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12 Things People Couldn’t Live Without in the 1960s

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  • Опубликовано: 6 авг 2024
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    #recollectionroad #nostalgia #1960s

Комментарии • 1 тыс.

  • @524kirkd
    @524kirkd Год назад +247

    We lived in an old house that was built in the early 1900s. It was creaky. I remember getting yelled at for running across the living room and causing the needle to skip on the stereo.

    • @summerrose4286
      @summerrose4286 Год назад +11

      Same

    • @lovly2cu725
      @lovly2cu725 Год назад +8

      😁

    • @saminaneen
      @saminaneen Год назад +1

      @@summerrose4286 I remember, in the 1960's, teenage girls, were REAL girls, and teenage boys, were REAL boys and there was no MENTAL illness, or FAKE genders, and all kids, knew, what public bathroom, to use.

    • @glennso47
      @glennso47 Год назад +4

      Did you finally learn not to run across the room and make the phonograph needle skip? 😮

    • @kirnpu
      @kirnpu Год назад +9

      Oh yeah - I'd forgotten about the needle skipping and creating a permanent ding on the record sometimes. Ugh.

  • @christopherkraft1327
    @christopherkraft1327 Год назад +208

    I was born in 1958 & I fondly remember each of these items!!! The sixties were a great time to grow up!!! 🙂

    • @Instantpower332
      @Instantpower332 Год назад +14

      53 for me and I also remember fondly all of those also.. I wish some times that life back then
      would come back.. A lot of fond times especially walking to school from 1st grade to 4 th
      grade. Now even if you had to walk a block ( we lived out in the sticks ) it was over mile to
      school for me. With todays problems that's not going to happen...

    • @michaelbenardo5695
      @michaelbenardo5695 Год назад +5

      Early and mid 60s, yes.

    • @freedomrings1420
      @freedomrings1420 Год назад +11

      Can you imagine growing up today when your fun is sitting, staring at your cellphone all day. My friend tries to do things with his 13 year old son. My friend has a boat ,bicycles...money. But his son only wants to play video games and my friend gets so mad. I'm 63 ... my friend is 55 and I keep telling him it's the new generation of Americans.

    • @christopherkraft1327
      @christopherkraft1327 Год назад +4

      @@freedomrings1420 Sad but so true!!! 🙄

    • @saminaneen
      @saminaneen Год назад +1

      @@christopherkraft1327 I remember, in the 1960's, teenage girls, were REAL girls, and teenage boys, were REAL boys and there was no MENTAL illness, or FAKE genders, and all kids, knew, what public bathroom, to use.

  • @SonyaSwann-xm9xd
    @SonyaSwann-xm9xd Год назад +256

    Love this nothing like growing up in the 60s and 70s what a wonderful time it was.

    • @tonycollazorappo
      @tonycollazorappo Год назад +28

      I was born in 1961, best times for kids to grow up in. We spent a lot of time outdoors and with friends, out in the sun.

    • @pegs1659
      @pegs1659 Год назад +13

      I totally agree.

    • @524kirkd
      @524kirkd Год назад +17

      @@tonycollazorappo Had to go home when the street lights came on. Nobody ever feared we’d be abducted or harmed by someone. I feel so blessed to have been born in ‘63 and experienced a very carefree childhood.

    • @kenlompart9905
      @kenlompart9905 Год назад +7

      @@524kirkd Born in 64, we had an old school bell my mom would ring at dinner time because she knew I was always close by but never knew where.

    • @524kirkd
      @524kirkd Год назад +12

      @@kenlompart9905 Dinner was at 6:00 and we were expected to be there. Since all of my friends were within a few blocks it was not difficult - but I do remember making a few mad dashes to get there in time! After dinner, we were back outside until dark in the summertime.

  • @brianbumgardner8704
    @brianbumgardner8704 Год назад +176

    Growing up in the 60's and 70's were the best times!

    • @michaelmerck7576
      @michaelmerck7576 Год назад

      Not for me,I like today way better

    • @saminaneen
      @saminaneen Год назад +1

      @@michaelmerck7576 I remember, in the 1960's, teenage girls, were REAL girls, and teenage boys, were REAL boys and there was no MENTAL illness, or FAKE genders, and all kids, knew, what public bathroom, to use.

    • @rachelgarber1423
      @rachelgarber1423 Год назад +5

      I learned to type on a manual typewriter, and I had an Instamatic camera

    • @johnburns1902
      @johnburns1902 Год назад +5

      It truly was. It truly, truly was.

    • @saminaneen
      @saminaneen Год назад +1

      @@johnburns1902 I remember, in the 1950's & 1960's, teenage girls, were REAL girls, and teenage boys, were REAL boys and there was no MENTAL illness, or FAKE genders, and all kids, knew, what public bathroom, to use.

  • @janet6348
    @janet6348 Год назад +33

    I still have the transistor radio my father bought for me when I was 16, and it still works!! I am now 73.

    • @bonniepwtf
      @bonniepwtf 10 месяцев назад

      Very cool.

    • @maryyoung4046
      @maryyoung4046 9 месяцев назад +1

      oh that is so nice, Janet. My father gave me a transistor radio when I was 6; and gave me another one for my 10th birthday. I no longer have them. I am glad yours still works.

    • @chimom7112
      @chimom7112 7 месяцев назад

      They don't make things like they used to. That's so cool

    • @daviddebord499
      @daviddebord499 4 месяца назад

      Can you find anything worth listening to?

    • @jellis3699
      @jellis3699 4 месяца назад

      What make radio?

  • @BOLLOCKS1968
    @BOLLOCKS1968 Год назад +154

    Me and my siblings would all talk into the fan so we could sound like robots 😂

    • @Stephanie-vn6ir
      @Stephanie-vn6ir Год назад +8

      We used to do the same exact thing, but with a window box fan.😂🤣

    • @earleneslay7977
      @earleneslay7977 Год назад +12

      I used to do that too! 😂. I never thought about that until now!!! 😂

    • @saminaneen
      @saminaneen Год назад +1

      @@earleneslay7977 I remember, in the 1960's, teenage girls, were REAL girls, and teenage boys, were REAL boys and there was no MENTAL illness, or FAKE genders, and all kids, knew, what public bathroom, to use.

    • @summerrose4286
      @summerrose4286 Год назад +4

      We did too.

    • @beanixdorf6977
      @beanixdorf6977 Год назад +3

      Yeah, we did too 😂😂😂

  • @jamierae7405
    @jamierae7405 Год назад +79

    The 60s were my junior hi and hi school years. Oh those were the days!!❤️❤️

    • @rooky55
      @rooky55 Год назад +5

      Like the song says. Those were the days my friend, we would sing and dance and dance forever and a day.

    • @524kirkd
      @524kirkd Год назад +3

      Did you have big coiffed hair in your yearbook pics? 😉

    • @elaineteeter9485
      @elaineteeter9485 Год назад +1

      @@rooky55 I loved that song, by Mary Hopkin. She had such a sweet voice. I was born in 1956; nowadays, the lyrics of that song bring tears of longing for those golden times.

    • @elaineteeter9485
      @elaineteeter9485 Год назад

      Haha, I had those pink sponge rollers and tried to sleep on them!

