Senior QUIZ: Remember these vintage objects? PART 2 🧠 Test your memory! 👑
HTML-код
- Опубликовано: 2 окт 2024
- Welcome to Trivia Quiz Rush, this is part 2 of my Quiz special about vintage objects! Put your memory to the test with this entertaining quiz for seniors! Do you remember these classic items from the past? Put your knowledge to the test and tally up your score! Get ready to take a trip down memory lane!
Did you miss part 1 and 3? Watch them here:
Part 3: • Senior QUIZ: Remember ...
Part 1: • Senior QUIZ: Remember ...
Please SUBSCRIBE: tinyurl.com/Ch...
Buy Me A Coffee: buymeacoffee.c...
Don't forget to check out these quizzes:
70s Quiz Part 2: • Ready to Relive The 70...
70s Quiz Part 1: • Do You Remember the 70...
Knowledge & Memory Quiz 39: • Senior Quiz: Put Your ...
YEAR 2023 Quiz: • 🧠 ULTIMATE YEAR 2023 P...
Music quiz: • MUSIC QUIZ 👑 Test Your...
Featured playlist:
• General Knowledge Quizzes
Guess the old item, Guess the old things, Memory Test
#retroquiz #memoryquiz #generalknowledgequiz #quiz #triviaquiz #guessretrostuffs #quiz #generalknowledge #virtualpubquiz
➡ Please subscribe to support the channel: youtube.com/@TriviaQuizRush?sub_confirmation=1
➡ I read and respond to every new comment, please drop a comment below!
➡ Share this video to someone who would appreciate it.
In case you missed the other parts of the "Vintage objects" quiz about objects from the past, be sure to check them out here:
Part 3: ruclips.net/video/WxDblCtVbiw/видео.html
Part 1: ruclips.net/video/TLvV6BaJcxA/видео.html
As always: some object names can vary per region, but don't hesitate to let me know if I made any errors. I hope you enjoy and please share your results in the comments. Dont forget to subribe to the channel! There goes alot of effort in these quizzes and it really helps!
UPDATE:
Since so many people are saying that was to short to be a 'hatpin': I BELIEVE YOU :D And I apologise. BUT; (since im from the 80's) I have the make due with the info given on the interwebs. Here is the source for the 'hatpin picture' and it says 'hatpin', So I'm disregarding ALL responsebility 😋😋😋 Source picture: www.etsy.com/listing/1283537994/antique-vintage-gold-colored-hat-pin. (just kidding I'll do more fact checking next time!)
The item you said was used to trim kerosene lamps is a candle snuffer. Before candles had self consuming wicks the wicks needed to be trimed when they were burning. The carbonized wick remains would collect in the small box.
It was a woman’s label pin from Avon in the 1970’s. My mom has one.
The ice cream freezer was used to store factory made ice cream and water ices for sake in a shop, not for manufacturing it.
My apologies if I was mistaken! Hope you at least enjoyed the quiz!
that’s what i thought! especially cause it has those little doors on top to open. they were full of ice.
Not a coal shovel. That is a dust pan. A coal shovel would have a long handle and were almost always made of iron or tin.
I thought I had the right one. My apologies if I was mistaken!
It looked to me like it was to sweep the ashes from the fireplace into. (Did I get that grammar right?)
Think it's a fireplace ash shovel
I thought the same way
I agree!
To make this fair, you need to include a banana for scale in each picture.
I see you are a man of culture...
Agree, the size ratio is sometimes difficult to see.
Yep, I thought the hatpin was a rug beater! LOL
I missed the wool carder. Photo was too small on my phone. I was born before 1950… and had many aunts and uncles on farms. All these items were common place, including wool carders of various designs.
@@keithmaxwell3048 ~ thought the same! 😂... then remembered I have my grandpa's monogramed hatpin.
I agree with other commenter about the ice cream freezer and the coal shovel/dustpan. Also the "hat pin" is not a hat pin; not long enough. It is a women's stick pin to be worn as a broach.
