Lite-Brite
Hasbro unveiled its new art toy in 1967. The design was elegantly
simple: a grid of holes covering the front of what looked like a small
television housing.
A responsible adult installed a light bulb behind the screen, and
the rest was up to the child's imagination. Using pegs of eight
different colours - green, blue, red, yellow, orange, pink, purple and
clear - children either created their own pictures or followed the
colour-by-letter patterns provided. When the work was done lights went
out, Lite-Brite went on, and a new masterpiece came to luminescent
life.
The versatile toy was limited only by the size of the screen, the
range of colours available, and the depth of imagination. For the
creatively challenged, Hasbro provided dozens of pre-patterned picture
sheets (sold separately).
Over the course of Lite-Brite's lengthy career, characters from
Scooby-Doo to Darth Vader, from My Little Pony to Mickey Mouse to Mr.
Potato Head have graced the screens of Lite-Brites across the country.
Planning ahead for absent-minded children and/or their
slippery-fingered younger siblings, the good folks at Hasbro also
offered refill packs of the small pegs, ensuring the future of glowing
art for generations to come. |
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