Boomer Classics: 30 Nostalgic Photos For A Trip Down Memory Lane

Enjoy a trip down memory lane with these boomer classics—nostalgic photos that promise to transport you to a time filled with fond memories and heartwarming moments.

Nestlé’s Quik that came in a tin container and required a spoon to pop open its lid:

And Peter Pan Peanut Butter that game in a glass jar with a tin lid that was sometimes hard to grip:

“Clicker” TV remotes:

The Ed Sullivan Show, which aired on Sunday nights:

Schwinn Sting-Ray bikes with the banana seats that everybody you knew seemed to own:

Duck and cover drills, which were supposed to help you survive a nuclear attack…by hiding under your desk and covering your neck?

Having your sandwiches you brought for lunch be wrapped in waxed paper:

Elaborate Jell-O desserts that were served at every party you went to:

And savory Jell-O being used to make Jell-O vegetable salads:

Rolling Stone being a counterculture magazine:

Bayer Aspirin packaged in tin pillboxes:

And Prell shampoo when it came in a glass covered bottle:

Floor ashtrays that were perfect to put next to a chair or sofa that didn’t have a side table:

Promotional 45 records that came on cereal boxes:

Note pads that were hung on the wall next to the kitchen wall phone so that you could take a message or write down any information you needed:

Colonel Sanders starring in Kentucky Fried Chicken commercials:

Mr. Whipple in the “Please, don’t squeeze the Charmin!” Charmin commercials:

Gas station attendants at full-service gas stations:

The little seats inside of phone booths so that people could sit down while they made a call:

Dr. Scholl’s wooden Exercise Sandals that came in the distinctive almost Kodak yellow box:

Electric skillet frying pans, which were the air fryers of its era:

Bankbooks, that you would get the day you opened your account and allowed you to keep track of deposits and withdrawals:

Built-in 8-track players in a car’s center console:

Howard Johnson’s restaurants, which were always a stop any time you went on a car trip:

The slanted mirrors on the top of super market shelves that let you be able to see what was in the back:

Super market clerks that would walk you out to your car if you needed help loading groceries into your car:

Shopping for your Sunday best at Penneys:

Ben Franklin stores, which were the five and dime that carried all the art and crafts supplies, party supplies, and stationery you could want:

Coca-Cola machines that looked like this and sold you a Coke for a dime:

And lastly, the TV test pattern screen that went up at midnight which meant that was the end of programming for day until the next morning:

Source: www.buzzfeed.com

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