Mmmh, ill do better next time!
yup!!!!
It is a stick pin for a man's tie
I would have said that the coal shovel was actually a receptacle used in sweeping ash from grates. Also agree with the ice cream cabinet used to store manufactured ices. That brings my score to a paltry 11. Many objects such as milk shake mixers and tongs for ice blocks did not exist in Britain.
I think the hat pin was a tie clip. Hat pins did not have the anchor on them.
The corn shucker is shown worn wrong. The loop goes around the thumb with the hook in the palm.
When I was looking for a picture I noticed that there where quite some variants.
would have been interesting to have shown the items that are usually found with the shuckers, like the corn binders and silo fillers (fodder choppers)
@@yann664 Ah maybe that could explain it then!
It was easier to count the ones I got wrong, 3
I hope it wasn't too hard :(
I Still Own That Old Fashion Egg Beater.
😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅
If it works, it works!
i wish i still had mine. they’re terrific. work better than a whisk :) 🌷🌱😮
Me too! Still beats eggs in a powercut!
That’s the only one I got right!😊
Lincoln logs?
I have a drill just like that, same color even and still use it.
If it works, it works!
I also have one with the correct bits, they don't have a twisted shape, just straight, so the work won't ride up since its revolving slower than a power drill.
The hand cranked drill is still an issued tool in the US (and I’m sure other) militaries today!
The lantern wicks are still in use today!
The cigar cutter is still sold and in use today!
The mechanics oil cans are still sold and used today!!!
Hand cranked meat (and grain) grinders are still sold and used today!
Hand cranked washing machines are still sold and used today… though they’re smaller and plastic these days… and are quite popular with off grid living.sewing thimbles aren’t out of use at all. They’re sold in many department stores (Walmart Fred meter, target, etc).
Manual sausage stuffers are also still quite popular and available for purchase.
So at least 8 out of 30 are still quite well used and easily available today.
Absolutely! And that's great that these things have long lifespans. And for the other objects: they probably laid the groundworks for the newer improved versions.
#17 I think the Corn Husker is being worn the wrong way round in your picture.
The hook should be in the palm of the hand.
I think you're right sorry!
I managed 22 right. The final score doesn't matter to me really. It was an interesting way to spend some time watching this. Thanks! 👍😁
Nice, happy to hear you enjoyed it. Thank you for watching!
24 RIGHT Bonus answer Lincoln Logs
24/30 is pretty good! The answer I was looking for was Lego, however Lincoln Logs seem pretty simular, so I'll aprove :D
I got 10 out of 30. I still have my mother's old egg better/ cake mixer. We used the gosunder when I was a boy. Goes under the bed. My father had a kerosene lantern. It had a mantle made of silk. Not a wick.
Thank you for sharing!
I missed the hat stretcher & hair pin, as both seemed familiar but but the unknown size was my problem.
28/30 is a great score, well done!
That "hair/hat pin" is actually a lapel pin. Hat pins did not usually have a cap and were significantly longer.
The ice cream freezer isn’t like my white mountain of 1920
Technology has certainly come a long way since 1920.
I got 18 including the bonus. Legos.
Correct! Great job
I got 18 right and i think the toy from the 50s is lincoln logs
Its Lego! Thanks for playing!
Tinker Toy might be the answer to question. I missed 3, not bad for 71 year old guy.
27 correct is a great score! The the bonus questions answer is was looking for is "Lego".
32 correct. I'm guessing LEGO. 😊
Correct! And 32 is amazing considering there where only 30 objects :D :P
For the BONUS QUESTION my answer would be either "TINKER TOYS" , "LINCOLN LOGS" , "LEGOS BUILGING
BLOCKS" , or "GILBERT ERECTOR SETS !!!
FOR THE RECORD I GOOGLED MY ANSWERS AND OTHERS AS WELL :
"TINKER TOYS" : invented in 1914 !
