Etch-A-Sketch
The closest most people got to Pop Art in the 60s was the
Etch-A-Sketch - a popular device that enabled you to make disposable
black and white drawings on a television-like screen by twiddling two
knobs.
Drawing straight lines was easy, but curves were next to
impossible. Consequently, most people's Etch-A-Sketch creations tended
to veer towards the 'abstract' side of things. Of course, if you
messed up, you could just turn the thing upside down, shake the screen
and start over.
Etch-a-sketch often lasted about a week until childhood curiosity
could be contained no longer and the back would be wrenched off for
closer examination. There was a rumour that the "silver stuff"
(actually aluminium powder) inside was heavily toxic, although this
was probably spread by anxious mothers trying to deter their kids from
taking them apart.
In late 1950s France, a fellow named Arthur Granjean invented a
novelty he dubbed the "L'Ecran Magique" ('the magic screen'). Arthur
took his product to the International Toy Fair in Nuremberg, Germany
in 1959, and the Ohio Art Company, though it had passed the toy over
the first time around, eventually decided they wanted to bring
Arthur's apparatus to the United States. Ohio Art put the magic screen
inside a red plastic frame, christened it the Etch-A-Sketch, and
advertised the heck out of it in print and on television in the waning
months of 1960.
The
marketing paid off, an the Etch-A-Sketch became a must-have item for
Christmas, and sales went through the roof. Magic screen indeed.
An Etch-A-Sketch's backside is coated with a mixture of aluminium
powder and plastic beads. There are two white knobs at the bottom of
the frame, which control a horizontal and vertical rod. At the point
where these two rods meet, a stylus is seen on the screen. When the
stylus moves, it scrapes over the screen and leaves a dark trail in
its wake. A good hearty shake of the Etch-A-Sketch jumbles the powder
and clears everything from the screen.
In the 1970s, Ohio Art issued "Hot Pink" and "Cool Blue" frames,
and for the toy's 25th anniversary in 1985, the company offered the
"Executive Etch-A-Sketch", boasting a snazzy silver frame, a
hand-carved signature at the top of the frame and jeweled drawing
knobs! It was priced at $3,750.
There are models with colour and sound effects, and even the
Etch-A-Sketch "action pack" which included different puzzle and game
overlays that could be placed atop the screen. But the best-selling
version, and the one indelibly ingrained in our toy culture memories,
is the classic red. |