Robbie said:I always consider Walkers to be WRONG, but I think historically they're correct in that the packaging was originally blue for cheese & onion and green for salt & vinegar but competitors did it differently, and it's the rival colours that stuck.
The Truth said:Golden Wonder was the first company to produce ready-salted crisps and dispense with the need for the little blue bag. They were also the first crisp company to introduce 'proper' flavour to crisps, with cheese and onion in 1962.
This.nadroJ said:I feel like salt and vinegar should be blue, because it's a seaside flavour and the sea is blue, hence blue packaging.
Technically I think cheese and onion should be yellow, like the pack I'm currently eating are. Cheese=yellow, onions=yellowish, makes sense for them to be yellow.
So I'm going to be annoying and say blue for salt&vinegar, yellow for cheese&onion.
Touche.nadroJ said:^No no no, because the traditional flavour of red crisps is Ready Salted, red is IN the name. If they were in a blue packet they would be called Bluey Salted, obviously.
Yeah, yeah, alright! The wikipedia article has been completely rewritten since I read it (although they claim Irish company Tayto came up with Cheese & Onion flavour - in yellow/orange bags)furie said:Robbie said:I always consider Walkers to be WRONG, but I think historically they're correct in that the packaging was originally blue for cheese & onion and green for salt & vinegar but competitors did it differently, and it's the rival colours that stuck.
You're wrong![/indignant nephew of a Golden Wonder employee]
Golden Wonder were the first UK company to produce and sell flavoured crisps
The Truth said:Golden Wonder was the first company to produce ready-salted crisps and dispense with the need for the little blue bag. They were also the first crisp company to introduce 'proper' flavour to crisps, with cheese and onion in 1962.
GW always had S&V in blue and C&O in green. Walkers UK are the only people who do Salt and Vinegar in green - even their foreign Lays brand use blue for S&V.
So they did it differently compared to their more popular competitors (GW were easily the most popular crisp manufacturer for many decades, with Smiths Crisps close behind. Walkers on made the big time late in the 80's and were propelled by being owned by Pepsi Co. ).
So ner! :lol:
http://www.aba-design.co.uk/colour-bran ... isps-blue/
http://www.h2g2.com/approved_entry/A16455053