Bring back some good or bad memories


Showing posts with label toys. Show all posts
Showing posts with label toys. Show all posts

August 13, 2018

This Wisconsin Man Has More Than 200,000 Comics in His Collection

Some people wonder why anyone would collect anything. Steven Kahn said his reason is simple.

“When we are experiencing stress in our lives, it is especially comforting to have something that either makes you feel good or reignites some memory from the past that gave you a good feeling,” said Mr. Kahn. “I think that is the greatest attraction of collecting for me. It gives you something that recreates something from your past that feels good.”

Steve Kahn, owner of Inner Child, located at 5921 Sixth Ave. A., poses with his five copies of “Amazing Fantasy 15,” the comic book where Spider-Man was introduced to the world.

Kahn doesn’t remember a time when he wasn’t collecting. As a young boy, he waited every Friday evening for his father to come home from his trips as a traveling salesman. He arrived with little wrapped bars of soap from the motels he had stayed at. This was his first collection.

“So every Friday, he would bring me more, and I developed a collection of bars of soap — different sizes, different colors, different odors,” he told Kenosha News. “As I got older, I collected baseball cards and comic books.”

Since then, Mr. Kahn has expanded his collection to include comic books; he guesses that he has 100,000-200,000 comics. He also has an extensive collection of toys that appealed to boys growing up in the 1940s, ’50s and ’60s. And while Kahn doesn’t read his comics, he collects and appreciates them for a different reason.

“I think [comics] are the most underappreciated art form in America,” he said “I think it’s great art.”

Kahn believes that finding his collectibles is the fun part of his hobby. While he can’t reveal exactly where he gets his collectibles because the marketplace is so competitive, he said he travels with wide-open eyes. He has traveled to Indonesia, Afghanistan and India, and has found objects that showed artistic expression.

“Many of my most dear collectibles are not necessarily valuable or beautiful, but I may have lived with the artist or shared something with the artist that was very special,” he said.

With all of the things he has been collecting, Kahn has outgrown his storage lockers; he finally bought a warehouse in Kenosha, WI, early in 2011.

Steve Kahn poses in his warehouse of comics and toys.

“When you go over 100,000, you get a reality check,” he said. “And you start to realize you’re not going to take it with you, and that maybe it’s time to start letting it be enjoyed by others.”

Kahn and his family spent time cleaning and converting the warehouse they purchased in the historical area of downtown Kenosha into a 2,500-square-foot storefront. They named their store the Inner Child because the items in the store make your inner child feel good and brings you back to your childhood.

Upon entering the store, anyone born after 1950 will find things that remind them of their youth. Both sides of the store highlight figurines and vehicles from many of the characters in pop culture. In the back left are comfy leather chairs where visitors can play Nintendo games; you just need to pick up the controller and pick from the hundreds of games Kahn’s son has collected.

The back of the store is the wall of comic books ranging from the Silver Age, Golden Age and Bronze Age. Ten thousand comics are displayed in boxes. And while some of the comics are first editions — and quite pricey — most of the items in the store are reasonably priced.

“I’ve been able to capture multiple generations of collectibles and have examples of toys and fun things [customers] grew up with,” he said. “That’s probably been the nicest part about having the store thus far.”

Steven Kahn loves sharing his stories and collectibles with people of all ages, and is delighted he can share his things with the little community of Kenosha.

“As I’ve grown older, I’ve truly begun to realize that you really can’t take it all with you. Whatever you obtain in life, whatever you accumulate in assets or material possessions, stay here when you leave,” he said. “So at some point in time you have to figure out a way to share what you have obtained with others.”

The comic book wall at Inner Child store, 5921 Sixth Ave. A, features valuable comics.

Figurines at Inner Child store, located at 5921 Sixth Ave. A.

Steve Kahn’s horror collection is popular at Inner Child.

Figurines at Inner Child store.

Video game area where patrons can test out the wares at Inner Child store.





December 24, 2017

20 of the Most Popular Fads From the 1970s

Find out what was popular when your parents were kids, or take a nostalgic trip down memory lane from your own childhood:

1. 8-Track Tape Player


Developed as a car accessory to give drivers an alternate to listening to radio stations so they could listen to their own song selections. Motorola manufactured the first players, which were installed in Ford automobiles. Many record companies were quick to put many of their artists on the new format, but by the mid 1970s, most record labels had stopped producing music in 8-Track tape format because the quality was not good and they were bulky and inconvenient. Cassette tapes and vinyl records replaced 8-Tracks by the late 1970s.


