A pencil case with little selophane sleeves on the side so you can insert letters spelling your name (this may have been why I got beaten up regularly)
Those giant pens that were actually lots of different coloured separate pens that clipped together unconvincingly.
Rubbers that were half a normal rubber and half an 'ink rubber' which completely failed to work, other than by gradually obliterating the paper.
An ADIDAS sports bag...when ADIDAS was really uncool. I write it in capitals because they did, and because we used to speculate as to what it stood for. After Dinner I Did A ****. Or simply ADIDAS I was told.
A balaclava. Everyone at our school in North Yorkshire wore them in winter. We'd have looked like a miniature paramilitary brigade.
Those f*cking rubbish letter stencils that created rubbish versions of all letters with holes in.
Those sheets of paper with letters on such that if you rubbed on the back of the paper, the letters came off, enabling to 'write', in theory, very neatly on things.
Still on what was evidently a large industry in producing letters that looked like type but weren't, there were those (again, entirely hopeless) machines that would print impressions on a sticky tape so you could make your own embossed labels.
Still on what was evidently a large industry in producing letters that looked like type but weren't, there were those (again, entirely hopeless) machines that would print impressions on a sticky tape so you could make your own embossed labels.
I had an Adidas sports bag for my rugby kit, don't recall having any of the others. No need for a balaclava in my day, we used to raid the buttery regardless, winter or not.
I had an Adidas sports bag for my rugby kit, don't recall having any of the others. No need for a balaclava in my day, we used to raid the buttery regardless, winter or not.
Not sure why I'm focussing on the truly crap, perhaps it's because everything else (segs, that horrible school toilet paper) has been mentioned before, but there was this form of 'art' where you scratched on guidelines away at a matt surface to reveal a silver/reflective image beneath. Like painting by numbers but actually requiring even less creative input/ability.
Another thing...I could never do airfix. I was too clumsy and impatient. On the rare occasion I finished a plane it had so much glue on it, it looked like it had been jizzed on by a 747.
Not sure why I'm focussing on the truly crap, perhaps it's because everything else (segs, that horrible school toilet paper) has been mentioned before, but there was this form of 'art' where you scratched on guidelines away at a m
I know you're too young for some of these, sparkmonster. But we should hunt down and bankrupt those tossers who produced the giant multicoloured biros. Fkn useless.
Everyone needs a balaclava. Sooner or later. And a number of the other things were actually a help.
I know you're too young for some of these, sparkmonster. But we should hunt down and bankrupt those tossers who produced the giant multicoloured biros. Fkn useless.Everyone needs a balaclava. Sooner or later. And a number of the other thing
Another thing, in this increasingly angry tirade, were medicines back then completely ineffective or my parents just heartless? Rosehip syrup? Calomine lotion? Vix? A toothache tincture? A remember them all as achieving precisely feck all.
Another thing, in this increasingly angry tirade, were medicines back then completely ineffective or my parents just heartless? Rosehip syrup? Calomine lotion? Vix? A toothache tincture? A remember them all as achieving precisely feck all.
Dentists waiting rooms, the bleakest places in the world. Passing the time unspecified hours away from NHS misery, and had the dentist or their staff thought to provide ANYTHING to take the child's mind away from it. No, it was a three year old copy of Reader's Digest or Women's fecking Own. I remember once being absolutely delighted that there was a Wombles picture book where by tilting image you could see a second scene. Picked it up, 30 seconds later, a heavily sedated child enters the room and accuses me of 'thtealing my boo'.
Dentists waiting rooms, the bleakest places in the world. Passing the time unspecified hours away from NHS misery, and had the dentist or their staff thought to provide ANYTHING to take the child's mind away from it. No, it was a three year old
I might be wrong, but I think protractors were pretty much a one company product. Until I was 12 I'd only ever seen a small see-through semi-circle with edges that sloped down, except for the base, which didn't. Then someone came in with a BLUE 360 degree one which pretty much blew my world away.
I might be wrong, but I think protractors were pretty much a one company product. Until I was 12 I'd only ever seen a small see-through semi-circle with edges that sloped down, except for the base, which didn't. Then someone came in with a
Rubbers that were half a normal rubber and half an 'ink rubber' which completely failed to work, other than by gradually obliterating the paper.
That's all I'll admit to having at school, and they were facking useless.
I had a balaclava some years later, but it only had holes for the eyes, which was a facking nuisance if I wanted a cigarette.
Rubbers that were half a normal rubber and half an 'ink rubber' which completely failed to work, other than by gradually obliterating the paper.That's all I'll admit to having at school, and they were facking useless. I had a bala
'How I learned to smoke through my eye' - the autobigraphy. A hole for the mouth and you'd have looked like a black and white minstrel, which would never do!
