Men's and Boys' Underwear Packaging
The Vintage Skivvies Brand
Men's and Boys' Underwear Packaging
Underwear Home Page New Products Specials My Account Archives Underwear
Man Wearing Union Suit, Long Underwear
Categories
Derby Underwear Derby Derby Underwear
Underwear
Fruit of the Loom Underwear Fruit of the Loom Fruit of the Loom Underwear
Boxer Shorts
Hanes Underwear Hanes Hanes Underwear
Boxer Briefs
Jockey Underwear Jockey Jockey Underwear
Briefs
Lord Dayton Underwear Lord Dayton Lord Dayton Underwear
Union Suit
Love Denver Colorado Love Denver Colorado Love Denver Colorado
Boxers
Ocoee Underwear Ocoee Ocoee Underwear
Vintage Underwear
Robby Boy Underwear Robby Boy Robby Boy Underwear
Vintage Skivvies Men's Underwear
Vintage Skivvies Underwear Vintage Skivvies Brand Vintage Skivvies Underwear
Old Drawers
Vintage Skivvies Store
Underwear Hot News Underwear
Underwear
Underwear The Runway Underwear
Underwear
Underwear Website Awards Underwear
Underwear
Underwear Retailers Underwear
Underwear
Underwear Sizing Chart Underwear
Underwear
Privacy Notice
Underwear
Underwear Return Policy Underwear
Underwear
Underwear Terms of Use Underwear
Underwear
Archives
Underwear History Underwear
Underwear
Underwear Ad Gallery Underwear
Underwear
Underwear Packaging Underwear
Underwear Articles Underwear
Underwear
Underwear Glossary Underwear
Underwear
Home To Vintage Skivvies Home Archives To Vintage Skivvies Archives Packaging
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5

Early union suits came loose on the merchant's shelf or wrapped in thin paper. But by the 1920s, the elegance of boxed underwear was considered a mark of distinction. Allen A even put a rather sophisticated paper band around it’s union suit before nestling it in watermarked tissue paper inside a box.

Packaging had its marketing uses, too. When Cooper Bennington union suits were $1.00 each, ads often insinuated some kind of bargain at $3.00 the box for 3 suits. Topkis even sold their suits by the half dozen ... at $6.00 the box!

Derby Brand Boxer ShortsBy the 1940s and 1950s, with the increased popularity of shorts and separate shirts, individual packaging in cellophane became the norm. The industry stalwarts ... Hanes and Jockey ... all bragged that they were "cellophane wrapped."

With the 1950s came the rise of the petrochemical industries ... and plastic. Mayo Spruce was a pioneer in the switch from cellophane to plastic. But plastic packaging became the gold standard for underwear merchandising when it was adopted by the incredibly successful Jockey brand by Coopers Inc.

Browse through this section of the Archives ... for sheer interests sake ... and see focus not only on underwear, but also on how it was packaged.<<


The History of Men's Underwear Live Vintage Skivvies Auctions on ebay!

Specials | Advanced Search | Contact Us | Create an Account | Log In
Copyright © 2011 Vintage Skivvies, LLC Powered by osCommerce | Privacy Notice

PayPal, Visa and MasterCard