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In 2012, Hasbro announced the premiere of a version of the Easy-Bake Oven in black and silver after executives met with McKenna Pope, a girl from Garfield, New Jersey, who had started a Change.org petition asking the toy maker to offer the product in gender-neutral packaging. [26] [27] The prototype Easy-Bake Oven was also made available in ...
Most every girl born since 1960 has had one of her earliest cooking experiences with an Easy-Bake Oven. One of the rare toys that actually accomplishes something, the Easy-Bake is heated by a 100 ...
Take a look at the Easy Bake Oven through the years: Although the Easy Bake Oven technically was not the first working toy oven for children, the product grew in popularity due to use of a light ...
In 1986, the first vector-based clip art disc was released by Composite, a small desktop publishing company based in Eureka, California. The black-and-white art was painstakingly created by Rick Siegfried with MacDraw, sometimes using hundreds of simple objects combined to create complex images. It was released on a single-sided floppy disc.
Shrink art, Shrinky Dinks, or Shrinkles is a toy and activity kit consisting of sheets of polystyrene which can be cut with standard household scissors. When heated, the cut shapes become about nine times thicker while their horizontal and vertical dimensions reduce to about one-third the original size, resulting in hard, flat forms which retain their initial color and shape.
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The Queasy Bake Cookerator was a variant of the Easy-Bake Oven working toy oven, produced by Hasbro in 2002. It was discontinued soon afterwards. [ 1 ] The toy used a standard 100-watt incandescent light bulb as a heat source, and had a warming chamber on top of the oven. [ 2 ]
Cabbage Leaf (1931) by Edward Weston. Cabbage Leaf is a black and white photograph taken by Edward Weston in 1931. The picture demonstrates the artist renewed interest in the physical textures of vegetables, seashells and other objects that were the subject of many of his photographs at this time.