    • @coleparker
      @coleparker Год назад

      Mine as well. When I was a junior in high school, I had this thing for one of the seniors even though she was a WHOLE YEAR OLDER😀

  • @roncaruso931
    @roncaruso931 Год назад +84

    I still have my View Master from the 1960's. I'll never forget the brilliant colors and the 3D effect.

    • @dennythomas8887
      @dennythomas8887 Год назад +1

      Sadly I don't have mine anymore. One year for Christmas "Santa" brought me View Master picture disks of all the National Parks, they were awesome! Unbeknownst to me at the time it was a lead up to a 3 week road trip to Yosemite, Zion, and Yellowstone National parks the following summer. Guess my parents were trying to get me to not hate being stuck in the backseat of the car with my two older sisters. Being the kids we were of course we fought the whole time. Drove my parents nuts. 😂😂

    • @roncaruso931
      @roncaruso931 Год назад +1

      @@dennythomas8887 Great days gone forever!!

    • @joannjones3232
      @joannjones3232 Год назад

      I still have mine too!

    • @herbs4921
      @herbs4921 Год назад

      I get better colors and 3D with my virtual reality goggles today.

    • @Nightwriter1843
      @Nightwriter1843 11 месяцев назад

      That was my favorite from the video, too!! We didn't have a color TV until much later; maybe that's why the View Master seemed so cool...!!!

  • @Shmerpy
    @Shmerpy Год назад +20

    I still have our family Sunbeam toaster from the early fifties, the kind where the bread goes down automatically, and comes up automatically too, all by clever mechanisms. Still works like new.

    • @dawnelder9046
      @dawnelder9046 10 месяцев назад +1

      I had the one my husband's Aunt bought in 52. She had 4 children, plus foster children. Finally hit the dust in the early 2000s. Unable to get it fixed, which was my first instinct. The elements had melted.
      My sister still has the one my mom bought in 57. Not used quite as much. Less children.
      You can not buy a toaster that well designed anymore.

  • @lisadobbie7109
    @lisadobbie7109 Год назад +174

    Every item in this video was a part of my life growing up in the 60's. What memories!!! It was a special decade, wasn't it!!

    • @Nicksonian
      @Nicksonian Год назад +12

      That’s what I just said. The only stretch was, my family never had a View-Master, but I had a friend who did.

    • @laurachristianson1688
      @laurachristianson1688 Год назад +10

      @@Nicksonian exactly while I was managing a record store when they first came out they were hailed as some great new thing….digital sound and no scratches like vinyl…HAH. I just love when a cd gets one little mar I get to listen to feedback or worse….yet I have albums that are nearly fifty years old that still sound pretty damn good. Granted I have most always used good care with them polyliners, the ever present discwasher, needle cleaner etc.

    • @Nicksonian
      @Nicksonian Год назад +7

      @@laurachristianson1688 I entered college in 1975, and the main activities me and my roommate engaged in outside of looking for girls and eating pizza was scouring the racks of the record stores. My ex berated me into culling my LP collection about 20 years ago…down to barely 200. My old roommate today has thousands of LPs and CDs. My brother worked for a time in one of the stores I bought many of those LPs, Finders Records in Bowling Green, Ohio, which remains in business in the same location today…a real rarity.

    • @saminaneen
      @saminaneen Год назад +1

      @@Nicksonian I remember, in the 1960's, teenage girls, were REAL girls, and teenage boys, were REAL boys and there was no MENTAL illness, or FAKE genders, and all kids, knew, what public bathroom, to use.

    • @Helmuesi911
      @Helmuesi911 Год назад +4

      What did you use the electric shaver for?

  • @lisadobbie7109
    @lisadobbie7109 Год назад +112

    Remember when the ink cartrige came on the market for fountain pens. That was high tech in those years.

    • @michaelbenardo5695
      @michaelbenardo5695 Год назад +5

      I remember that! Was quite a thing, compared to having to frequently refill the pen.

    • @glennso47
      @glennso47 Год назад +6

      Yet the cartridges often leaked ink all over the place. 😢

    • @61rampy65
      @61rampy65 Год назад +2

      @@glennso47 Yes, and it usually was in my front shirt pocket! Mom would get so mad!

    • @ValleyoftheRogue
      @ValleyoftheRogue Год назад +4

      Fountain pens were already on the way out then.

    • @trish5556
      @trish5556 Год назад +6

      In the late 1960's it was considered chic to have a fountain pen with purple ink. Also sealing wax was big. I remember having wax and a sealer to put on the back of envelopes. That is also when incense started to come in style, along with beads hanging from a doorway.

  • @susandockery1838
    @susandockery1838 Год назад +84

    I love these these videos too. It’s wonderful to watch these videos and remembering those days when I was young. I grew up in these days. Times were so much simpler.

    • @markjulianoriginalhooli2217
      @markjulianoriginalhooli2217 Год назад +12

      Things made sense then✌️

    • @flyingphobiahelp
      @flyingphobiahelp Год назад +1

      Oh, we forget so quickly - the fear of nuclear annihilation, being sent to Viet Nam, riots across many US cities etc, etc

    • @michaelbenardo5695
      @michaelbenardo5695 Год назад

      @@flyingphobiahelpWe did have nuclear fears, but in the early part of the decade, life for kids was great.

    • @markjulianoriginalhooli2217
      @markjulianoriginalhooli2217 Год назад

      @@flyingphobiahelp I'll bet you're really popular at parties🙄

    • @flyingphobiahelp
      @flyingphobiahelp Год назад

      @@markjulianoriginalhooli2217 😂😂😂😂

  • @DrumWild
    @DrumWild Год назад +44

    My fountain pen is 35 years old, and I still use it daily for writing in a journal.

    • @baseballmomof8
      @baseballmomof8 Год назад

      Where do you find the cartridges?

    • @BakedRBeans
      @BakedRBeans Год назад +2

      @@baseballmomof8 A true fountain pen does not use a cartridge. It has a rubber bulb that is refilled by dipping the pen carefully in a jar of ink. Flip the lever out, and back, and you're done. Cartridge pens were a gimmick that didn't last long- they were replaced by ball point pens.

    • @baseballmomof8
      @baseballmomof8 Год назад

      @@BakedRBeans I have this vague memory of putting a fountain cartridge into a fountain pen. But maybe that’s not what it was? I was quite sure we had to use fountain pens by the time we hit third grade, that would’ve been about 1965. But then my memory isn’t that great…

    • @rickalexander2801
      @rickalexander2801 Год назад +1

      A few years ago I got interested in fountain pens and now have a small but nice collection. My goal is to able to write in the Spencerian style. Better late than never. I'm in my late 60's.

    • @johnburns1902
      @johnburns1902 Год назад

      No kidding, really? I remember them.

  • @RaeAnne232
    @RaeAnne232 Год назад +31

    I miss the 1960's. I had all these things. Brings back such great memories. Thank you.

    • @tonycollazorappo
      @tonycollazorappo Год назад +6

      I truly miss those 60s as well. I would go back in time if it were possible. :)

    • @michaelbenardo5695
      @michaelbenardo5695 Год назад +2

      And the great cars and great paying jobs!

  • @JD-gy7kp
    @JD-gy7kp Год назад +29

    The 60's were a BLAST. 🙂🙃😉 I'm still looking for a Time Machine to go back.

