Taylor & Ng

Taylor & Ng logo designed by Win Ng

Taylor & Ng, founded in 1965, is a retailer of Asian-inspired cooking supplies and kitchen furnishings made popular in the 1970s and 1980s. Currently selling products online.

History

The company was founded in 1965 by artists Spaulding Taylor and Win Ng under the name Environmental Ceramics, and later changed to Taylor & Ng.[1][2] In the 1970s and 1980s Taylor & Ng was a very popular department store of handcrafts that operated in San Francisco.

With the addition of Win Ng's brother, Norman Ng, as president, grew from a small ceramics shop on Howard Street (in San Francisco) into a major producer and retailer of housewares and owning a multi-level emporium shop at Embarcadero Center.[2] There were also stores at other Bay Area locations as well a Taylor & Ng shop inside Macy’s in New York.[2] These products sold heavily through Macy's and other major department stores and housewares retailers throughout the U.S. during the late 1970s and 1980s.[2]

Win Ng's whimsical designs and animal drawings became a thematic focal point for many extremely popular Taylor & Ng products, from coffee mugs to kitchen aprons, pot holders, and dishtowels. These products sold heavily through Macy's and other major department stores and housewares retailers throughout the U.S. during the late 1970s and 1980s. He created pottery, book designs and linens for over 20 years.

In 1977, Taylor & Ng purchased a warehouse space at 67-69 Belcher St, in San Francisco's Duboce Triangle neighborhood and refurbished the 67 Belcher side only.[3]

The San Francisco department store closed in 1985 in order to focus the business on wholesale. An online retailer with the same name, Taylor & Ng, features reissues of old company designs.

Cookbooks

The department store was known for the signature designs and illustrations by Win Ng. The company also published a number of popular cookbooks which also featured the artwork of Win Ng.

  • Dim Sum: The Delicious Secrets of Home-Cooked Chinese Tea Lunch by Rhoda Yee. San Francisco: Taylor & Ng, 1977.

References

  1. "Win Ng". www.askart.com. Retrieved 2016-12-28.
  2. 1 2 3 4 "Artists: Win Ng". Rehistoricizing The Time Around Abstract Expressionism. Retrieved 2016-12-28.
  3. Lands, Emily (2015-11-06). "Almost 20,000 square feet in Duboce Triangle live-work space for $12.5M". SFGate, On The Block. Retrieved 2016-12-28.
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