The school book club was a powerful way of teasing money out of tiny hands sent dizzy by a pamphlet featuring a...
In the sixties they were a chilling vision of things to come, dispassionately pulsing out messages of doom whilst Michael Caine struggled...
OK, so technically speaking it’s called Glass Houses, but the eyecatching, diagonally refracted, jittery typeface (never ‘font’ before 1985) in question was...
A giant white ‘SB’ in a black circle in Radio Times was the thing to look for: it meant it was time...
Those two words alone, surely, mark the historical spot where the trusty, utilitarian telephone got its first stirrings of fashionability and gadgetdom...
In the ’80s, competition was good and proper, in ever sphere of endeavour. Even, it seems, in education. Early in the decade,...
’Wow! You’ve got a Soda Stream?!’ Surely there was nothing quite like the do-it-yourself fizzy drink-maker (or ‘dispenser’ as they called it)...
The manned exploration of space is the zenith of human technological endeavour, a stirring quest for knowledge and achievement that has the...
If these worryingly over-adhesive arachnidy cephalopods were affixed to the upper portion of a smooth glass surface, they would gradually roll down...
Captain Birdseye’s ‘crew’ was the epitome of this advertising genre: the all-singing, all-dancing chorus of stage school children giving it full-on eyes-and-teeth...
Led by a jaunty insect of indeterminate species in union jack dungarees and Michael Bentine’s eager voice, the Stamp Bug Club was...
In between doling out the Crackerjack cabbages and soliciting estimates on a Mini Metro from The Price is Right’s baying mob, Leslie...
While adults stuck with their dull muesli and bran-based cereals in the morning, kids wanted something more interesting. For parents, the only...
Gardening in the 1970s was all about bringing the indoors outdoors.