Gray Matters by Stuart Carlson and Jerry Resler for September 07, 2024

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    Zykoic  3 months ago

    Yep. Buster Brown shoe store.

    “I’m Buster Brown, and I live in a shoe. That’s my dog, Tige, and he lives there, too. Plunk your magic twanger, Froggy!”-

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    HarryLime  3 months ago

    There was a fluoroscope in the shoe dept. of the large department store in town. Whenever we went there shopping with Mom, we would step onto the machine to wiggle our toes … it was fun.

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    maureenmck Premium Member 3 months ago

    I looked it up. According to the Museum of Radiation and Radioactivity: “The shoe fitting fluoroscope was a common fixture in shoe stores during the 1930s, 1940s and 1950s.”

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    hans Premium Member 3 months ago

    Toes that glow in the dark…

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    fuzzbucket Premium Member 3 months ago

    Now Timmy wears size 13 shoes.

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    E.Z. Smith Premium Member 3 months ago

    Remember seeing them, but never used one.

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    luckyduck  3 months ago

    Used em evey fall when I got my new back to school shoes.

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    morningglory73 Premium Member 3 months ago

    I remember those and I think I did use it once. Then they were gone.

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    Brent Rosenthal Premium Member 3 months ago

    This is a blast from my past. My father and his father were the buyers for the largest shoe store in the Midwest, Gilbert’s in Columbus. I remember such a machine from when I was a kid in the early 1960s.

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    goboboyd  3 months ago

    I’ve always been disappointed that I just missed these in shoe stores. A couple, while inoperable, were still in prominent places in the stores, were waiting to be removed. Perhaps there are a few in private clubs where refurbished pinball machines are used. Equal amounts of ‘magic’ to me in the 50s.

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    suelou  3 months ago

    Well, at least they weren’t mandated in order to buy a pair of shoes…

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    heligoland  3 months ago

    I remember them. I was allowed to use one once when I was about 5. My mother thought they were unsafe.

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    hubbard3188  3 months ago

    Yup, stuck my feet in one of those when I was very young. Saw my tiny Tarsals as clear as day. They went away pretty quickly though. (the machines, not my toes!)

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    gooddavid  3 months ago

    I think the last shoe store x-ray machine was found in a shop in Tennessee in the 1980’s. It wasn’t in use but still there.

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    cherns Premium Member 3 months ago

    I loved using them to get fitted for shoes.

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