In his book Hobbies: Leisure and the Culture of Work in America, Steven Gelber points out that prior to 1950 less than one-third of American homeowners painted their own houses. During the 1950s, however, that figure rose to eighty percent. How can this shift be explained?
Image: The Du Pont Color Selector, c1940. Hagley Imprints Department, TP937.D92
Image: The DuPont Color Selector, Cape Cod Style Exterior Overlay shown atop blue exterior paint and orange shutter paint. Hagley Imprints Department, TP937.D92
The DuPont Color Selector was a new tool for dealers to cultivate consumption habits. It also highlighted technological innovation in the materials from which the book was constructed, since cellophane was still a relatively new DuPont product. And as an interactive showroom tool that relied upon staff assistance, the DuPont Color Selector was intended to keep homeowners engaged with authorized dealers and contractors while in the process of planning to paint their homes. After all, the DuPont Color Selector encouraged consumers to only simulate painting by using its overlays; the real, messy work was best left to the professionals.
Image: Meet the Stars of "Are We Painters." Front page of the DuPont promotional leaflet, 1941. Hagley Manuscripts and Archives, Acc. 1803, DuPont Company Advertising Department Records, oversize box 68.
But the tide was irreversible. According to Steven Gelber, the anthropologist Margaret Mead observed in 1957 that “The do-it-yourself movement is not just a hobby. It is often a pleasant and meaningful contribution to family life.” Gelber goes on to associate the do-it-yourself movement with post World War II family bonding and the idea of the house as a hobby. He cites painting as one of the most popular do-it-yourself projects, due to easy access to materials and a relatively simple concept. Industry resistance toward the do-it-yourself painter vanished as the majority of homeowners claimed painting as their own task. The explosion of the 1950s do-it-yourself movement left the authorized paint contractor as an employee for the wealthy, while middle-class Americans grabbed brushes and rollers, determined to paint their own walls.
Image: At This Painter Meeting... Back page of the DuPont promotional leaflet, 1941. Hagley Manuscripts and Archives, Acc. 1803, DuPont Company Advertising Department Records, oversize box 68.
Sources:
E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Company. The DuPont Color Selector: Dedicated to Home Owners, Who Will Find it Helpful in Choosing Colors That Keep a Home Looking its Best by Their Painting and Decorating Contractor. Wilmington, Del.: E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Company, 1940.
Gelber, Steven M. Hobbies: Leisure and the Culture of Work in America. New York: Columbia University Press, 1999. View item on Google Books
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