    • @LuvBorderCollies
      @LuvBorderCollies Год назад

      Cool boy toys that were semi dangerous to eyes. That was fun.

    • @jodyjackson5475
      @jodyjackson5475 11 месяцев назад +2

      The best. So free and happy

  • @cherylschantz9893
    @cherylschantz9893 Год назад +65

    I love that vinyl albums have made a comeback.

    • @MothGirl007
      @MothGirl007 Год назад +4

      For a lot of people, they never went away.

    • @brigidsingleton1596
      @brigidsingleton1596 Год назад +3

      My albums never really went away... Yes, I bought audio tapes then CDs but never got rid of my records and love them still though my new record player is never used as my hands shake from Essential Tremor now so I am scared to drop the stylus and make scratches even worse than they ever were from repetitive playing Getting old us not so much fun but whilst the memories linger, life is not so bad

    • @TinCupChalice40
      @TinCupChalice40 Год назад +4

      @@brigidsingleton1596 I was just thinking today how getting old really does stink. I get jealous just watching people walking normally. It really puts money in perspective. Money is my last priority now.

    • @patriciakesler317
      @patriciakesler317 11 месяцев назад +1

      Still have the mine

    • @shiralleehaggart72
      @shiralleehaggart72 9 месяцев назад

      Still have mine.

  • @williamjones7163
    @williamjones7163 Год назад +7

    The picture of the child holding a fan that has minimal blade protection made my skin crawl for a second.

  • @MAGronemeyer
    @MAGronemeyer Год назад +67

    There's something you definitely left out was the Lady Sunbeam hair dryer with the vinyl bonnet that connected with a hose to the unit.

    • @Nunofurdambiznez
      @Nunofurdambiznez Год назад +7

      My mother used her bonnet hair dryer literally for 30 years - which she got in the late 60s with her S & H green stamps!

    • @karenh2890
      @karenh2890 Год назад +4

      Yes! We'd put foam curlers in our hair and put the bonnet on! I have my great-aunt's hair dryer. She probably bought it in the 60s.

    • @jane-cn6nd
      @jane-cn6nd Год назад +2

      My grandmother used to set her sisters' hair and they'd be plugged into the bonnet dryers in the living room.

    • @Mick_Ts_Chick
      @Mick_Ts_Chick Год назад +3

      I still have a picture of myself at about 4 or 5 yrs old with one of those on my hair, and wearing my footie pajamas. 😂

    • @lovly2cu725
      @lovly2cu725 Год назад

      omg had one. next episode

  • @annabrown7302
    @annabrown7302 Год назад +4

    TODAY 2023 PEOPLE'S LOVE HAS GROWN COLD THATS WHY I LOVE MY CATS AND ALL ANIMALS GREAT AND SMALL ❤❤❤

  • @drusmith3480
    @drusmith3480 Год назад +59

    When I was a little kid in the early 70s, I loved it when my Dad got the slide projector out. I was so fascinated with how the pictures on the wall changed when you pressed the button.

    • @glennso47
      @glennso47 Год назад +3

      I had a slide projector that I used to entertain my kids by showing them pictures of my navy days and other pictures I had taken for slides. They were fascinated by the pictures on the wall.

    • @glennso47
      @glennso47 Год назад +3

      Remember the Instamatic camera with flash cubes for indoor lighting for pictures? “Blue dots for sure shots “ was the commercial for the flash cubes . The cubes had a blue dot that was supposed to tell you the flash cube was ready for picture taking.

    • @kenlompart9905
      @kenlompart9905 Год назад +1

      @@glennso47 And it made a high pitched squealing noise when it was getting ready. My best friends mom worked for Polaroid so they always had cameras around. We used to make funny faces at the camera then watch it develop right in front of our eyes.

    • @johanvangelderen6715
      @johanvangelderen6715 Год назад

      ​@@glennso47
      The blue dot indicated that a bulb within the cube had not been used yet.
      After use the individual blue dot would be Grey and burnt.

    • @saminaneen
      @saminaneen Год назад +1

      @@johanvangelderen6715 I remember, in the 1960's, teenage girls, were REAL girls, and teenage boys, were REAL boys and there was no MENTAL illness, or FAKE genders, and all kids, knew, what public bathroom, to use.

  • @kimbrey65
    @kimbrey65 Год назад +38

    I remember watching my grandparents' slides from their vacations to Florida.

    • @jillcampbell8019
      @jillcampbell8019 Год назад +1

      My grandparents living in California. 👍🏼

    • @lavenderflowersfall280
      @lavenderflowersfall280 Год назад

      My grandmother liked her casinos and cruises but my great uncle and aunt (after selling great grandpa Albert (my middle name's Alberta) has travelled the world over; Rome, Greece, most of America.
      Not once have I or my cousins (or Dad that I know of) ever been invited.
      Grandma left all her money to one son.
      Nope, I never did anything to anyone but nothing that wasn't orthodontia and once when I bought a car was left to me.
      And I grew up with Grams raising me.
      Real class act fam

  • @theodorerelic2718
    @theodorerelic2718 Год назад +37

    I remember the 60s, and I recall the only place I recall a fan was in the front room. I don't remember any of the other rooms having a fan back then, but we typically kept our windows open to keep the bedrooms relatively cool. And I remember my dad, who was a steelworker who also was a welder, being the belle of the ball, so to speak, with neighborhood kids wanting extra forks welded onto their bikes :) I remember Viewmasters; my mom would take the tabletop model and cycle through the reels, shining them on the front room wall while telling us the stories from them. I still have a good collection of those to this day. They bring back so many memories for me.

    • @bryanspindle4455
      @bryanspindle4455 Год назад +3

      Same here. We had one small fan that was usually in the living room. My dad moved it to my parent's bedroom at night. The other bedrooms were stifling. We didn't get an air conditioner until 1971.

    • @freedomrings1420
      @freedomrings1420 Год назад +2

      Extra forks for the " chopper" look. We just cut off the forks from old bikes and hammer them over the existing forks . Kinda dangerous, but so was growing up in our days which made men ... MEN. Today ,they have warnings on everything.

    • @freedomrings1420
      @freedomrings1420 Год назад +3

      @@bryanspindle4455 I moved to Florida in 88 from Upstate NY and I have live in places in Florida with only a fan . How I survived without AC in Florida is amazing.

    • @bryanspindle4455
      @bryanspindle4455 Год назад +1

      @@freedomrings1420 l don't know. Most of July, August and September are very humid here in coastal Virginia, but not as bad as Florida.

    • @Fred-kz5xh
      @Fred-kz5xh Год назад +1

      We still have a GE Grey fan like in your video. We depended on it every summer.

  • @mikehughes4969
    @mikehughes4969 Год назад +132

    As far as I'm concerned, vinyl records still sound better than anything today. And did anyone else love the pop hiss sound of a flashbulb going off?

    • @pavelsarneki354
      @pavelsarneki354 Год назад +3

      Love? No.

    • @524kirkd
      @524kirkd Год назад +4

      We had an instamatic camera with a “flip flash”. It held about 10 flash bulbs and you plugged it into the top of the camera. You would use 5 flashes and flip it over to use the other 5 flashes. My mom was famous for thinking she had a flash left but really didn’t 😂. She never swore but that brought her to the edge. As kids, my sister, cousins and I thought it was hilarious when it happened.