'How I learned to smoke through my eye' - the autobigraphy. A hole for the mouth and you'd have looked like a black and white minstrel, which would never do!
'we'd put our foot into a circle and then go round:'
Kids today, don't know they're born. Five of us there were, but just one foot between us, AND we had to make a circle with it. Hurt like hell, but nobody cried. Times were different.
Did anyone say "AYAZ!" when hurt by the way?
'we'd put our foot into a circle and then go round:'Kids today, don't know they're born. Five of us there were, but just one foot between us, AND we had to make a circle with it. Hurt like hell, but nobody cried. Times were d
I also had a fencing mask. I found it in my dads shed when he died. It definitely wasn't his as it was too small. No idea how they fence in them, I had trouble seeing clearly through it.
I also had a fencing mask. I found it in my dads shed when he died. It definitely wasn't his as it was too small. No idea how they fence in them, I had trouble seeing clearly through it.
As a kid I used to have to take this medicine called 'Tedral' for my asthma.
Not the tablet form that now seems to have been discontinued, but a dark yellow/green viscous-yet-slimy liquid that tasted like Satan's ar$ehole.
I don't think that I ever managed to down the foul brew without throwing it up within 30 seconds - I have no clue what good my parents thought it was doing me since I never held it down long enough to get it into my system.
Jeez, I can still taste it now - ghastly!
As a kid I used to have to take this medicine called 'Tedral' for my asthma. Not the tablet form that now seems to have been discontinued, but a dark yellow/green viscous-yet-slimy liquid that tasted like Satan's ar$ehole.I don't
after a 3 hour football game in park 36-33 we had a jubilee from corner shop a pyramid of flavoured ice that took about 2 hours to consume. The melted juice poured into your mouth was a bonus.
after a 3 hour football game in park 36-33 we had a jubilee from corner shopa pyramid of flavoured ice that took about 2 hours to consume.The melted juice poured into your mouth was a bonus.
Also did anyone have one of those stencils that had outlines of test tubes, bunsen burners etc to allow you to draw diagrams for chemistry experiments easily?
ADIDAS = All Day I Dream About Sex, surely?Also did anyone have one of those stencils that had outlines of test tubes, bunsen burners etc to allow you to draw diagrams for chemistry experiments easily?
Capt F - Re your "jubilee". What you had was a Jubbly! and it was packaged (uniquely I believe) in a cardboard tetrahedron. So there!
Anyone have a Weetabix 3D Viewer. Used to get stereoscopic cards in the Weetabix pack. Animals and such like. You had to send away for the red plastic viewer.
The advert was to the tune of "when Johnny comes marching home"............
"The animals came in two by two Hurrah Hurrah, The animals came in two by two Hurrah Hurrah You can get your view from Weetabix it will only cost you One and Six So send for a Weetabix 3D Viewer today".
Capt F - Re your "jubilee". What you had was a Jubbly! and it was packaged (uniquely I believe) in a cardboard tetrahedron. So there!Anyone have a Weetabix 3D Viewer. Used to get stereoscopic cards in the Weetabix pack. Animals and such like. Yo
Nobody believes me that when I first went to school, the desk had a pot of ink as part of it. and we were given essentially metal versions of quill pens.
That was the late 1950s.
Nobody believes me that when I first went to school, the desk had a pot of ink as part of it. and we were given essentially metal versions of quill pens.That was the late 1950s.
Nobody believes me that when I first went to school, the desk had a pot of ink as part of it. and we were given essentially metal versions of quill pens.
That was the late 1950s.
We had them in our school (grammar)
I thought that technology couldn't go much further when they brought out Kaleidoscopes and pens that wrote in three colours
Nobody believes me that when I first went to school, the desk had a pot of ink as part of it. and we were given essentially metal versions of quill pens.That was the late 1950s.We had them in our school (grammar)I thought that technology couldn't go
We still had the ink fountains in primary school, around 1967 or 1968. Well remember the awe we felt when we were all issued with these new `ball point pen` thingys; far too long for small hands, blue and gray, and swelling in size from both ends to form a rather bulbous shape.
Had a blue Adidas sports bag too. After spending years wondering was it `Ad-i-das` or `A-did-as`, was happy to put to rest such a poser by discovering that it`s actually an amalgamation of founder Adolf Dassler`s two names, (he was known as `Adi`). He and his brother set up a shoe company, fell out, with the brother founding `Puma`.
We still had the ink fountains in primary school, around 1967 or 1968. Well remember the awe we felt when we were all issued with these new `ball point pen` thingys; far too long for small hands, blue and gray, and swelling in size from both ends to
I think I was the ink monitor at some point, filling up the ink wells from what looked like one of those old oil cans.
