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Season's Change
Love Will Keep Us Warm
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Message aprons first appeared in the late 1960s. "Kiss the cook" and "For
this I went to college" were some of the most popular messages embossed on
the once-again-popular full-length aprons. These messages were a reflection
of the Feminist Movement that was starting to pick up steam at this time.
While the decorated kitchen apron has passed in and out of popularity, it seems to
be coming back into fashion, if only for a relatively small population. The
rest of America will always have a place in its heart for them and the
memories tied to each of us, whether that recollection is of a mother,
grandmother, servant or June Cleaver.

Any Design on Kitchen Aprons - $13.95
Longer style - $14.95
Shipping - $5.95 on any size order - in the USA
Never a sales tax.
All orders shipped ASAP ( usually next day )
Great Gift Item !
Select from several beautiful designs to be placed on your next
kitchen apron.
To choose an
image, click on the name in the left hand column.
DeerLake Kitchen Aprons now come in two sizes. The original measures 22" W. by 24" L.
We also have a longer size that measures 22" W. and 30"
L. Both Have a 1" wide adjustable neck strap and the waist ties in the back.

Medium length apron comes in Royal Blue and Stone ( Light Brown ) Colors,
100% cotton with a Teflon finish,
full Bib Style apron, with three pouch pockets.
Full length apron comes in Stone and Hunter Green,
has two waist level pouch pockets with one pen pocket,
One size fits all, durable and machine washable.
While everyday women were using kitchen aprons for a variety of tasks, television
shows mirrored this by featuring women wearing aprons in nearly every
episode of family favorites. Over the past four decades, many of these shows
have been in re-runs allowing later generations to have a peek into life in
the 1950s. Naturally, it was not as idyllic as portrayed on television, but
the shows have helped develop a stereotype of both the 1950s, in general,
and kitchen aprons.
Magazines from the 1940s and 50s feature apron-adorned women in nearly every
advertisement that is related to housework or cooking. It was a standard
uniform that, at the time, was not frowned upon. Aprons were a selling
feature for irons, kitchen appliances, food products and more.
The kitchen apron remained a common fixture in homes for more than a century until
the late 70s and into the 1980s. By then, primarily food service workers and
weekend barbecues were using the apron. While there are many kitchens in
America that are apron-less, it is experiencing resurgence in popularity for
many women. According to Antiques and Collectibles magazine, aprons of the
1950s have been "experiencing a revival." Younger generations are looking
back to what their grandmothers had and emulating it in a new way. Retro
housewives clubs are popping up in large cities and over the Internet;
looking back to the past for inspiration and style.
You've Come a Long Way, Baby: The History of the Kitchen Apron

Aprons reach into history as far back as Adam and Eve when they "sewed fig
leaves together, and made themselves aprons" (Gen. 3:7) to hide their
nakedness. Since then, aprons have gone on to many uses. Physically
laborious, dirty and dangerous work requires an apron for protection.
Butchers, waiters and welders continue to use aprons specifically designed
for their occupation. Television shows and magazine ads from the 1950s were
full of women, wearing kitchen aprons for every occasion, especially parties when
their aprons were the final touch on the outfit for the night. Several
decades later, in the late 1990s, aprons even made their way to the fashion
runway when the so-called-new Apron dress was made fashionable, again.
"For [domestic workers in the early 1900s] the apron was a convenient,
all-purpose tool, used to carry wood and kindling, to gather eggs and
vegetables, to wipe their brows in the noon-day sun, or just to hide a
special treat for a willing helper."
"In the kitchen were I grew up there was a drawer for nothing but aprons. My
mother and grandmother would not be caught in the kitchen without one. I
remember lime green with lace, pink calico, a blue one made from the same
material as the tablecloth, a brown one with yellow chickens, a yellow one
with teacups and saucers. The first thing I see when that room rises up in
memory is a woman standing by the stove -- a woman in a kitchen apron."
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"Kitchen aprons remain forever entwined in our memories."

Golden Deer On Stone Apron
Baking Memories
Nothing says " I care " more,
then the image of someone cooking with their kitchen apron on.
Baking cookies with the kids,
or whipping up that romantic dinner.

Fly-fishing on White Apron

Birds & Flowers
Slide Show
For Best Viewing
Use F-11 Key.
5 minutes long
Brighten the day of someone special,
with a new Kitchen Apron.
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