Irish Adverts Project, click here.