    • @Retired_Gentleman
      @Retired_Gentleman Год назад +10

      I fondly remember that hissing. I made the mistake of touching one of the used flash bulbs. Ouch!

    • @michaelbenardo5695
      @michaelbenardo5695 Год назад +3

      I agree!

    • @reb1050
      @reb1050 Год назад +8

      The old flash bulbs also had a distinct smell to them.

  • @Nicksonian
    @Nicksonian Год назад +44

    I literally used every item featured here. My first camera was an Instamatic. It set me on a course of becoming a photojournalist. I have piles of old Nikon equipment, but I wish I still had that first Instamatic. And being a photographer, I have boxes of slides in the basement…with no projector.
    My dad used an electric razor so naturally, I started using one in high school. But after about five years and tired of going through razor after razor and lousy results, I tried using a blade, and have never gone back to an electric over 40 years.
    While I didn’t have an authentic Sting Ray bike, I had a bike the same frame size. I spray painted it gold and put a banana seat and chopper handle bars on it. I road that bike so much and so hard, the front fork eventually broke off. About that time the ten-speed craze started and I’d outgrown the Stingray.

  • @NASCARFAN93100
    @NASCARFAN93100 Год назад +83

    60s Nostalgia is absolutely fascinating

    • @cathyheston3029
      @cathyheston3029 Год назад +19

      Especially when you lived through it 😊

    • @Nicksonian
      @Nicksonian Год назад +8

      @@cathyheston3029took the exact words right out of my, um, keyboard

    • @ironmartysharpe8293
      @ironmartysharpe8293 Год назад +6

      Definitely the 60s and 70s were the best decades in my life
      How lovely it would be if there was such a thing as a time machine

    • @saminaneen
      @saminaneen Год назад +1

      @@Nicksonian I remember, in the 1960's, teenage girls, were REAL girls, and teenage boys, were REAL boys and there was no MENTAL illness, or FAKE genders, and all kids, knew, what public bathroom, to use.

    • @brianbumgardner8704
      @brianbumgardner8704 Год назад +6

      ​@@ironmartysharpe8293If those times had just carried on.... We need times like this now more than ever.

  • @cleach5501
    @cleach5501 Год назад +29

    I was a young teen in the 60s. This brought good memories back to me. My transistor radio was stolen out my locker…..never got it back. 🇨🇦

    • @Nicksonian
      @Nicksonian Год назад +8

      My parents only got us one transistor radio, and my brother being three years old meant that he had it most of the time. When my daughter was in high school, her iPod was stolen from her locker. IPods will be on Recollection Road before you know it.

    • @saminaneen
      @saminaneen Год назад +1

      @@Nicksonian I remember, in the 1960's, teenage girls, were REAL girls, and teenage boys, were REAL boys and there was no MENTAL illness, or FAKE genders, and all kids, knew, what public bathroom, to use.

  • @GentlePace8
    @GentlePace8 Год назад +53

    I absolutely love your videos. So cozy, I keep rewatching them, missing the good old times 💕🌸

    • @sonhuynh8222
      @sonhuynh8222 Год назад +8

      Same here !

    • @-Thauma-
      @-Thauma- Год назад +8

      Same 😊❤

    • @heatherwhittaker6169
      @heatherwhittaker6169 Год назад +12

      Agree.. these makee feel cozy...we are fortunate to have these memories.

    • @saminaneen
      @saminaneen Год назад +1

      @@sonhuynh8222 I remember, in the 1960's, teenage girls, were REAL girls, and teenage boys, were REAL boys and there was no MENTAL illness, or FAKE genders, and all kids, knew, what public bathroom, to use.

    • @saminaneen
      @saminaneen Год назад +1

      @@-Thauma- I remember, in the 1960's, teenage girls, were REAL girls, and teenage boys, were REAL boys and there was no MENTAL illness, or FAKE genders, and all kids, knew, what public bathroom, to use.

  • @Mbase-apollo
    @Mbase-apollo Год назад +26

    I grew up in Boston during the 60s and there was about a hundred kids that lived on my street, every family had at least 5 or 6 , same with the next street and so on the baby boom was on.

    • @summerrose4286
      @summerrose4286 Год назад +4

      Same. My best friend lived across the street; they had 8. Best friend from school lived a street over; they had 4. Brother's best friend lived up our street; they had 6.....we all played together all day in the summers especially.

  • @rooky55
    @rooky55 Год назад +40

    I listened to the world series in 1962, sitting on a swing, when I was 10 years old with my new transistor. Just a memory that stayed in my head all these years.

    • @brucesmith9144
      @brucesmith9144 Год назад +1

      Now you stream from the web.

    • @rooky55
      @rooky55 Год назад +2

      @@brucesmith9144 Right but there was no charge for radio or TV back then.

    • @freedomrings1420
      @freedomrings1420 Год назад +2

      You felt like a king with a little transistor radio. They usually used a 9 volt battery, I believe.

    • @rooky55
      @rooky55 Год назад +2

      @@freedomrings1420 Yup, mine was 9 volt and would fit in a shirt pocket. I felt very lucky to have it.

    • @TinCupChalice40
      @TinCupChalice40 Год назад +2

      The transistor radio kept me company, many lonely nights as a kid

  • @carlavision6143
    @carlavision6143 Год назад +40

    I was born in '65 and only remember vinyl but, had radio later on in the 70's. Really enjoyed your video!

  • @Dave-hc6pp
    @Dave-hc6pp Год назад +23

    In 1964 my mother was in nursing school after my dad was killed in a car wreck. One of her classmates came to visit and brought me a 45 rpm Beatles record. I think it was, “I want to hold your hand”. Around that same time, my grandfather gave me one of the early transistor radios. Every night when I was supposed to be sleeping I would have tha radio on really low so no one would hear it and I would listen to my favorite station until I fell asleep.

    • @LuvBorderCollies
      @LuvBorderCollies Год назад

      My mom had a larger transistor radio about the size of a smaller shoe box. Sometimes I'd sneak it upstairs to bed. Plug in the tinny sounding earpiece and scan the world for radio stations. Winter was best for picking up far away stations.

  • @louettesommers8594
    @louettesommers8594 Год назад +23

    I’m 73 and I can remember failing typing in Jr.High. Lol

    • @janetwentz3259
      @janetwentz3259 Год назад +2

      I failed it too!!! Had a terrible teacher.

    • @sonhuynh8222
      @sonhuynh8222 Год назад +3

      I barely passed with 30+ wpm. Haha

    • @larryhall7998
      @larryhall7998 Год назад +3

      Same here!!! but I am 68.

    • @jamesstark8316
      @jamesstark8316 Год назад +3

      I had typing in 7th grade in 1964. Hated it but eked out a 65 so I wouldn't have to repeat. Ugh.

    • @earthwormscrawl
      @earthwormscrawl Год назад

      I'm 63 and only the girls were allowed to take typing, and as boys, we were only allowed to take wood shop.