"LINCOLN LOGS" : invented in 1916 !
"LEGOS" : invented in 1932 !
"GILBERT ERECTOR SETS" : invented in 1913 !
"SLINKY" ; invented in 1945 !
I GOOGLED THE CORRECT ANSWER : "PLAY - DOH " :invented in 1956 !
Hahha wow you sure did some research. The answer I was looking for was "Lego". There is an official page on their website about it: www.lego.com/en-us/aboutus/lego-group/the-lego-group-history
Now that I'm studying it more carefully, you are right that a carpenter invented it's basis in 1932, so you are definately not wrong :) But it alswo states "1955: Godfried Kirk launched the LEGO(r) System in Play as a structured system of products - the more bricks you have, the more you can build". I was the lauch of Lego as we know it today.
Thank you for sharing!
I loved Lincoln Logs-also had an Erector sert and Tinker Toys-never got into Lego
#6 is an adding machine ribbon. Typewriter ribbons were black only,, The corn husker is being worn upside down. The hook was in the palm of the hand
Thanks for pointing out those details!
No, not necessarily. Typewriter ribbons WERE, maybe still are, both black & red, to allow also typing in red - for emphasis or to mark a 'red letter day.' To make sure the one in the picture is not an adding machine ribbon, there needs to be something for scale. The adding machine ribbons I've used were smaller, perhaps 1" in diameter & the typewriter ribbons were more like 2" in diameter.
Not true. I have a typewriter that switches from red to black.
Actually, many typewriters used those 2 color ribbons too-they had a 3 position lever to select red, black, or no color(used for cutting Mimeograph stencils
Type writer ribbons were red and black. In UK?
Bonus question is probably an Erector Set, known in the UK as Mechano
In The Netherlands that was called Mechano too, but the answer I was looking for was Lego!
How about Lincoln Logs? Not used much today, but the first thing I thought of.
Tinker toy
@@dadskrej5226. before the ‘50’s. but i thought of them, too. :)
My father - 1923 - and his elder brother already used Meccano in the 1930'ies. On the side, Meccano was used by many engineers an physicists for prototyping and experiments. In fact even a protype nuclear reactor was built using these parts. I still renemver the gree and red netal strpus and the brass screws wit square (!) nuts.
corn husker on backwards
You are right, my apologies!
Ladies used those pens to close their scaves and or shawls
A lego but do you know what walk down stairs alone or in pairs. Everyone knows it's slinky.
And the slinkys made today are cheap plastic. Ours then were metal and worked much better.
Lego is correct!
Yeah had a plastic one myself, it didn't have the needed weight to it.
If you’re Australian it’s bananas in pyjamas that come down the stairs in pairs. ruclips.net/video/EqPT80Skq9Q/видео.htmlsi=fTsPh2dJwMrpIqf4
Bonus Question, legos is my guess. Though the other guys guess of the erector set is another possibility.
Quiz: missed the corn husker thing,did not see question 1,thought the projector was a old recording device,and the cigar cutter,the coal shovel ?? Looks like my firewood ash shovel, but ok . 😊
Great job! Lego was indeed the answer I was looking for.
23 isn't a hat pin, it's a stickpin. Used in lapels and ties, not hats. (Hatpins were longer, and didn't have an end-cap.)
Since so many people are saying that was to short to be a 'hatpin': I BELIEVE YOU :D And I apologise. BUT; (since im from the 80's) I have the make due with the info given on the interwebs. Here is the source for the 'hatpin picture' and it says 'hatpin', So I'm disregarding ALL responsebility 😋😋😋 Source picture: www.etsy.com/listing/1283537994/antique-vintage-gold-colored-hat-pin.
(just kidding I'll do more fact checking next time!)
lincoln logs
I guessed Lego but had many happy hours with the Lincoln Logs.
Going to be completely honest here: Lego was the answer I was looking for. I never heard of Lincoln logs, but it's so close, I accept :D
@@TriviaQuizRush I Still Own Lincoln Logs.
😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁
Hell I'm 72 and still have some of these. 🤣🤣🤣
Thank you for sharing!
Hang on to them, if we have an energy crisis, you're all set!!
I'm only 55, and I have a few too. :D
I got 2 wrong because the items looked different from the ones I saw when I was young. Otherwise, I got 26.
Great job! Yeah I have learned can be quite some regional differences, shape and name-wise....
27 got
Great score!
Lincoln logs
Unfortenately not, it's Lego!
29 right
Wow, great score. Would you say the quiz was too easy?
Your #23 is wrong. A hat pin is much longer and did not have a cover/cap on the end. Your’s is a stickpin, most commonly used when wearing a cravat, but became popular in the eighties as just a pin. Most hatpins had a glass marble type end, as a posed to the fancy gold piece on the top of yours.
Answer to the Bonus, is it Lincoln Logs?
Thank you for your input and clarification on the difference. It challenging for me as I'm from the 80s myself, I don't own these actual objects.
@@TriviaQuizRushI'm in the UK so got 26 of these. That is definitely a "stick" pin of some sort. Hat pins are much longer. I have a pair of victorian silver plate ones with elaborate heads. I use them occasionally as most one size hats are too large for me.
The coal shovel is more like an ash shovel. The head is too wide for use in the average scuttle and the handle shaft is much too short. You might get away with it on a very tiny grate but not in a main fireplace.
Well, I'm old....knew them all. Lego's building blocks.
Correct! Great Job.
It was not Lego's. Lego came around in the 70s.
@@davidschwartz5127 ~ Funny then ... how I was playing with them as a child? ... around 1959-60 🤔😂 Legos added different sizes later on.
@@davidschwartz5127 sorry, sweetie. founded in 1932.
@@bonniemoerdyk9809 Yes, me too.
I only got 22 right, 😢The bonus question has to be either Lego or Mechano
22 is a fine score :) Lego is correct!
You got number 24 wrong. It is called a brace. If you had the drill bit, it would be referred to as a brace and bit.
In UK English parlance, it is a just a hand drill; a brace and bit is a U shaped crank device with a free rotating large domed knob on the opposite end to the chuck. They took special wood bits, not drills, with a square tapered shank to fit the two-jaw grooved chuck. Generally used for boring large holes in wood.
From what I've learned so far from making these quizzes, that yes.... of course i make mistakes because most of this is before my time.. :D BUT I've also learned that some objects had different names per region/country. So try to see it more like this: its more about recognising what it does, and what its for, than the specific name. I hope you enjoyed!
A brace would be most commonly know for a off set handle that was leaned on with a pivot at the top. One would brace themselves on it while auguring a hole. The photo is of a common drill.
If you don’t believe me Google it.
Nope. A brace is a different tool. More of an Ess shaped crank handle with a chuck.
i got 28 out of 30,
i question the hat pin and the coal shovel looked more like a fireplace ash shovel, coal shovel would have had a longer handle, the hat pin would have been much longer and seldom have a stopper on the end that was lapel or stick pin.
for the bonus question lego.
Lego is correct!
Shocker….
I still use my moms hand egg beater daily … the best…!
Correction on (hat pin) it’s a lapel stick pin less than 3” long … hat pins are 6-14” in length
You are right. Thanks for your feedback!
15
How do you feel about the difficulty? Too hard?
I missed too many to count. Is the bonus Legos? Thank for the great quiz!
Correct again :D Hope you enjoyed!
@@TriviaQuizRush I enjoy all of your quizzes. Thanks again!
You are wrong. It's Lego. There is no S.
The constantly moving pictures and background make me feel nauseous.
Thank you for letting me know, ill work on that!
