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  • darren
    replied
    Re: Glue

    Originally posted by Sly View Post
    I remember using those white spreaders that over years of use were caked in rubber glue. That stuff had a really weird smell to it, like watery or something.

    I once got really light headed in high school when using a glue gun. I always thought it was pretty cool how the plastic tube you inserted could be heated and be squirted out as glue. There was nothing cool about feeling crappy when using it in a none ventilated area.
    yes i got sick a few timesusing those glue guns.
    it got so light heaed i had to ask the teacher to open the window.
    id rather use prit stick anyday.

    Leave a comment:


  • Sly
    replied
    Re: Glue

    I remember using those white spreaders that over years of use were caked in rubber glue. That stuff had a really weird smell to it, like watery or something.

    I once got really light headed in high school when using a glue gun. I always thought it was pretty cool how the plastic tube you inserted could be heated and be squirted out as glue. There was nothing cool about feeling crappy when using it in a none ventilated area.

    Leave a comment:


  • Heather74
    replied
    Re: Glue

    Originally posted by stuckinthe80's View Post
    Can you remember the glue pens that had a sort of hard plastic nib on the end that you pressed down on what you wanted to glue and a spot of the glue came out?
    Yes I do the more glue you wanted the longer and harder you pressed ,it came out in a liitle pool at the end of the nib
    You could also get Tippex pens which worked in the same way.

    Leave a comment:


  • stuckinthe80's
    replied
    Re: Glue

    Originally posted by huggie74 View Post
    You can still get those, they are as rubbish now as they were back then, the sponge bit falls off after a few uses. Very frustrating to use I find. You end up screwing the top off and tipping the glue out!
    Can you remember the glue pens that had a sort of hard plastic nib on the end that you pressed down on what you wanted to glue and a spot of the glue came out?

    Leave a comment:


  • Heather74
    replied
    Re: Glue

    Originally posted by Trickyvee View Post
    I also remember using glue in a long transparent tube-type thing like a big pen with possibly a sponge in the end. The glue was also transparent. Might have been made by UHU
    You can still get those, they are as rubbish now as they were back then, the sponge bit falls off after a few uses. Very frustrating to use I find. You end up screwing the top off and tipping the glue out!

    Leave a comment:


  • Trickyvee
    replied
    Re: Glue

    I also remember using glue in a long transparent tube-type thing like a big pen with possibly a sponge in the end. The glue was also transparent. Might have been made by UHU

    Leave a comment:


  • darren
    replied
    Re: Glue

    Originally posted by huggie74 View Post
    Flour and water paste thats what our Nan use to make us for our scrapbooks! many a happy hour we spent cutting up old birthday/ Christmas cards up.
    Another thing I loved doing was cutting up old catalogues and making up a family and their home from all the different departments.
    I guess in a way I cut out everything I would have liked to own, bed room furniture, toys, bit tv's ,outside fun and games etc.

    Happy times!

    Tho best thing about school glue in the white squirty bottles was spreading it all over your hands and spending the afternoon peeling it all off again!
    i bet the teachers where not to happy though.
    bad gitl heather.

    i can still remmber the smell of it.
    very strong smell.

    Leave a comment:


  • Seventies Child
    replied
    Re: Glue

    We were always getting told off at Primary for painting glue on our hands, letting it dry and the peeling it off. It was brilliant. I can still smell it now in my mind.

    Leave a comment:


  • Trickyvee
    replied
    Re: Glue

    Copydex...I too loved to smear it on my hands and peel it off. I loved the stripey pot and the red lid with a brush on it. I've only remembered the glue in the triangular bottle from these posts. Couldn't remember its name but it was hopeless to get the glue out. Funny little red, angled spready thing on top.

    Leave a comment:


  • kazboot
    replied
    Re: Glue

    I did exactly the same sort of thing in my scrapbooks, Heather.
    I also used to make up names and write stories about the catalogue pic people.

    My other great love was collecting pics of horses and other animals and sticking them in scrapbooks or on my bedroom wall ( I used sellotape for the wall ).

    Leave a comment:


  • Heather74
    replied
    Flour and water paste thats what our Nan use to make us for our scrapbooks! many a happy hour we spent cutting up old birthday/ Christmas cards up.
    Another thing I loved doing was cutting up old catalogues and making up a family and their home from all the different departments.
    I guess in a way I cut out everything I would have liked to own, bed room furniture, toys, bit tv's ,outside fun and games etc.

    Happy times!

    Tho best thing about school glue in the white squirty bottles was spreading it all over your hands and spending the afternoon peeling it all off again!

    Leave a comment:


  • kazboot
    replied
    Re: Glue

    Flour and water paste served me well for many years.
    I used to make lots of scrapbooks and always used it for sticking in pics.

    Leave a comment:


  • FLYING SAUCER
    replied
    Re: Glue

    I do remember the almond smelling glue in the pale blue plastic lidded pot! It was the same size as a drum of that smokers toothpaste Eucryl? Similar packing! The smell was delightful, I wonder how many hungry kids had a taste?

    Who remembers the glue used in middle school 1974ish that used to come in squeezy cylinders (a bit like old washing up liquid bottles) it was white and had, in purple, it's name DUFIX ?

    Leave a comment:


  • Richard1978
    replied
    Re: Glue

    I remember putting together model planes with polystyrene cement that smelt like garlic. It was hard to join 2 pieces without the glue oozing out of the join & making a mess.

    Also it was easy to get it on my fingers & form a crusty film that would peel off when it dried.

    I remember a friend having a bottle of Golden Gum, very similar to Gloy Paste.

    My Dad would occasionally used Araldite for DIY, which seemed strange coming in 2 tubes. I've hard that it they were mixed in 1 you never would have set solid even when sealed.

    Leave a comment:


  • The Low Country
    replied
    Re: Glue

    Oh goodness! I'd forgotten about the balsa cement and the triangular topped glue. I think the triangular topped one was called Gloy (as mentioned in second reply) the plastic bottle was also triangular if I remember correctly but as you say was extremely messy - too little & it didn't stick, too much and everything stuck together! I think some of the other glues mentioned in reply two such as Pritt were after my time as a child because I remember them being about in my later teens and early work days. Cow Gum may have been around but I seem to think it was more of a commercial item that came in a large tin than a little plastic pot for home use.
    Not forgetting the home made flour and water paste!!!



    Originally posted by Emettman View Post
    Not the name, but there is an elusive memory associated with the smell. I'll leave my subconscious to work on that.

    I could wax nostalgic on the adhesives of my childhood, their smells and their quirky natures compared to modern glues.
    Young people today, they don't know how lucky they are...

    Balsa cement drying in lumps faster than you could stick it to the bits of balsa you were trying to turn into a rubber-powered aeroplane, for example.
    Or the bottle of gum with the angled rubber spreader on top with which I stuck tea and cigarettte cards into their albums at my grandmother's house, and always too much or too little coming out.

    Leave a comment:

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