Content starts here
CLOSE ×
Search
Reply
Anonymous
Not applicable

๐Ÿค” 1923-1973 Do You Remember...

๐Ÿ‘Tell us about YOUR "good old days"......

 

BORN: Age 50 - 1973, Age 60 - 1963, Age 70 - 1953, Age 80 - 1943, Age 90 - 1933, Age 100 - 1923.

168,434 Views
940
Report
Honored Social Butterfly

Wasnโ€™t there some sort of an X-ray machine in the shoe store to check out your feet - for what?  

 

 

ITโ€˜S ALWAYS SOMETHING . . . . .. . . .
Roseanne Roseannadanna
0 Kudos
3,579 Views
12
Report
Bronze Conversationalist

I never saw one. 

My mother wanted the width of her thumb between toe and end of shoe.

Papaw of Boo
3,338 Views
11
Report
Social Butterfly

I still see some parents doing that today.  The olโ€™ thumb ruler!

0 Kudos
1,629 Views
0
Report
Social Butterfly

    Yup!  To give you โ€œsome room to grow! ๐Ÿ˜Š

3,163 Views
0
Report
Honored Social Butterfly

This was it โ€œA Shoe Fitting Fluoroscopeโ€   Pic of the machine and below that is a pic of how it was viewed and what they saw.

We got hit with a lot of radiation when we were younger.  

 

 

IMG_0273.jpeg

 

IMG_0274.jpeg

 

ITโ€˜S ALWAYS SOMETHING . . . . .. . . .
Roseanne Roseannadanna
3,173 Views
8
Report
Silver Conversationalist

 OK ! Have to admit I was stumped.. ( a common occurrence for me, just sayin ) Based on it 's function I'm sorta glad i missed this one.

0 Kudos
2,863 Views
2
Report
Honored Social Butterfly

@LeeS4949 @MsStretch @papawofboo @LisaS961881 

 

The shoe fitting fluoroscope had to have been around 1953 - 1957 - we were also very poor - so who knows, maybe we were the test subjects.  

 

At the time, I thought it was cool - now, well, definitely not so much.  But that is why I remembered it - but I did need to look it up to determine if my memory was correct. Like I said earlier,  I was very, tiny so maybe they just wanted to see if my feet were formed correctly.  This pic came from a museum - Oak Ridge Tenn. 

My Dad was a brickmason and he did some work on something nuclear in OakRidge, TN.    Maybe now I know why I am not only  tiny but also glow in the dark ๐Ÿ˜ฒ

 

Oak Ridge, TN was evidently a big nuclear/ radiation site and I guess still is - lots of history.

Oak Ridge,TN.gov - About Oak Ridge - What Makes a City Great 

from the link ~

Oak Ridge was built under a cloak of secrecy by the United States government during World War II as a major site of the Manhattan Project, the massive wartime effort that produced the world's first atomic weapons.

US Dept of Energy - Oak Ridge, TN 

 

ITโ€˜S ALWAYS SOMETHING . . . . .. . . .
Roseanne Roseannadanna
2,885 Views
1
Report
Social Butterfly

 Geez Gail, youโ€™re right - looking back, in those days everyone was just more trusting.  
At the time, It seemed like this machine would revolutionize the process of finding the perfect fitting shoe.


 I found a bit more info in this Smithsonian article:

Better Feet Through Radiation

    

2,884 Views
0
Report
Honored Social Butterfly

@GailL1 , these X-ray machines were definitely after my time.  Oh my, this must have been one of those "state-of-the-art" "modern-day" (at the time) contraptions when I was still getting fitted. We never had anything so futuristic in the shoes stores I went in. ๐Ÿ˜

2,939 Views
0
Report
Bronze Conversationalist

Never seen one or heard of one. Course I grew up in a very small town that didn't have a doctors office much less a shoe store.

Papaw of Boo
0 Kudos
2,966 Views
0
Report
Social Butterfly

โ€ฆ.that gave me a giggle - I remember 2nd grader me sitting in the chair at the dentist thinking, โ€œHmmmmโ€ฆ.if this this so safe, then why are they all running out of the room before they do it to me?

3,077 Views
2
Report
Social Butterfly

Yes, So true and obvious, and yet we had to listen to elders and not question! 