  • @MeadowFarmer
    @MeadowFarmer Год назад +35

    Wallpaper was a big thing back then. Watches had to wound by hand, alarm clocks and even some wall clocks had to be wound by hand too. They made a lot of noise. There weren't any digital clocks back then. Coffee percolators and large pedestal ash trays were common. Lots of people had cloth slip covers over their furniture, and some people had clear vinyl covers. In rural areas most people had burn barrels for their trash. Just about everyone had aluminum ice cube trays. Kool Ade and Wyler's drink mixes were common and most kids made their own freeze pops with plastic molds.

    • @johnmontgomery3471
      @johnmontgomery3471 Год назад +1

      I used to think people who complained about taking out the trash were wimps. My family lived in rural towns and burning the trash was a chore shared on a rotating basis.

    • @lisadobbie7109
      @lisadobbie7109 Год назад +2

      You are correct on every point!! Ahh, the memories.

    • @kolsen6330
      @kolsen6330 Год назад +6

      Remember Fizzies? The tablets on foil backed sheet?

    • @danielulz1640
      @danielulz1640 Год назад +1

      ​@@kolsen6330YES, for making your own soda pop!

    • @MeadowFarmer
      @MeadowFarmer Год назад

      @@kolsen6330 I don't think we ever had that. I was born in 62 and Fizzies were banned in 1968 because they had cyclamate, so it's a little too early in my life to remember.

  • @WildStar2002
    @WildStar2002 Год назад +16

    The oscillating fan (set to not oscillate) was also great fun to talk through and alter your voice - or sometimes even throw M&Ms into - which would get then ejected at high speed to everyone's amusement but mother's! 🤣

    • @cindytrayer4279
      @cindytrayer4279 Год назад +2

      I totally forgot about talking into it!!!😂😂😂😂

    • @skottyo
      @skottyo Год назад +1

      That baby pictured holding the fan made me cringe a bit. Little fingers and a fast moving metal fan didn't mix well.

    • @WildStar2002
      @WildStar2002 Год назад +1

      @@skottyo Same! 😲Only, perhaps that was a baby Clark Kent? 🤔

  • @jec1ny
    @jec1ny Год назад +5

    I just realized that I am really old. I can remember every single thing on this list.

    • @stick9648
      @stick9648 11 месяцев назад

      So you're still an idiot.

  • @lizzapaolia959
    @lizzapaolia959 Год назад +30

    Your videos are outstanding. We can't thank you enough for sharing these historical time's.
    God bless 🙏

  • @jedidrummerjake
    @jedidrummerjake Год назад +26

    Thank you for another wonderful episode! ❤

  • @pameladonnelson2093
    @pameladonnelson2093 Год назад +12

    I remember these things from the 60’s❤

  • @patbrennan6572
    @patbrennan6572 10 месяцев назад +3

    What I miss most from the 50s is my youth.

  • @janetwentz3259
    @janetwentz3259 Год назад +18

    My very first job was at Rite Aid back in the 70’s. We developed film and when the pictures were delivered we had to check them in. We would look at people’s pictures 😮. My Gosh the things we saw. It was terrible of us but a lot of fun.

    • @nomadman1196
      @nomadman1196 Год назад +2

      Did you work with Robin Williams?

    • @summerrose4286
      @summerrose4286 Год назад +1

      My husband and I (boyfriend at the time) worked at Revco during college. Our boss looked at people's pictures all the time.

  • @Go4Corvette
    @Go4Corvette Год назад +14

    Wow, that baby with the electric fan sure looks dangerous. I used all of these items at one time, and some of them I still have today. Thanks for the video.

    • @howieduin915
      @howieduin915 Год назад +1

      They only needed to put their fingers into the fan once or twice to figure it out. I'm guessing that nobody ever lost a finger in that type of fan. Scary, hurts a little. But no biggie.

    • @doll624
      @doll624 Год назад

      @@howieduin915 Looking at that picture of the baby with the fan caused me to have a twinge of remembered fear. Yes, people did get hurt with these fans, all the time.

  • @cheriestelzer9969
    @cheriestelzer9969 Год назад +3

    These make me miss my parents and growing up. I never take for granted how good I had it

  • @loviatar9
    @loviatar9 Год назад +15

    Ahhh, view masters ❤ Finally, depth!

  • @greatprovider8198
    @greatprovider8198 Год назад +14

    I want to go back in time.

  • @nancycurtis488
    @nancycurtis488 Год назад +6

    Two things I can think of…every homemaker wanted and needed a Sunbeam Mixmaster mixer to make cakes and cookies and having an automatic Sunbeam pop-up toaster was an important piece of kitchen equipment.

  • @DrumWild
    @DrumWild Год назад +34

    I used a manual typewriter during my first year of college [1983]. The only computers that could be found were in the computer lab on-campus.
    Tried to use a computer there and got kicked out because I was a Music major. "Math and Science majors ONLY!"
    I don't miss that.

    • @tonycollazorappo
      @tonycollazorappo Год назад +4

      Same, I started college in 1981, I was 20. I used a nice manual typewriter. I learned to type in the mid 70s in high school.

    • @rooky55
      @rooky55 Год назад +3

      You were lucky! MS DOS would have driven you nuts.

    • @524kirkd
      @524kirkd Год назад +2

      I used the same portable Remington manual typewriter my mom used when she was in college. That would have been 1959-60. I was a freshman in 1981. My mom still has that typewriter.

  • @loishuston7446
    @loishuston7446 11 месяцев назад +2

    Loved growing up in the 60's. Your collection brought back many good memories.

  • @61rampy65
    @61rampy65 Год назад +10

    The fountain pen and its successor, the cartridge pen, were endless sources of ink stains all over my hand and the paper. Being left-handed, I would slide my left hand over the freshly written ink. When the Bic pen (only $0.19!) came out, it was a life changer!!

    • @paulne1514
      @paulne1514 10 месяцев назад +3

      I remember, they shot it through a piece of plywood, then wrote with it, still sticking out of the plywood.

  • @NorkelFjols
    @NorkelFjols Год назад +17

    I was born in the early 80's and I also remember those View Master things, so they were still around in the late 80's at least.

    • @jasonwomack4064
      @jasonwomack4064 Год назад +5

      They're still made. Just saw them in a cracker barrel gift shop.

    • @dougbrowning82
      @dougbrowning82 Год назад +1

      Sawyer's Inc. introduced the View-Master in 1939. The early viewers were heavy Bakelite, and the reels were mostly family oriented, travel pictures in 3D shot on Kodachrome. In 1962, Sawyer's was bought out by GAF, and the content began to transition to more child friendly material, such as toy tie-ins and cartoons. The technology has remained constant, so that any View-Master reel ever released will work in any View-Master viewer or projector, with the exception of some GAF era reels that were designed to work in the viewers only.

  • @samyoung3592
    @samyoung3592 Год назад +11

    you describe everything so perfectly

  • @lisadobbie7109
    @lisadobbie7109 Год назад +4

    No recollection of the 60's would be complete without including, Beatle mania, with the fab four mop heads!!

    • @lovly2cu725
      @lovly2cu725 Год назад +2

      dave clark 5 album was in the photo at the record store

  • @jmlewis435
    @jmlewis435 Год назад +14

    I had a Kodak Instamatic. Those were the days!

