I can always remember buying sweet cigarettes with my pocket money, and then pretending to be all grown up like a lady and smoking, and then when i was all grown up i never did smoke a real cigarette, i guess you can say i gave up smoking with out even starting
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Re: Sweet cigarettes
I remember the Barratt's ones dropping the pink ends in the mid 1980s to make them look less like cigarattes.
There were some more expensive ones that had crumbly chocolate wrapped in ricepaper, & the boxes were glossy card & celophane wrapped, making them even more cigarette like.
Here's a good site about sweet cigarettes, mostly American:
Candy Cigarettes: THE BIG CANDY SMOKIN' THUMB.The Trickster On The Roof
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Re: Sweet cigarettes
I remember those joke ones with the talc and the red foil end. I thought they were really cool which is worrying. Still, apart from a very brief flirtation with the old cancer sticks at uni, I've never gone for it either.1976 Vintage
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Re: Sweet cigarettes
We used to have them in Australia up until the early 90's. They were originally called "Fags" then changed to "Fads" because the politically-correct Nazis thought the former word was demeaning to gay people!
I used to buy them when I was a kid, then in my 20's took up the real thing until one of my girlfriends convinced me to quit the horrid habit in 2003 at the age of 32. Haven't been back to it since and glad I've kept up my resolve. :-)
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Re: Sweet cigarettes
Our newsagents had those boxes of sweet cigarettes lined up at the front of the cabinet holding the pick n mix sweets. I wasn't allowed to buy them because they looked too much like the real thing. I did buy the little hard white ones though.1976 Vintage
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Re: Sweet cigarettes
This is an interesting site of sweet cigarettes from around the world.
http://cardhouse.com/a/candy/bigthumb.htmThe Trickster On The Roof
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