Scanning Around With Gene: Animals in Advertising
Animals have long been a regular theme in advertising, especially when anthropomorphized. Except for obvious ties to products like dog food and pet products, animals usually have nothing to do with the goods or services advertised, but we connect with them and the products nonetheless, and we get a good feeling when a company is associated with cute animals.
I often wonder what the meetings at an ad agency are like when the topic of animals comes up. It must be hard to think of anything new to do with them, although special effects have allowed us to make animals seem to talk, dance, and do other human-like things. And we always seem to fall for animals (or talking babies) with an irreverent or comical persona.
So I wasn’t surprised to find a great series of print ads featuring animals from the Eastern Corporation, a paper maker in Bangor, Maine, for its line of Atlantic bond printing paper. They all appeared in a series from 1946 that ran in American Printer magazine. Click on any image for a larger version.


The company managed to vaguely connect the animals to the product through small poems that appeared with each illustration, which then tied in loosely to the ad copy. But like many paper company ads, the main point was to simply show off the paper and the printing quality you could achieve with it.


Paper company ads are somewhat unique in that regard and have often showcased interesting art for the sake of art. I mean, what can you really show about a paper product other than the paper itself? So most paper ads are inserts, printed on the actual stock.
The Eastern Manufacturing Company opened a pulp and paper mill in South Brewer, Maine, in 1889 and soon became the city’s largest employer. The plant began as a sawmill with the intention of making paper from leftover lumber and scraps.


Eastern soon specialized in fine-grade paper and Atlantic Bond became its trademark line. The mill closed in 2004.



One interesting note on Eastern is that the company had a standing offer to pay $5 to any boy who could climb all the stairs leading to the top of a 173-foot chimney at the plant. Turns out the first successful climber was a 17-year-old girl, Dione Polliot, who received $10 for her triumph in 1900, and a story in the New York Times.



Paper companies still advertise, and their promotions are some of the most interesting design projects in the market. Have you seen any recent examples of animal art from paper companies?
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This article was last modified on May 15, 2023
This article was first published on November 4, 2011