2. Cork Pop Guns


When you would shoot it, the cork would pop out and hit your assailant.


3. Daisy Dukes


Extremely short, form-fitting, denim cut-off shorts worn by young women, originally in the American South. They were named after the character Daisy Duke (portrayed by actress Catherine Bach) in the American television series , The Dukes of Hazzard.


4. Dashboard Hula Girls


A small hula girl doll that attached to your car dashboard and danced when the car moved.Made popular by California surfers.


5. Disco Music


Saturday Night Fever (John Travolta), ABBA, Donna Summer, The Village People, Dance Fever, Bee Gees, and The Jackson Five...






November 2, 2017

12 Popular Vintage Children's Toys of the 1960s

In the 1960s, as popular culture became ever more important, toys start to reflect the television, movies, and musical influences that children experienced during the decade. While the focus still remained similar to the types available for children in the 1950s, more and more toys featured labels associated with popular characters or celebrities like The Flintstones or The Beatles. Here, below are 12 popular children's toys of the 1960s:

1. Rock 'Em Sock 'Em Robots


Boxing robots are hand controlled for hours of fun. Boxers move around, throw left and right punches. When socked on the chin, a spring mechanism pops the head up.


2. Popcorn Maker


Electric Popcorn Maker, watch corn pop under heat proofed safety glass top to serve friends and family.


3. Chatty Cathy


This talking doll gave Barbie a run for her money in the 1960s, becoming the second highest-selling doll of the decade. Pull the string from her back and Cathy would speak one of 11 phrases. "I love you" was one, of course. Even Marcia Brady was a fan!


4. Ken Doll


Barbie made her debut in 1959, and went without a companion for two years before Ken arrived in 1961. The doll had "real" hair (made of felt) its first year on the market before getting a plastic 'do.


5. Barbie's Dream House


Dolls were hot commodities in the 1960s, and they needed a place to live. In 1962, some prime real estate opened up for Barbie - a cardboard ranch complete with mid-century modern furniture. Years later, she would add levels and decadence to her abode.






October 31, 2017

You Were a Child of the 1950s and 1960s If You Remember These Dolls

You were a child of the 1950s and 1960s if you remember these dolls. Did you have one? Do you still have it? Or are you collecting any of these much loved dolls.



1. Thumbelina Doll

The Ideal Toy Company borrowed the name “Thumbelina” from a fairy tale and began selling Thumbelina in 1961. This sweet-faced baby doll was popular for its real life look, light weight, body that could wiggle, and for its lovely pink and white costumes. The doll brought out the desire of a girl to identify with her mother.



2. Tiny Tears

Tiny Tears was a doll manufactured by the American Character Doll Company. She was produced from 1950 through 1968. After being filled with water from her baby bottle, the doll shed tears from tiny holes when her stomach was pressed. Tiny Tears gave expression to the compassionate nature of a child.



3. Chatty Cathy Doll

Chatty Cathy was a pull-string talking doll manufactured by the Mattel from 1959 to 1965. In 1960, a child had the choice of one of two outfits for it. In 1961 six extra outfits were sold for it with names like Party Dress, Nursery School Dress, Sleepy Time Pajamas, Playtime Shorts, and Party Coat. In 1963 Sunday Visit Dress and Sunny Day Capri Shorts were available. The doll fascinated children with its appealing voice.



4. Patti Playpal

Patti Playpal was produced by the Ideal Toy Company from the late 1950s to the early 1960s. Its head, arms, legs and torso were made from vinyl. At 36 inches tall the dolls were marketed as “companion dolls” to children, able to share clothing with their owners as if they were a real friend.



5. Barbie

Barbie needs no introduction. She has been a fashion doll manufactured by Mattel, Inc. since 1959. Barbie has many accessories and doll friends. Mattel has sold over a billion Barbie dolls, making it the company’s most profitable line. American businesswoman Ruth Handler is credited with the creation of the doll using a German doll called Bild Lilli as her inspiration.







August 25, 2017

December 11, 2016

15 Creepiest Vintage Toys That Would Haunt Any Children's Dreams


Here are 15 toys would pretty much scare the crap out of most adults and possibly give you nightmares for a while. Scroll down at your own risk...

