I made my TFS layout using Pimp-My-Profile.com
Hi! Eveyone my name is Hattie and I'm a Tupperware consultant here in the Arlington, TX(thanks to the internet I don't have to live in your city or state-I can help you no matter where you live!) I'm a real live person, not internet spam. Please feel free to visit my website by clicking the links above -or- email me at [email protected] or send me a message on here if you are in the area to book a party and see all the new products Tupperware has to offer!! This is about having fun, being clever, and then turning around and making fun of having fun.In 1942, Mr. Tupper bought his first manufacturing plant, a factory in Farnumville, Massachusetts to begin manufacturing his new products. But, Mr. Tupper wasn't satisfied. He wanted a lid for his plastic container with a watertight seal so food would stay fresher longer, liquid would not spill out and containers could be set in a refrigerator at any angle. His inspiration came from a very unlikely place. One day, he noticed a paint can lid can keep paint fresh and from drying out for years! Earl had a brainstorm. The world-famous Tupperware seal he designed is similar to a paint can lid turned upside down! Here’s the secret—if you look at the rim of a Tupperware product, the edge over which the seal fits flares out slightly, just 5 to 10 degrees. The little rim, combined with a perfectly fitting seal, is what locks in the freshness of foods. In 1946, Mr. Tupper introduced Tupper Plastics™ brand products to the American consumer and began marketing them in department stores as well as by catalog. Tupper's first consumer plastic products were the Bell Tumbler and Wonderlier Bowl. The products were displayed and very often sat for a long time on store shelves. Why? There was no one teaching consumers about the unique features of the product and how to work the now-famous seal. Mr. Tupper had the genius for creating Tupperware, but he had no idea how to get people to buy it. A friend gave Brownie Wise her first set of Tupperware bowls purchased at a hardware store. It took Brownie three days to figure out how the seal worked. But once she did, she began to show others the products and became excited about the potential of this product line. She then thought about connecting the product line to the party plan, a method of selling that had recently been introduced to Stanley Home Parties where she worked. Brownie Wise wrote to Earl Tupper in Massachusetts and announced that she wanted to sell Tupperware products on the home party plan. Earl Tupper had no idea what Brownie was talking about, but sent her a product price list and full permission to sell, sell, sell! And sell she did! In 1949 she was selling more Tupperware than any other distributor. In 1951, Tupperware was officially pulled from retail stores and Brownie Wise was hired as Vice President and General Manager for the new Tupperware Home Parties.