    • @journeytothemosthigh5021
      @journeytothemosthigh5021 Год назад

      Still have mine!

    • @trish5556
      @trish5556 Год назад

      That was my first camera someone bought new for me-13th birthday. Before that I had hand-me-down box cameras that I had to tape the edges to so light would not come in. I wish I still had it for old times' sake.

  • @sleepingwithcats5121
    @sleepingwithcats5121 Год назад +9

    I had the View-Master and loved it I was born in '64 so my decade was mostly the 70's although I still remember the 60s

  • @Mbartel500
    @Mbartel500 Год назад +15

    How about the two kinds of manual can openers? One punched a triangular shaped hole in the can lid. it was known as a “churchkey” the other kind was a rotary opener that cut the entire lid off.

    • @scottmcwave9479
      @scottmcwave9479 Год назад +9

      Still use both of them! Doesn’t everybody?

    • @jane-cn6nd
      @jane-cn6nd Год назад +5

      ​@@scottmcwave9479Yes because electric can openers are basically crap.

    • @lovly2cu725
      @lovly2cu725 Год назад

      it is still known as a church key 😁

    • @lovly2cu725
      @lovly2cu725 Год назад

      @@scottmcwave9479 i do but the opener i have doesnt cut the can , it un seals it so no sharp metal

    • @maryyoung4046
      @maryyoung4046 9 месяцев назад

      I still have and use a rotary can opener.

  • @jeffreyslotnikoff4003
    @jeffreyslotnikoff4003 Год назад +22

    45 rpm singles were the main carriers of musical bliss for most baby-boomers in the early to mid-sixties; the way we not only enjoyed music, but could also expand and experiment with it because when one side (sometimes both sides) were done (around 3 or 6 minutes respectively), you would reach for another single... and that one was not necessarily by the same artist(s). That's also why AM radio, and later FM Progressive radio were so influential in the tastes, perhaps even the politics, of our generation.

    • @glennso47
      @glennso47 Год назад +1

      The instrumental” The Horse “by Cliff Noble was supposed to be just side 2 of a song called “Love Is Alright but a DJ accidentally played the Horse and the song went viral! And Love Is Alright just dropped into nowhere.

    • @geolassx5755
      @geolassx5755 10 месяцев назад

      Remember the plastic inserts for the 45s so you use a standard record player as well.

    • @shiralleehaggart72
      @shiralleehaggart72 9 месяцев назад

      Iam Gen x born 1965 and still have a lot of 45 rpm records. My favorite music being the 1960s music. I also have two of the original record players from that time as well.

  • @MsMary-mg3ho
    @MsMary-mg3ho Год назад +5

    We didn't have a slide projector, but we had an 8mm movie projector. I remember that we would close the curtains during the day so we could see the screen, and it felt like we were shutting out the world. Sometimes my mom would pop popcorn, and we'd have Kool-Aid and popcorn, so it felt like we were at the movies, but the "stars" were our family on vacation or at birthday parties. 🙂 I also LOVED my View Master! I remember I had one of the Wisconsin Dells and thought the pictures were so pretty.

    • @truthtriumphant4015
      @truthtriumphant4015 Год назад +1

      I purchased a few View. Master's a few years back to have as "entertainment" when the grid goes down.

  • @stevenlitvintchouk3131
    @stevenlitvintchouk3131 Год назад +8

    Most vinyl records had two sides of music. You turned the record upside down to listen to the music on the opposite side. Even today, we still say "the flip side" to mean the other side of an issue or a concept. That's where "the flip side" metaphor came from.

  • @brendalee1265
    @brendalee1265 Год назад +197

    I grew up in the 60s and I loved it. I hate the times we live in and the things that are offered to us. Please take me back to the life where humanity had morals. This video makes me want to cry because I miss those days so much.

    • @sunilkumar-iq2oq
      @sunilkumar-iq2oq Год назад +9

      I know why you feel like that but today is important than yesterday, with all the advancement we have now the world should be more entertaining than before

    • @saminaneen
      @saminaneen Год назад +1

      @@sunilkumar-iq2oq remember, in the 1960's, teenage girls, were REAL girls, and teenage boys, were REAL boys and there was no MENTAL illness, or FAKE genders, and all kids, knew, what public bathroom, to use.

    • @markjulianoriginalhooli2217
      @markjulianoriginalhooli2217 Год назад +17

      Take me with you ✌️

    • @cathyheston3029
      @cathyheston3029 Год назад +8

      I'll bet you never thought you'd say this 😊

    • @mmwaashumslowww7167
      @mmwaashumslowww7167 Год назад +11

      I did too and despite having most of today's high tech offerings, I still get great pleasure listening to my transistor radio and the short wave stations that have changed little over time. I wish I still had a lot of the things, shown in the video.

  • @RichardinNC1
    @RichardinNC1 Год назад +4

    We pretty much had all of the above, although no color slides, just prints from an Instamatic. My grandparents had a manual mower. I had a small radio I listened to base ball games all the time. My mother had a large vinyl record collection and got me started on a music hobby but I got 8-tracks in the 70s for my car. I used a 1930s manual typewriter for college term papers in the early 80s. Just a few years later, my sister used a Commodore 64 computer for papers in Grade School! Yes she was much younger than me.

  • @kandipiatkowski8589
    @kandipiatkowski8589 Год назад +5

    The slide projector was a staple of my history and geography classes in 9th and 10th grade. My teacher would take weeks out of class to show slides of his travels all over the world. Out of the 2 years I had him as a teacher....we never saw the same slide twice. In addition to everything I learned in those 2 years, I developed a love for travel and historic architecture.

    • @trish5556
      @trish5556 Год назад +2

      My history teache5r's slide show of his trip to the Grand Tetons and Yellowstone fueled my life-long desire to visit those places. Thankfully I did go a few years ago and it was all that and more!

  • @Retired_Gentleman
    @Retired_Gentleman Год назад +5

    An excellent video.
    Born in 1959, I remember all these items. In the past 15 or so years I've collected a few Instamatic and Polaroid cameras and slide projectors. Great nostalgic fun. Many are in original boxes or packaging.
    You didn't mention 8mm movies, though.

  • @paulhare662
    @paulhare662 Год назад +4

    As a child in the 60s, I relied on the garden hose quite a bit.

    • @marinecorpswarrior915
      @marinecorpswarrior915 Год назад +1

      Yep, no bottle water. A quick drink from the water hose and you were off again.

    • @saminaneen
      @saminaneen Год назад +1

      @@marinecorpswarrior915 No, we NEVER drank from the hose, it contained, a
      neurotoxin, called fluoride.

    • @paulhare662
      @paulhare662 Год назад

      @@marinecorpswarrior915 Bottled drinks were a source of income. Finding and cashing in return glass soda bottles.

  • @slim-oneslim8014
    @slim-oneslim8014 Год назад +7

    Another great episode! Things long forgotten like Viewmaster, electric razors made of metal, cameras with a flash cube. I remember it was a thrill to get home movies back from development. First regular 8 then to super 8. Set up the screen and have fun. Very good memories.

  • @frankwafer6919
    @frankwafer6919 Год назад +3

    thank you for all the wonderful memories of yesterday!

