tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3016902290858278012.post3424690802894956045..comments2024-03-25T08:43:11.554-04:00Comments on Quasi-Interesting Paraphernalia Inc.: Who is this guy?David W.http://www.blogger.com/profile/12787360271258648033noreply@blogger.comBlogger5125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3016902290858278012.post-70077656037067072202021-02-05T23:26:44.366-05:002021-02-05T23:26:44.366-05:00 www.omgab.com 우리카지노사이트
www.omgab.com/theking 더킹카... www.omgab.com 우리카지노사이트<br /> www.omgab.com/theking 더킹카지노<br /> www.omgab.com/sands 샌즈카지노<br /> www.omgab.com/first 퍼스트카지노<br /> www.omgab.com/yes 예스카지노<br /> www.omgab.com/super 슈퍼카지노<br /> www.omgab.com/gatsby 개츠비카지노<br /> www.omgab.com/33 33카지노<br /> www.omgab.com/world 월드카지노<br /> www.omgab.com/merit 메리트카지노BTL카지노https://www.blogger.com/profile/14187624986122063522noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3016902290858278012.post-35969893522993693072021-02-05T23:26:27.258-05:002021-02-05T23:26:27.258-05:00 www.bbdd66.com 우리카지노사이트
www.bbdd66.com/theking 더... www.bbdd66.com 우리카지노사이트<br /> www.bbdd66.com/theking 더킹카지노<br /> www.bbdd66.com/sands 샌즈카지노<br /> www.bbdd66.com/first 퍼스트카지노<br /> www.bbdd66.com/yes 예스카지노<br /> www.bbdd66.com/super 슈퍼카지노<br /> www.bbdd66.com/gatsby 개츠비카지노<br /> www.bbdd66.com/33 33카지노<br /> www.bbdd66.com/world 월드카지노<br /> www.bbdd66.com/merit 메리트카지노BTL카지노https://www.blogger.com/profile/14187624986122063522noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3016902290858278012.post-37823931507993421272013-05-18T18:56:59.611-04:002013-05-18T18:56:59.611-04:00Oh?Oh?Arizona Mikenoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3016902290858278012.post-35415860396582837992013-05-18T16:38:09.251-04:002013-05-18T16:38:09.251-04:00Thanks for the great comment Mike! I loved reading...Thanks for the great comment Mike! I loved reading it.<br /><br />I think there's more text in your comment than there is in my post which makes me feel like I'm really slacking.David W.https://www.blogger.com/profile/12787360271258648033noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3016902290858278012.post-69412711787439366842013-05-18T11:51:50.616-04:002013-05-18T11:51:50.616-04:00I know exactly what you mean. I bought the same bo...I know exactly what you mean. I bought the same book in college and ordered a whole bunch of stuff out of it. I still have the book but (sadly) not many of the things I ordered or the catalogs I received. I think the book was a spin-off of a section that was originally published in an all-Fortean Weirdness special issue Whole Earth Review (itself a spin off of the Whole Earth Catalog) which I also still have.<br /><br />I remember getting the offset-printed catalogs for the unusual movie and TV models, and ordered some Buckaroo Banzai merchandise the book turned me on to.<br /><br />I have been an inveterate catalog collector my whole life, and probably enjoyed the catalogs I received in the mail (which i endlessly perused, and from which I made endless lists of all the things I planned to buy with my very finite financial resources) more than getting the merchandise I would sometimes order from them. Like Christmas presents, the anticipation was often better than actually receiving the goods. Like you, I wish I had kept a lot of those catalogs, but figured they would always be available somewhere, and with moves those things get lost, misplaced, or tossed. Kind souls often scan them and post theme on the 'Net, or they can sometimes be found on eBay, but a lot are just tossed as ephemera and are gone forever.<br /><br />I still have some, or have have recovered some, some I'm still looking for. The massive 100+ page novelties catalog from San Antonio's Elbee company was one of the great joys of my youth, and I still think it is a model of proto-punk cut-and-paste DIY design (I went to their retail store in San Antonio in the 1980s when I was stationed there in the army, expecting a Walmart-size house of novelties and magic, but they had closed out most of their novelties and magic sales and were just concentrating on wooden nickels - which, under another business name, they are still doing). The old Edmund's Scientific Company catalogs in the 1960s and 1970s. The Flosso-Hornmann magic catalogs. The Blackhawk Films catalogs, huge newspaper-size catalogs for 8mm and 16mm films that were printed on cheap pulp paper. The Superior Bulk Film Company catalogs, that had every gadget and doo-dad that an aspiring amateur filmmaker could want. The back pages of the Warren magazines, whose ads for the Captain Company's offerings were like a monthly catalog for me, or later the ads in The Monster Times and Jim Steranko's Mediascene.<br /><br />Print catalogs have gotten a lot scarcer in these days of on-line sales, but I miss those. My son still loves the Lego catalogs that come out every month or so, and part of the fun is endlessly re-reading them.Arizona Mikenoreply@blogger.com