Most Loved Childhood Toys

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  • KrisyKat
    KrisyKat Posts: 749 Member
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    I also really loved my LITE BRITE!!!
  • TeenaMarina
    TeenaMarina Posts: 420 Member
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    Don't forget the Rubik's cube, but it was much easier to just pop it apart!
    Ha ha, my brother and I did that a couple of times. They may have changed the design where you can't do that anymore...?
  • kidakiwi04
    kidakiwi04 Posts: 238
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    I loved my Kenya dolls (mainly cause they had my name lol). I had both of them and I would to take them everywhere. By far much better than my older sisters barbies ha ha h a.

    My first ten speed bike I got when I was 7. It was blue and purple and completely awesome.
  • DAM_Fine
    DAM_Fine Posts: 1,292 Member
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    I still have the stuffed monkey that was the first toy I received after I was born. Other than that, the boy next door and I used to play with his GI Joes and his Lego all the time.
  • PonyTailedLoser
    PonyTailedLoser Posts: 315 Member
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    Q-bert. Just because.
  • XXXMinnieXXX
    XXXMinnieXXX Posts: 3,459 Member
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    Uno cards. Lots of good memories on my french exchange trip and scoobies! X
  • ki4yxo
    ki4yxo Posts: 709 Member
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    Don't forget the Rubik's cube, but it was much easier to just pop it apart!



    Yeah, just turn one of the top sections, and pop off
    a corner! Then we used to WD40 them. :bigsmile:
  • TeenaMarina
    TeenaMarina Posts: 420 Member
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    Don't forget the Rubik's cube, but it was much easier to just pop it apart!



    Yeah, just turn one of the top sections, and pop off
    a corner! Then we used to WD40 them. :bigsmile:
    LOL, ahem, we used Vaseline...
  • lewdug
    lewdug Posts: 17
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    The big super-soakers, man! Those things were awesome! And just playing with water balloons was a ton of fun for me! Barbies, too, of course.
  • IvoryParchment
    IvoryParchment Posts: 651 Member
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    My grandma used to have these old Matryoshka dolls on the shelf.
    I used to sit there and play with them for hours, making up a family and story and everything.

    It's funny, my brother is the one that had one of those. He was too little to say Matryoshka (if we even knew the word in the first place). He named it a "girlie-girlie doll." He was also the one with all the stuffed animals, all of whom had their own personalities. Grandmother made some sock monkeys, then some of those stuffed dogs that were really just pilllows made from printed fabric.

    We had these cardboard bricks that were a foot long each. We built all kinds of stuff with those. We also had something called "American Bricks," that were apparently less expensive or less socialist than Legos. Then there were Tinkertoys and Lincoln Logs. Lincoln logs were pretty lame, because you couldn't make anything that could fly around the room with them. I had lots of fun with a set of dominos building buildings with sides in multiples of 4 and 7.

    We had Matchbox cars and a few Hot Wheels. We had these cities that opened up like suitcases where you could drive around and the cars would have their little adventures together. We also had metal versions of the suitcase becomes city for a knights castle and a frontier fort with soldiers and indians. Or we just built outlines of buildings with those cardboard bricks and our "men" (politically correct term for plastic figure dolls when your brothers are playing) would have their adventures in them.

    The best toys are multigenerational. I had a 45 RPM record player that was my dad's when he was a kid -- no close an play crap for me. And there was an entire set of his records, including the original Rudolph the Red Nose Reindeer and a set of Spike Jones records that must have been promotional items, since they had old time commercials on them in between Spike massacring the Nutcracker Suite.
  • Aemely
    Aemely Posts: 694 Member
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    I had these wooden architectural blocks that were pretty cool. They had arches, etc., and you could build neat things out of them, if you were patient. : ) I also liked playing in the dirt and making moss beds for my dolls. No Barbies for me, just a family with a mom, dad, and... I think there were kids but I can't remember. I also got a big wooden dollhouse that my Dad put together from a kit and painted the colors of my real house. That was very awesome. It had a mixture of plastic and wooden furniture and unmatching dolls in it (after I was done with it). I had a cool rock and shell collection that I added to whenever we went to a lake or the ocean.

    One time, I had an Visible Man kit where you put together a plastic model of a man with all of the organs and stuff. The modern version is really cheap and crappy compared to the version from the late 70's. It was something like this here: http://www.etsy.com/listing/89568054/vintage-visible-man-model-science . And, no, I didn't grow up to be "that kind of Dr." even though you can call me Dr. Ha-ha!
  • dcjackson50
    dcjackson50 Posts: 196
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    My Holly Hobby oven !!
    Ran out of cake mixes within a week,......my sister and I then used it to cook bologna, Lol
    Good times

    We put all kinds of **** in our oven LOL!!! I'm glad that we were not the only kids that totally used it to cook whatever worked and was handy.

    We had the orange colored Easy Bake oven. I think our bulb was too hot because I remember it being melted. Either the bulb or something we put in it! LMFAO at this memory.


    I know ours was too hot too,....but man we had fun and good warm snacks till that bulb blew. Lol
  • dcjackson50
    dcjackson50 Posts: 196
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    I also really loved my LITE BRITE!!!

    Lite Brite,.....almost forgot how much fun that was!!!!
  • IvoryParchment
    IvoryParchment Posts: 651 Member
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    We had the "Thingmaker" for those creepy crawler toys. We ran out of the expensive "goop" pretty quickly, and became proto-recyclers chopping up plastic that was going to be thrown out. We'd melt that down and make plastic bugs instead of the rubbery ones. We grew up in Wilmington, Delaware where little kids could tell polypropylene from polyethylene (since everyone's dads worked for chemical companies), so we actually had a pretty good idea which plastic would work.