  • @davidsquires154
    @davidsquires154 Год назад +5

    I,was born in 1957,and I grew up in the 1960's. I just about remember everything from the 1960's from this video.
    Since I was born in Detroit,Michigan and I still remember when it 25cents and 5centsforatransfer.

  • @timetoretire
    @timetoretire Год назад +4

    Had all of it. Moms royal typewriter. Mentor headlands beach and manry pool with the transistor radio. I have all my vinyl. Crowley makes retro record players. Im a '64 but older siblings ...please can we go back. I love to play with my grankids the way I did. Love your channel...

  • @jeanne-marie8196
    @jeanne-marie8196 Год назад +4

    I remember “buying” discs for my View Master in souvenir shops, whilst on vacation. My grandparents would also let us get a striped stick candy, too. One of my favorite candies was also given out by my grandmother on car trips; Lifesavers! Not the fruit ones, too many flavors on the dislike list by one of us. She had chocolate mint! Yum! We weren’t allowed candy or soda at home, so these were real treats to be able to have!

    • @stick9648
      @stick9648 11 месяцев назад +1

      When soda/pop was a treat .

    • @jeanne-marie8196
      @jeanne-marie8196 11 месяцев назад

      @@stick9648 Only at birthday parties! Same for ice cream

  • @Ltulrich
    @Ltulrich Год назад +19

    RR, please consider doing a nostalgia video about the prevalence/use of firearms by families and especially teens in the 40s and 50s.

    • @dougthompson5449
      @dougthompson5449 Год назад +4

      My brother back in 1963 took his rifle on the school bus, walked into school with it and put it in his locker. When it was time for shop class he carried his rifle down the halls into shop class where he etched his name into the stock. When school was over he carried his gun back onto the school bus for the ride home. The only comments that he got from the teachers was "nice gun".

    • @saminaneen
      @saminaneen Год назад +1

      @@dougthompson5449 I remember, in the 1960's, teenage girls, were REAL girls, and teenage boys, were REAL boys and there was no MENTAL illness, or FAKE genders, and all kids, knew, what public bathroom, to use.

  • @beckybanta126
    @beckybanta126 Год назад +4

    So fun to see so many items that were a part of my childhood days. Thank you. There are 4 items, however, that I remember using in the mid to late 1950s: View Master, Lighters (as you mentioned) a large variety of shapes & sizes, Vinyl Records, & Fountain Pens. I watched my Grandad use his often, plus others as well. Some were so important that they were never lent nor borrowed. Perhaps refilling of these could have been introduced 1960s. I remember having my bottle of ink to refill always close by.😊

  • @chnalvr
    @chnalvr Год назад +5

    Our family had every one of the items you mentioned in this video. However, we had a home movie projector for Super 8 film, rather than a slide projector. Many adults smoked cigarettes and were welcome to do so wherever they liked. I remember the metallic clink of the top closing and thinking adults were so cool. Thank goodness I never got hooked on cigarettes. I know many lives that were ruined by smoking cigarettes.

  • @lisadobbie7109
    @lisadobbie7109 Год назад +22

    How about the Wammo Super Ball? It seemed like it would go a mile high when a kid bounced it off the concrete.

    • @kirnpu
      @kirnpu Год назад +2

      Loved the Super Balls but they sure didn't stick around for long. They'd bounce right out of sight.

    • @LuvBorderCollies
      @LuvBorderCollies Год назад

      I remember a lot of super balls landing on the school roof. Just a one story brick building but there was no way to get on top without a ladder. Then you had to work up the nerve to politely ask a janitor for help.

    • @kirnpu
      @kirnpu Год назад +1

      @@LuvBorderCollies There was nothing more frustrating than watching your ball take that last hop on to a roof...

  • @jaycorby
    @jaycorby 11 месяцев назад +4

    How could you forget S & H Green Stamps! Those little green adhesive stickers were given out by many businesses and earned points depending upon the number of purchases one made. They were carefully glued into little paper books, and when enough points were accumulated, they could be redeemed for any of a huge variety of items shown in a glossy catalog. Folks saved for months to acquire such enviable treasures as table lamps, magazine racks, wall clocks and even luggage. The greater the value of the items, the more books of stamps were required.

    • @stick9648
      @stick9648 11 месяцев назад +2

      Came with some brands of cigarettes too.

    • @markthomas9703
      @markthomas9703 8 месяцев назад

      Loved to see the latest catalog. Even wanted things in those that I had m o use for ,but it was fun to see it .

  • @sallymiller1359
    @sallymiller1359 Год назад +15

    Only thing I didn't have was the dreaded push mower, my Dad had a riding lawnmower which was great! My uncle had the push mower, kept him in shape. Everything else is a wonderful memory and I probably have some of these things hidden in the attic. I know everyone always says this but for me, those were much better days.

    • @trish5556
      @trish5556 Год назад

      We had a push mower until I was about 13. Man was I happy to get a gas powered mower!

    • @trevinbeattie4888
      @trevinbeattie4888 Год назад

      My grandparents had a push mower, and I preferred using that over my dad’s gas mower because the fumes from the gas engine were nauseating.

    • @sallymiller1359
      @sallymiller1359 Год назад

      @@trevinbeattie4888 I can understand that

    • @julieinthenorthwest4594
      @julieinthenorthwest4594 10 месяцев назад

      How about the push edger? That was a pain to use.

    • @sallymiller1359
      @sallymiller1359 10 месяцев назад

      Sounds awful, didn't know they had such a thing but it makes sense. Now I use a battery charged edger, piece of cake! lol @@julieinthenorthwest4594

  • @5610winston
    @5610winston Год назад +5

    3:00 Gotta love that blade shield.
    It's a wonder that any kids had fingers left to work those typewriters.

    • @kenneth9874
      @kenneth9874 Год назад

      Poking through it in the front wasn't dangerous

    • @trish5556
      @trish5556 Год назад

      @@whatsup5791 My sister almost lost an arm on one until my mom pulled the plug. She insisted she didn't touch it, the machine had reached out and grabbed her arm!

  • @3cardmonty602
    @3cardmonty602 Год назад +3

    I still own a manual lawnmower. I was using it before I bought a battery powered lawnmower. My lawn is so small that I don’t need a gas powered lawnmower. Although, Good thing I didn’t drop dead pushing the manual lawnmower here. It even got mistakenly delivered to my old address, and the new tenant tried to steal it before she realized it was a manual lawnmower. LOL! She was more than happy to hand it over. I’ve used it when my battery powered lawnmower runs out of juice, so it’s still valuable to me.

  • @larryhall7998
    @larryhall7998 Год назад +12

    The first major purchase I made with my own money (paper route) was a Schwinn stingray. Had it until a few years ago. The only thing original was the shadow.

  • @stevenj2380
    @stevenj2380 Год назад +10

    And in the early 60s (elementary school) were not using old-style fountain pens at all. Instead of cheap ball points, they pushed us to try the ink cartridge refillable Schaefer pens. That lasted a couple of years or so it seems, then we just went to BIC.

    • @lovly2cu725
      @lovly2cu725 Год назад

      i remember when bic came out

    • @williamwilson6499
      @williamwilson6499 Год назад

      @@lovly2cu725Then you were born in the 40s.

    • @ladyd8339
      @ladyd8339 11 месяцев назад

      And you used your pen to write in cursive! Now people can hardly write their name like that!