That was Fun!! 😊 I missed 4 out of 25, not too bad for someone born in 1955. Most of these items were common prior to the 30s, some much older than that. One of the items I got wrong, and I was so mad at myself....the corn husker. I remember my dad showing me one when I was very young (7 or 8), so when the pic showed onscreen I remembered seeing it, but couldn't remember what it did. Dad had even put it on his hand w/the wrist laces to show how it worked! The 1950s toy would likely be Legos. 😉
Thank you for sharing! Great score tho. That said, I probably didn't help that the corn husker in the picture was work the wrong way ... :(
One web site says that "LEGOS" was officially launched in 1958 !
Lego!
Technically true but it was launched to the mass - in its mostly current form - around 1955. (hence the "around" :D) Alot of info here: www.lego.com/en-us/aboutus/lego-group/the-lego-group-history
I don't believe they used the Lego name or the present configuration at launch, I remember them as bricks
What you called an "egg beater" is more commonly known as a whisk!
Always called an egg beater where I’m from. I’m 73 so I’ve used one and still have the one I got for my first kitchen when I married.
Thanks for sharing. Learning new stuff about these things every day (80s "kid" here). About the name: some objects are called differently per region. It's more about the fun of recognising, than the actual name. I just want viewers to have that nostalgic experience "Oh yeah that thing!". In the end that whats it about. :)
@TriviaQuizRush Hi, sure I get it. It could be a British thing, where and when I grew up, back in the 60s, many of these items were as common as muck, as they used to say. Lol, except a lot had slightly different names and more than a few belonged in museums even when my Victorian grandmother was a child.
True, alot of these things have an incredible lifetime. Which is only good ofc, so many stuff these days are so perishable
I have a whisk-ithat is not a whisk, it's an egg beater-same purpose however
IF the hat stretcher were show with something to show scale size... as is it looked like a unique nutcracker... maybe 1 out of 200,000 would even have seen a hat stretcher
I will add a banana for scale next time!
The corn huskier, was the only one, that I didn’t get.
I didn’t always have the same name, put did have the same task!
Play carefully, & smile often!
As long as you recognised what it does, then you score a point :) Name doesnt really matter (and it differs per region)
The Erector set. You could build all kinds of things with and without an electric motor. IE a crane, trucks, cars and a lot more.
You're not the 1st one to guess that :) But the answer I was looking for was 'Lego'.
erector set was well before theb 50's created in 1913,
I got 26 right.
And the bonus question is Lego?
Great score and correct!
I like these types of sites, except for yours. bad pictures, too small, and a lot of the objects are still available to purchase and use. oil cans! egg beater! pht
Thats because that despite these objects are vintage, doesn't mean they still can't be used. It's also challenging to find good quality photos of these old objects, but I did what I could. Sorry you didn't like the quiz...
Erector set and legos came out before that
Lego. No S.
Technically true but it was launched to the mass - in its mostly current form - around 1955. (hence the "around" :D)
Lego, -in its current known form- came to the masses around 1955 (hence the 'around' :D). Alot of info here on the official Lego site:
www.lego.com/en-us/aboutus/lego-group/the-lego-group-history
Scored 23. My guess is an erector set for the bonus. I own a few of those items. Oil cans, hand drills.
The bonus question was Lego!
tinker toys?
The answer to the bonus question was Lego!
I remember most. I still use a frigtening bunch ?!
Whats a 'frigtening bunch'?
These need to be multiple choice. I knew what they were used for but not specific names.
If you recognised them and knew what they were used for than you should count it as correct :) Names vary per region anyway!
@@TriviaQuizRush
In that case, I only missed the hat stretcher. I knew it stretched *something*, but without scale, I couldn't tell.
That coal scuttle was a lot different from the one my grandparents had
Haha sorry, I there where many different models and tried to pick one that looked 'common'.
Legos
Correct, great job!
For the building set, how about Tinker Toys?
The answer I was looking for was Lego.
Never saw a lamp wick in a roll. Mine were Allready cut to length
That's interesting! Maybe it's for DIY lamp projects?
