Ashtray

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A glass ashtray
A glass ashtray
This circa 1950 Googie or Populuxe ashtray was designed by industrial designer Maurice Ascalon, and manufactured by the Pal-Bell Company.
This circa 1950 Googie or Populuxe ashtray was designed by industrial designer Maurice Ascalon, and manufactured by the Pal-Bell Company.

An ashtray is a receptacle used by smokers to deposit the ash and butts of cigarettes and cigars. Ashtrays are typically made of glass, pottery, or metal.

The most common ashtray design is a shallow cylinder with a flat base, to rest on a table. Many ashtrays have notches at the rim, to hold cigarettes and/or a cigar. In Spain, some ashtrays consist of two interlocking parts, the bottom of which is filled with water. Ashtrays are also built into cars, and provided in toilets and other public places.

Ashtrays have been a popular advertising vehicle. Collectors look for ashtrays with clever and unusual ads, colors, shapes and sizes. Some ashtrays of the late 1940s to early 1970s were freeform vehicles for Googie styling. During the 1950s and 1960s, small personal ashtrays were part of a table setting, commonly placed on the top right-hand side, behind the wine and water glasses.

When smoking was still permitted in public buildings, ashtrays were fixed to corridor walls at regular intervals. These from the ORF Funkhaus (opened in 1938) in Vienna, Austria have removable parts for easy cleaning.
When smoking was still permitted in public buildings, ashtrays were fixed to corridor walls at regular intervals. These from the ORF Funkhaus (opened in 1938) in Vienna, Austria have removable parts for easy cleaning.
A Safe Smoker cigarette butt disposal receptacle.
A Safe Smoker cigarette butt disposal receptacle.
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