  • @keithwilson6060
    @keithwilson6060 Год назад +13

    The 60’s was unique because the highly accelerated technological advances of the post-WWII period were finally filtering their way into consumer goods.

  • @cherylb6755
    @cherylb6755 Год назад +2

    I have an Underwood & Underwood stereoscope from the late 1800s. It was a precursor to the View Master. I still enjoy looking at stereoscopes.

  • @karenstyles2623
    @karenstyles2623 Год назад +2

    The push lawn mower, record players, view masters. I still like the light up toys of today. I remember the ordinary camera. That's gone away forever too. The rectangle camera from Kodak still lingers on my mind from time to time. I don't always like some of today's world. I still enjoy my smart phone though.

  • @P_RO_
    @P_RO_ Год назад +3

    By 67 everyone had a transistor radio. The problem was the batteries which weren't cheap for a kid and only lasted a few hours.

  • @mewregaurdhissyfit7733
    @mewregaurdhissyfit7733 Год назад +9

    Great stuff as always!!!

  • @mordechai-
    @mordechai- Год назад +2

    I was born in '62. My grandfather had about four typewriters, and whenever my siblings and I visited him we typed stuff on those typewriters. I have fond memories of them. We listened to records, I owned a transistor radio. We had air conditioners, but my mother said it was too expensive to use them. My late father smoked, but he didn't use a lighter. We had a View-master, and several discs. And damn, I had to use that manual lawn-mower. I hated it.

  • @Tomatohater64
    @Tomatohater64 Год назад +5

    Great memories from the 60s and 70s.

  • @madmike2624
    @madmike2624 Год назад +4

    Your background music is so perfect for this video!!

  • @typograf62
    @typograf62 Год назад +4

    You are right - a manual lawn mower did produce a certain feeling of a job well done. I had forgotten that. A fountain pen is (to me) the perfect way to write. I can concentrate on writing, not on Windows updatring etc. Also works in a train or on a bus as a good lightweight instrument.

  • @marcse7en
    @marcse7en 11 месяцев назад +1

    I'm proud to be a child of the 60s (born in 1962) ... All of us who experienced that very special decade are lucky!

  • @papashark2345
    @papashark2345 Год назад +1

    i love the voice that takin me to all those beautiful yerars Thank You !!!

  • @tonycollazorappo
    @tonycollazorappo Год назад +4

    I had a transistor radio at the age of about 4, in 1965. I enjoyed the music and still like the music of that era as well as music and movies from the 30s, 40s, 50s and early 70s. After the early 70s, movies are, or were hit or miss.

  • @lisadobbie7109
    @lisadobbie7109 Год назад +54

    Life was simpler in the sixties. More basic. More independent style of life. I miss that.

    • @Coolcarting
      @Coolcarting Год назад +3

      Saying that with your 2000's device. You are part of the problem that ended that independent style of life.

    • @SMac-bq8sk
      @SMac-bq8sk Год назад +5

      @@Coolcarting: Dang, if only she hadn't started using her "2000's device," we'd all still have a more independent style of life! Shame on her!🙄

    • @joedoe-sedoe7977
      @joedoe-sedoe7977 Год назад

      How could life be anything but simple when you are just a dumb kid?

    • @williamwilson6499
      @williamwilson6499 Год назад

      Rose colored glasses are so ubiquitous. You would hate the 60s if you actually had to live it.

    • @SMac-bq8sk
      @SMac-bq8sk Год назад +6

      @@williamwilson6499: Ubiquitous? I did live through the 60s. Some of it I liked, some of it I hated. Could've done without the hippie movement; but overall, the social health of society was much better than it is now.

  • @elaineteeter9485
    @elaineteeter9485 Год назад +2

    I loved my Viewmaster. I was in elementary school at Lynbrook School in Bethesda, Md and my mother would take me to Lowen's Toy Store to buy more Viewmaster slides. I felt as though I were actually in the story. My favorite was Snow White. Such lovely memories of the best times in my life.

  • @dogsareprecious4842
    @dogsareprecious4842 11 месяцев назад +1

    I realllly love and appreciate your videos !!! Brings back sooo many childhood memories!

  • @dizzysdoings
    @dizzysdoings Год назад +13

    Grew up with almost all of these. I still have my parents' records, don't know if they're worth anything or not.

    • @BakedRBeans
      @BakedRBeans Год назад

      The value of a typical record collection is....very low! Collectors are extremely picky about condition. If you have a "mint condition" record (never played-original shrinkwrap) they will look at it. If the record has even the smallest defect , they will just say"no"

    • @dizzysdoings
      @dizzysdoings Год назад

      @@BakedRBeans not sure how old they are. They're classical music. I just haven't gotten around to doing anything with them.

    • @lovly2cu725
      @lovly2cu725 Год назад

      i have the dave clark 5 one shown in the video

    • @BakedRBeans
      @BakedRBeans Год назад

      @@lovly2cu725 I used to have that one! Two items to the right of that one is "Off The Beatle Track" Never head of that one. Must be a compilation.

    • @BakedRBeans
      @BakedRBeans Год назад

      @@dizzysdoings If they are classical, you might have some valuable ones in there because classical fans generally take very good care of their records, and some classical fans will value one record highly if it is a certain record label, or year of manufacture.

  • @tinamcknight7384
    @tinamcknight7384 Год назад +11

    I was born 1960. Child of the 60's and teenager of the 70's. What a great time. Learned how to type on a manual typewriter, the keys jamming was such a pain.

    • @patgervasio7044
      @patgervasio7044 9 месяцев назад +1

      I think electric typewriters were already becoming popular by the mid sixties.

    • @maryyoung4046
      @maryyoung4046 9 месяцев назад

      Same here. I got a manual typewriter for my 13th birthday. Yes I remember when the keys would jam or stick together and having to pull them apart before I could resume typing. I loved typing on it though. Made up stories and later on songs.

  • @nhlams
    @nhlams 9 месяцев назад

    Brings back a lot of memories! Miss those simple days.

  • @kirnpu
    @kirnpu Год назад +2

    Fabulous trip down memory lane! I loved my transistor radio. The Viewmaster was fun too. I hated taking pictures and having to wait forever to get the shots back. When we finally got to same-day developing I thought I'd died and gone to heaven. I can't even imagine how many miles I put on my Stingray as a kid - seems like I practically lived on it.

  • @janisrattiner7159
    @janisrattiner7159 Год назад +3

    The Polaroid “Swinger” camera 🤗

    • @lovly2cu725
      @lovly2cu725 Год назад

      had one for the ny worlds fair

  • @johnbethea4505
    @johnbethea4505 Год назад +3

    I had all of these either in the 1950's or the 1960's...

  • @Tsch6373
    @Tsch6373 11 месяцев назад +1

    The 'manual' lawn mower was called a 'reel'. An older family member had one back in the day and when I was 12, I pushed it around her yard, resulting in some blisters on my hands. Good memories...

  • @rhrh2025
    @rhrh2025 Год назад +2

    Going to school in the 60s was like sitting in an sauna all day. Most of the school was not air conditioned. A new annex had AC, and the office had window units. The rest of the buildings were like an oven. We did have heat though! LOL