Only knew 20 of them. I was born in 1954.
That still a score of 67%!
Lincoln logs or miniature red bricks, 21 right.
Great score!
#24 is called a brace and was used to hold bits that would drill into materials.
Ive learned its called differently per region :)
Bonus answer - LEGO
Correct, great job!
Silly putty???
The answer to the bonus question was Lego!
Got 22 and am saying erector set for bonus
Great job again. The answer I was looking for was Lego, however 'Erector set' and 'Lincoln Logs' came out around the same time, so I count those as correct too ;)
Being 76 I would have expected doing much better - but these things were even before my time
I thought exactly the same thing!
Maybe part 1 is easier? ruclips.net/video/TLvV6BaJcxA/видео.html&lc
Being from another country, it was interesting to learn the English words for a lot of familiar items. Though some I didn't know probably never crossed the Atlantic.
Though the wick scissors was mainly used for candles. As grid failures don't happen as often nowadays and candles has improved, I rarely uses mine.
Yeah i understand what you mean. It's not about the exact name.... but more about that you recognise the item and remember what it does. Names probably vary per region/country as you mentioned.
In 69 years old and still have a lot of those things in my garage !!!
Don’t throw away stuff that isn’t broken!
I got items #1, 2, 3, 6, 7, 8, 9 (I knew that one because I'd seen it back as a teenager in an old "GAMES" magazine about "mystery" vintage items from an "ancient" Sears catalog), 10, 11, 12 (well, sort of --- I'd thought it might have been for washing clothes or boiling something), 14, 15 (well, again, I just "sort of got it" in that I thought it was maybe for mixing a container of some sort of food-item that you'd put on the tray under the beaters-head), 19 (well, "washing machine" was one of my guesses; I'd also thought maybe it was either a cream-separator or a butter-churn), 20, 22, 24, 25, 26, and 30. I'm guessing that the "build anything" toy was an Erector Set.
Thank you for sharing! The exact name doesnt really matter, I'ts more about recognising what it does (name can differ per region anyway). So you did well!!!! The bonus question was 'Lego'!
Fun trip down memory lain.
Thank you for playing!
Great quiz. I got 5 wrong. Bonus, Meccano?
Thank you, glad you enjoyed! The answer I was looking for was Lego.
I got 0.😂
Lincoln logs for children
The answer was Lego!
An Erector Set.
Close, but the answer I was looking for was "Lego"
I have that seltzer bottle in my cupboard. The “hat pin” is a tie pin. I have my grandfather’s a hat pin is about 6 inches long. I got 28/30 and the bonus is Lego or Lincoln logs
Correct, it's Lego!
Knew 28 of them. Thanks Grandma and Grandpa!
And thats why you don’t throw away old stuff 😀
Weird, that was the wrong reply (meant for another). Great score anyway :)
I got them all. Im only 51. 😵
Wow, I think you’re the 1st in the comments to do 100%.
15 and Tinker Toys
The answer is was looking for was Lego!
I got 13 but 6 were guesses
If you guesses right you still score :)
I got 29 out of 30 right
Great score. See how well you do on part 1 and 3!
26 out of 30.
Great job. Have you tried part 2? ruclips.net/video/kCdDzNrIcG8/видео.html
Many building toys were introduced in the 1950s. Legos were originally wood and began in a garage in Denmark in the 1932. Two years later he named his company LEGO after the Danish phrase leg godt (“play well”). In 1947, after World War II, when injection molding was introduced to Denmark, Christiansen bought an injection molding machine for the company to make toys. That same year, Christiansen and his son obtained samples of plastic, interlocking bricks which inspired the later Lego bricks created in 1949. It was in 1954 that the LEGO company began to introduce sets of building blocks to build specific buildings. TMI I know, but suck it up buttercup. 😎
Hahah nice. No that was not TMI, that was a good read! This is the read why I made the question say "Around '55" :D. I had this info from the extensive history info on the official lego site (found here: www.lego.com/en-us/aboutus/lego-group/the-lego-group-history). Thank you for sharing!