1. Kobe Doll


Kobe dolls were made in the Kobe region of Japan starting in the 1890s. They’re mechanical wooden dolls with a mechanism that often made their eyes and tongues protrude like a cartoon creature seeing a pretty lady cartoon creature, or you know, like The Devil.


2. Charlie McCarthy


We can blame actor and ventriloquist Edgar Bergen for arguably the most inadvertently terrifying dummy ever to exist. Charlie McCarthy may have been innocent in the beginning, but then he took on a life of his own. And ventriloquist dummies shouldn’t do that.


3. Krimson Terror


Not only is the Krimson Terror quite the terror, it was a kit, so you had to put it together yourself and manufacture your own haunting!


4. Old Witch Sparkler


The motto on the front is, “Makes Colorful Harmless Sparks.” The motto on the back is, “No Really. Tooootally Harmless. We Swear.”


5. Little Miss No Name


Little Miss No Name, the saddest, most devil-eyed doll, was available for one year, in 1965. She wore a burlap sack and guilted you into buying her by weeping and eking out horrendously sad poems, like:
“I need someone to love me.
I want to learn to play.
Please take me home with you
and brush my tear away.”
Yeah…no thanks.






October 28, 2016

30 of the Most Popular Fads From the 1960s

Find out what was popular when your parents were kids, or take a nostalgic trip down memory lane from your own childhood:

1. Afros


Everyone had an afro. During the 1960's one crazy fad they had was that everyone had afros. Not only the man, but also the women. The bigger the better. They afrod it up!


2. Balsa Wood Airplanes


Model planes made from balsa wood. Kids would make them and fly them just like paper airplanes, but they would fly better. Companies stopped making them because kids were sniffing the glue used to make the planes.


3. Banana Seats


People used to ride bicycles that had long seats that curved at the back. These were known as banana seats.


4. Barbie Dolls


By 1965, one hundred million dollars of Barbie merchandise was sold. Barbie is the one to help make Mattel the biggest toy company in the world. Created by Ruth and Elliott Handler (owners of Mattel), after watching there daughter play with paper dolls, realizing there weren't any 3-dimentional dolls to play with and dress. Barbie was names after the daughter for the idea.


5. Beatlemania


Rabid Beatles fans suffered from Beatlemania. The British rock group was a huge hit among the kids of the '60s. People would faint at their concerts and even just from seeing them perform on TV.






October 26, 2016

30 Popular Vintage Toys From the 1970s

In the 1970s, some major advances in computer technology started to influence children's toys during the decade as evident in the simply computerized game of Simon and the development of the Atari computer and gaming system.


Popular culture also continued to greatly influence the types that were available, with many youngsters being able to recreate their favorite movies or television shows with matching actions figures and dolls.

Here, below is a list of the 30 most popular toys from the 1970s:

1. 1970s Barbie Dolls & Accessories


Barbie Dolls were popular through out the 70s and still are today, they have changed and evolved each year to cater for the latest fashions and trends, these are from 1971.


2. Atari 400 Home Computer System (Came Out in 1979)


One of the earliest home computer systems available to the general public, the Atari 400 Home Computer System which included Console, basic language cartridge, TV Switch box to plug into your TV and AC Adapter, this was an expensive item if you consider the average wage at the time was under $20,000 but they sold like hot cakes.


3. Vintage Easy Bake Oven


Easy Bake Oven unit includes cake mixes and utensils. It is always fun for young cooks to prepare and serve their own food, just select a mix, add water and place pan into tray then slide into oven. Oven measures 14 x 6 x 11 inches.


4. Vintage 1970s Pocket Transistor Radios


Pocket Transistor Radios became available as the new solid state technology allowed anything electrical to become smaller, they allowed kids to listen to their favorite pop music on the radio.


5. Hot Wheels Track and Cars


Anything with cars will always be popular, every boy wanted Hot Wheels cars and tracks for Christmas and Birthdays.






August 22, 2016

Fascinating Facts About the Invention of the Slinky by Betty and Richard James in 1945

"You don't have to be smart, athletic, rich, or clever to appreciate the Slinky. It's a toy for regular people." - Philadelphia Inquirer Magazine, 1993.

The Slinky debuted at Gimbel's Department Store in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in 1945. Richard James, the inventor, was skeptical about how the Slinky would sell. All his doubts were put to rest when all 400 Slinkys for sale were purchased in 90 minutes. Since then, over three hundred million Slinkys have been sold worldwide.