1,416 Views
0
Report
Honored Social Butterfly

@LisaS961881 , I still think that. Drape me with a leaded heavy bib and then leave, before they zap my mouth, an open orifice to the innards of my body, with those "dangerous, radioactive" x-rays.  Talk about moot points, what good is protecting my chest going to do? ๐Ÿฉป

2,471 Views
0
Report
Honored Social Butterfly

IMG_0267.jpeg

 

Evidently they are still around for history buffs - $ 90 on ebay - Maybe that was when shoes were all made in one country and size was more standardize - I donโ€™t find that anymore.

 

 

ITโ€˜S ALWAYS SOMETHING . . . . .. . . .
Roseanne Roseannadanna
2,800 Views
2
Report
Social Butterfly

I still see these in some stores!

1,372 Views
0
Report
Silver Conversationalist

 I'm not exactly sure why but getting this used on me was fun somehow.. I guess its use faded away with family Sunday dinners,Drs who made house calls, and courtesy to strangers.. sad..

2,610 Views
0
Report
Social Butterfly

    I certainly do remember that โ€œbreak-in periodโ€!  And I usually chose Mary Janes anyway.   Mary Janeโ€™s and white ankle socks - with or without laceโ€ฆ.  

2,709 Views
0
Report
Silver Conversationalist

 Oh yes,the twice a year shoe trip.. Once in the fall for a new pair of "clod hopper" boots for winter,and another trip in spring for sneakers.. 

2,819 Views
0
Report
Social Butterfly

IMG_0919.jpeg

 

 Does anyone else still have something like this in their home?  Remember when, whether it was a wedding, a nightclub, a restaurant or a bar, you always picked up a matchbook ? 

   

3,112 Views
3
Report
Silver Conversationalist

 Do they even make book matches anymore or have they done away with those as well?

2,956 Views
2
Report
Bronze Conversationalist

I don't think they do. Way back they were a necessary, I remember when you bought a pace of cigarettes they would give you a book.

Papaw of Boo
0 Kudos
2,203 Views
0
Report
Social Butterfly

    Since the Pandemic, I havenโ€™t seen them in restaurants, but I did attend a wedding last June where there were matchbooks as part of the table favors.

 

    I suppose that there is no longer such a demand for them.

    Smoking was certainly ingrained in mid-century culture though.
    I remember that our circa 1965 living room set had heavy glass ashtrays that matched the marble pattern of the end tables - and neither of my parents smoked.  They were sold as a necessary part of the ensemble. ๐Ÿฅด


    I never smoked, but I always nabbed one of these wherever I went as a souvenir.

 

    I believe youโ€™re right though.  They are no longer necessary, and in another few years theyโ€™ll be gone too!

2,728 Views
0
Report
Honored Social Butterfly

1000019113.jpg

 

Posted by Dave the Lighthouse Keeper
2,900 Views
1
Report
Silver Conversationalist

 Simple is still the best!!!

0 Kudos
2,597 Views
0
Report
Honored Social Butterfly

1000020257.jpg

 

Posted by Dave the Lighthouse Keeper
2,767 Views
1
Report
Bronze Conversationalist

I remember when the one bathroom was an outhouse, taking a bath in a #3 wash tub, being the youngest meant being last to bath. I thought that a phone on the wall was the best of the best. The only net was a fishing net. TV had rabbit ears but couldn't use them because we were too far away from stations. Had an antenna, many was the time that had to go outside to turn it so you could get a picture.

Don't know about you people but I am sure glad for the smart people who advanced us from these parts of the "good ole days".

 

Papaw of Boo
2,078 Views
0
Report
Honored Social Butterfly

1000020861.jpg

What is this?

Posted by Dave the Lighthouse Keeper
2,801 Views
2
Report
Social Butterfly

Dialing those phones to be the whatever number caller to win radio contests, was a pain!

0 Kudos
2,059 Views
0
Report
Silver Conversationalist

Another example of furniture that died with the arrival of new ideas.. 

2,793 Views
0
Report
Social Butterfly

IMG_0906.jpeg

 

3,467 Views
1
Report
cancel
Showing results forย 
Showย ย onlyย  | Search instead forย 
Did you mean:ย 
Users
Need to Know

"I downloaded AARP Perks to assist in staying connected and never missing out on a discount!" -LeeshaD341679

AARP Perks

More From AARP