Nostalgia Magnets
Description: A 90s computer with a sad face and the warning: “Please be patient with me, I’m from the 1900s”. A design that mixes digital nostalgia with cute self-deprecation. Great for introverts, nerds, jaded millennials or anyone who still remembers what it’s like to save to a floppy disk.
Description: Everyone has a favorite childhood restaurant they loved to eat at right? The smell and sights that transport you back to your childhood. Crystals was mine. If you were lucky to have eaten there as a kid in the 70's & 80's, then it was THE place for pizza, spaghetti and fun. With a theater in the back that played Looney Tunes and 3 stooges movies, this was a place like no other. Not to mention all the video games and building decorated with Art deco and other old oddities. *GET YOURS TODAY. AND SHARE WITH ALL YOUR FRIENDS AND ANYONE LUCKY ENOUGH TO HAVE VISITED THIS AWESOME BUT NEVER FORGOTTEN RESTAURANT!*
Description: Beards have taken over and this t-shirt will whisk-er you away to a place that fur and follicles rule. Nostalgic of your childhood? These parody "tease" are a tongue and cheek look back at how I would want to see them now. Twisted characters, pokes of fun and adult themes. Can you handle it?
Description: What is now known as "STP" was invented by German scientists during WWII as a response to Germany's need for lubrication of the German war-machine vehicles. WWII US Army divisions in Africa that overtook German Afrika Korps vehicles alleged that the Germans employed an engine oil that is now known as STP formulation full-strength in their air-cooled 4-cylinder engines, which successfully traveled through the hot African Desert war-front without seizing due to friction and extreme heat. How the Germans' original chemical synthesis formulation found its way to the U.S. after WWII is not known, but most likely it made that journey along with many of the other German innovations through the distribution of technology through the spoils of war.