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)
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.
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.
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.
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.
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
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.