In the mid-1940s there wasn’t a cooler or more desired toy on the market than the Slinky.

Children wouldn’t just push a slinky down a flight of stairs and watch it work — they also challenged each other to create the coolest, most mind-boggling tricks possible with their metallic toy.

What many fans of the iconic toy might not realize is that it was invented completely by accident.

Images from James’ patent, filed in August 1946 and approved January 1947.

The Slinky story started in 1943, when Naval Mechanical Engineer Richard James, was stationed at the William Cramp and Sons shipyards in Philadelphia. He was developing springs that could support and stabilize sensitive instruments when ships traveled into rough seas.

As he reached for one of his springs it was knocked from a shelf. James noticed that the spring “stepped” in a series of arcs from a stack of books, to a tabletop, and eventually onto the floor, where it re-coiled itself.

James decided to perfect the Slinky and worked with various types of steel and tension levels. After one year of tinkering he was ready to introduce the slinky to the world.

Slinky machine

His wife, Betty, had her doubts when he first started perfecting the toy. Those doubts were quickly swept away after she saw the final product. Children in the couple’s neighborhood eagerly awaited their turn to play with the new toy.

It was Betty who named it Slinky, a term she found in the dictionary and which stands for “sleek” and “graceful.”

With these advancements, James sold more than 100 million Slinky units in the first two years of production; as he kept the price of the toy at $1, he raked in the modern equivalent of $1 billion in revenue.

She believed the word aptly described the sound of the toy’s metal spring expanding and collapsing.

Richard and Betty James took out a $500 loan and formed James Industries, originally known as the James Spring & Wire company.

The first 400 Slinky units were made by a local machine shop. Each toy was hand-wrapped in yellow paper, and priced at $1 a piece.

The toys were originally 2 ½” tall and featured 98 coils made from high-grade blue-black Swedish steel.

1946 ad for Slinky.

Toy stores quickly turned down the couple’s new invention. It looked as though the Slinky was going to fail. In 1945, Gimbels department store located in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, decided to give the couple a chance to demonstrate their invention in the toy section of the store.

The toy sold out with 400 units being snatched up by eager children in just ninety minutes.

In 1946, Slinky was introduced at the American Toy Fair.

The toy became a national sensation after a commercial jingle proclaimed, “What walks down stairs alone or in pairs and makes a slinkety sound? A spring a spring, a marvelous thing. Everyone knows it’s Slinky!”

Slinky inventor Richard James, (R), and son Thomas, play with Slinkys on the stairs of the James family home in Philadelphia, PA, in 1945.

By the end of the 20th century there were already more than 250 million Slinkys sold.

In 2000 the Slinky was inducted into the toy hall of fame at The Strong: National Museum of Play.

The toy is still sold in stores around the world in both metal and plastic versions. The original Slinky though, remains the standard benchmark.

A rainbow-colored plastic Slinky, c. 1974. (via)

Interesting Facts:
  • In 1960, Richard James left his struggling company, which was deeply in debt, and moved to Bolivia where he became a missionary. When Betty refused to go with him, he told her she could have the company and he didn’t care what she did with it. Betty then took over the company and proved to be a much better business person than her ex-husband. The company expanded greatly under her leadership and to date has sold over 300 million Slinkies.
  • For her contributions in making the Slinky one of the all time best selling toys in the world, Betty James was inducted into the Toy Industry Hall of Fame in 2001. She died in 2008, at the age of 90. Her ex-husband, Richard James, died just 14 years after moving to Bolivia, in 1974.
  • Around 80 feet of wire was used in the original slinky design.
  • In 1945, the original Slinky toy sold for $1.00. Today, the same Slinky sells for about $1.99.
  • Other than toys, Slinkies have been used in pecan picking, drapery holders, antennas, light fixtures, window decorations, gutter protectors, bird house protectors, therapeutic devices, wave motion coils, table decorations, and mail holders, among other things. Notable among these were U.S. troops in Vietnam using the Slinky as mobile radio antennas and NASA later using Slinkies in certain zero-gravity experiments.
  • 50,000 tons of wire (around 3,030,000 miles worth) has been used in making the slinky since 1945 to present. That’s about enough wire to go around the Earth 121 times at the equator.






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