@@TriviaQuizRush Tinker Toys were also popular around/before 1955. They are also still made today.
The oil can one had a confusing visual and a lot of these were not shown in scale. For example, the hat pin looked like a bed warmer.
Thank you for your feedback. I will try to do that next time, but it's challenging because I don't own the objects. I have to make do with what the interwebs hands me :)
Legos - founded in 1932!
Erector sets - 1913!
Lincoln Logs and Tinker Toys around the same time.
so - how do you mean to ask tour question?
This is the reason why I made the question say "Around '55" 😀. Lego might be invented around the 30s, but it was brought worldwide and commercialised in its current form around '55. I had this info from the extensive history info on the official lego site (found here: www.lego.com/en-us/aboutus/lego-group/the-lego-group-history). Thank you for sharing!
Lego
Spot on!
Got 25 out of 30 and Lincoln Logs were the Legos of the 50's... you also had visual scale or presentation issues... as far as the Hat Pin... Gentlemen also had Stickpins
lincoln logs came out in 1916-1917 around the same time as erector set 1913, lego hit in the 50's
The hat pin i agree that was closer to a lapel pin. hat pins would not have had a stopper.
Thank for your feedback!
Ok, I'm old (75) these things were way before my time. probably used by my Grand Parents. I do however fondly remember home milk delievery when I was a kid.
Here in The Netherlands we had ,up to the 90s, “de melkboer” (the milkfarmer). He drove by in an odd looking buss that was basically a small grocery store on wheels. Some regions actually still have it today! The actual milkman ,as displayed, was before my time though. Thank you for sharing!
😊milk was never delivered in closed vans always
open trucks or hand pushed carts pbj UK
@@TriviaQuizRush In the 60s we had in Rotterdam milkmen who walked with a electric driven vehicle by hand :-) oftewel de melkboer liep met een electrisch karretje.
shut up and give the test !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
What do you mean?
17
Only missed 3!
Slinky or hula -hoop are my guesses
Lego was the answer to the bonus question
All but 2 --- used many of these myself
Thanks for sharing. What year are you from? (if I might ask?). Be sure to check out part 1 and 3 too! You'll find the links in the video description.
Lego's? Invented in the 50's and has endless building possibilities.
Right you are!
I probably used most of them!!!
Great memories!
What a wonderful channel
I'm, by today's standards, extremely old (mid 50's) so I'm quite good at this.
I didn't know anything about the corn husker though, so I've learned something.
More, more, more!
Thank you! Happy to hear that! I have been told the corn husker is been put on the wrong way in the picture I used, so that probably didn't help :D Making a 3rd 'guess-the-old-objects' quiz is going to be very challenging for me because both part 1 and 2 have 30 objects. So thats 60 total, and after 60 of these it gets very difficult for me to find 30 new ones (for part 3) that are widely recognisable. (especially because I'm from the 80s myself)... But I'm definately considering it.
In case you have seen part 1: ruclips.net/video/TLvV6BaJcxA/видео.html
Score 28 and Lego
Nice score, and correct!
I only missed the first one and boy don't I feel old - while I don't own a lot of these things I own probably more than half and use some of them regularly. There were a couple mistakes or objects that may have had a couple/double uses too.
Great score! You're right, on some objects I did not choose the best picture. It's challenging for me the judge which one is right as I'm from the 80s. But I hope you enjoyed!
Was the bonus question answer, a Slinky?
Unfortunately not, it's Lego!
toy piano
The answer to the bonus question was Lego.
@ 77…missed 3-4…cuz from Hawai’i…not use/seen those items before…😂
Not a bad place to grow up though :)
Age 77, 29/30 and Legos. What did I win?
I was originally thinking of a fully paid 2-week-stay in the Maledives, but then I figured eternal honor and glory (incl. bragging rights) would be worth so much more in the long term...