The posher kids had fountain pens, but in some ways they were worse, as they invariably leaked ink in your pocket.
I think I was the ink monitor at some point, filling up the ink wells from what looked like one of those old oil cans.The posher kids had fountain pens, but in some ways they were worse, as they invariably leaked ink in your pocket.
For several years we were not allowed to use ballpoint pens and being left handed this did create a rather unique writing style to avoid ink smudges and a blue hand.
For several years we were not allowed to use ballpoint pens and being left handed this did create a rather unique writing style to avoid ink smudges and a blue hand.
I most definitely remember using an ink pen aged from about 7 and having an inkwell on my desk. I've always been a bit of a "pen chewer" and it wasn't a great deal of fun when it dawned on me I had a mouthful of dark blue Parker ink!
I most definitely remember using an ink pen aged from about 7 and having an inkwell on my desk.I've always been a bit of a "pen chewer" and it wasn't a great deal of fun when it dawned on me I had a mouthful of dark blue Parker ink!
me own brother shoplifted the latter out of Woolies window back in the day - always remember the plods catching up eventually and giving him a stern telling off as loadsa otha stuff lay abandoned in the alley to side of the house that had been looted that day lol
you know who you are bro
Chopper/grafter/chipper me own brother shoplifted the latter out of Woolies window back in the day - always remember the plods catching up eventually and giving him a stern telling off as loadsa otha stuff lay abandoned in the alley to side of the ho
I recall having Septic Tonsillitis a few times as a child and having to have the back of my throat painted with 'purple paint'. I also had Scarlet Fever when I was 4yrs old and spent 4 weeks in isolation with my 3yr old brother who was admitted the day after. Our parents could only visit us from behind a glass screen.
You don't hear of these illnesses in this country anymore thankfully.
I recall having Septic Tonsillitis a few times as a child and having to have the back of my throat painted with 'purple paint'. I also had Scarlet Fever when I was 4yrs old and spent 4 weeks in isolation with my 3yr old brother who was admitted the d
also remember being poorly back in the day.... and no doubt milking it whils't Black Beauty and The Golden Shot kept everyone entertained
funny what we remember crystal.....also remember being poorly back in the day.... and no doubt milking it whils't Black Beauty and The Golden Shot kept everyone entertained
TheCoat 14 Sep 17 18:50 The walls in all my classrooms when I was at school were peppered with blue ink spots, as we used to flick our ink pens at our fellow pupils.
That rings a bell with me - we didn't know at the time that it was 'modern art'.
TheCoat 14 Sep 17 18:50 The walls in all my classrooms when I was at school were peppered with blue ink spots, as we used to flick our ink pens at our fellow pupils.That rings a bell with me - we didn't know at the time that it was 'modern art'.
Capt__F 28 May 10 10:49 after a 3 hour football game in park 36-33 we had a jubilee from corner shop a pyramid of flavoured ice that took about 2 hours to consume. The melted juice poured into your mouth was a bonus.
You mean JUBBLY !
Capt__F 28 May 10 10:49 after a 3 hour football game in park 36-33 we had a jubilee from corner shopa pyramid of flavoured ice that took about 2 hours to consume.The melted juice poured into your mouth was a bonus.You mean JUBBLY !
i used to have one of those superballs that bounced like fook ,as a nipper i thought i would go to the 20th storey of the towerblock where i lived and dropped the ball out of a window and expected to catch it as it bounced back up fookin thing split in half as it hit the ground
i used to have one of those superballs that bounced like fook ,as a nipper i thought i would go to the 20th storey of the towerblock where i lived and dropped the ball out of a window and expected to catch it as it bounced back up fookin thing split
had one of those metal pop guns with a cork on the end of a string .............if any of your mates had a "blackmans pinch,or coloured gentlemens pinch for the pc brigade " you knew he had stuck his finger down the barrel and pulled the trigger ,you only did it once !
had one of those metal pop guns with a cork on the end of a string .............if any of your mates had a "blackmans pinch,or coloured gentlemens pinch for the pc brigade " you knew he had stuck his finger down the barrel and pulled the trigger
Sekenden (?) guns which fired plastic ball-bearings and held lots of them for continuous use.
Mates and I had many hours of fun with those. Stung like a bugger if you copped one on the bare leg or arm though.
Sekenden (?) guns which fired plastic ball-bearings and held lots of them for continuous use.Mates and I had many hours of fun with those. Stung like a bugger if you copped one on the bare leg or arm though.
I used to build a lot of airfix. I wonder if they are in the loft somewhere... Did a fantastic job on an FW190, got an airbrush effect without an airbrush, was very proud :)
I used to build a lot of airfix. I wonder if they are in the loft somewhere... Did a fantastic job on an FW190, got an airbrush effect without an airbrush, was very proud :)