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A toda hora! Y en todas partes
This advertisement for Asunción brand yerba mate was published by a Paraguayan company in the Argentine periodical Revista Aconagua and aimed at Argentine consumers. The tagline is "A toda hora! Y en todas partes" (At every hour and in all parts)
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A London Coffee-house With Men Working
A painting of a group of men sitting down who are reading, writing and talking. On the left side, a woman sits under a canopy waiting to serve the men.
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A Coffeehouse In the Time of Charles II
A black and white print from a woodcut portraying six men sitting around a table drinking coffee. One man is serving the group.
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Video Advertisement for Yerba Mate Aguila
A young missionary chases after a girl. He is dressed in a gaucho hat and the girl changes clothes into a white dress. Both animated characters turn into Aguila yerba mate products in the end.
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Yerba Mate Advertisement for Nobleza Gaucha, "En mi boca se hace un canto!"
Man in traditional gaucho attire in the foreground playing music from a guitar. A young woman in pictured in the background in a rural dress with braids, smiling and preparing the mate.
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Yerba Mate Advertisement for Nobleza Gaucha "Se ve que cebé con yerba Nobleza Gaucha"
Two puppets sitting across from each other; a man dressed in traditional gaucho attire and a woman dressed in a rural dress and apron. The man is smiling and enjoying the mate, while the woman is preparing the mate. The man is sitting on a rock and the woman is sitting in a rocking chair.
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Negresse de Bahia / Indienne Botocudo [Negress from Bahia and Botocudo Indian]
Two studio portraits that are displayed side-by-side and depict a "negresse" and an "indienne" from Bahia, Brazil.
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Convoi de Cafe [Coffee Convoy]
Drawing that depicts a "convoy" of slaves transporting coffee beans at a dock.
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Rego conductor de café dos terreiros Guatapara [Coffee Trench Overseer from the Region of Guatapara]
Postcard sent from Brazil to Uruguay. Front of the postcard includes a photograph of coffee laborers transporting bags of coffee while under the supervision of a well-dressed man with lighter skin
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Coffee Carriers [Carregadores de Café]
Watercolor image depicting black workers in the streets of Rio de Janeiro. The men are carrying coffee bags on their heads.
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The Women's Petition Against Coffee
A document outlying the reasons London women felt negatively about coffeehouses for feminizing men.
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The Ale-Wives Complaint Against the Coffee-Houses, In A Dialogue Between a Victualler's Wife and a Coffee-Man
The transcript of a dialogue between the wife of a London tavern keeper and a London coffeehouse owner.
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Characters who frequented Button's coffee house about the year 1720.
An image depicting two intellectuals gathered in a coffeehouse
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Court manners, or, Tavern rioters
Painting of a British tavern depicting court manners
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Cosecha de cafe en Brasil [Coffee Harvest in Brazil]
Painting that depicts a rural coffee harvest in Brazil. The slave laborers are depicted working under the supervision of lighter-skinned men.
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Embarque de café para a Europa [Coffee Shipment to Europe]
Depicts laborers carrying bags of coffee beans onto a ship bound for Europe. Most subjects are actively working, while a few are paying attention to the camera.
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Advertisement for Red Rose Tea
This magazine advertisement is for Red Rose tea, which uses commentary on the exhaustion of shopping to help sell their product.
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Un Chocolate Generoso
This is an advertisement for Aguila Chocolate. It shows the different forms chocolate can take, showing the target audience the culinary possibilities of this product.
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Atiendalo!
This is an Aguila Chocolate advertisement that illustrates a boy walking away from a group of boys playing a game.
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Ayudelo!
This is an Aguila Chocolate advertisement the depicts a curious child and a concerned mother watching him.
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Inside the Bar of the "Edinburgh Castle" Coffee Palace
A drawing of the inside of the Edinburgh Castle coffee palace where a sign reads that "religious and social ----ings every evening at 9 o'clock" are convened. Several well-dressed men sit down in booths to drink coffee and talk while one man leans on a pickaxe and continues a conversation.
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The First Coffee Palace Established in England
A drawing of the outside of The Edinburg Castle Coffee Palace, with a few men entering it while several women walk by. The coffee palace advertises as a "working man's club" and includes "rich cocoa" and "strong tea" as a part of the products they are selling.
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Midnight: Tom and Jerry at a Coffee Shop Near the Olympic
A color print of a engraving showing Tom and Jerry in a chaotic coffee shop filled with men and women.
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Earliest Depiction of the Interior of a Coffee-House
This is thought to be the earliest visual depiction of a Coffee-house. It is a black and white drawing, and shows a group of men sitting around a table, with coffee cups on the table.
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Interior of a London Coffee-house
Interior of a London Coffee-house from The British Museum. There are two groups of men around two tables, as well as a serving bar and cauldron over a fire.