One of my favorite toys growing up. To this day I like collecting vintage lighting fixtures like soft drink clocks or signs probably because of this toy. They came with designs that you could use to create different cartoons and clowns but I never used those. I liked to create my own masterpieces.
This toy allowed you to be creative in a very different way. It brought out the artistic side in you. You could design different things and it would light up your room in the dark with colors. Lite-Brite was invented by Joseph M. Burck, a senior designer at Chicago toy and game design company Marvin Glass and Associates. The company licensed Lite-Brite to Hasbro, which officially launched it in 1967. It became a staple toy in the 1970s.
Of course…when I got older I would make crude messages on the Lite Brite for friends. Lite-Brite is recognized as one of the greatest toys of all time by the Toy Hall of Fame. It has become part of our pop culture.
Lite Brite commercial from the 1970s. Did you have one growing up?

I loved lite-brite!
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I still do a bit!
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Cool! Had one! 😎👍
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I never saw this toy before, perhaps I was too old for this.
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Almost everyone in my generation had one…it came out the year I was born in 67. It was fun though.
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Classic, but I didn’t have one. I had a friend who did and her pegs kept getting sucked up by the vacuum cleaner, so she ended up with a handful of pegs and the toy lived in the back of the closet!
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Yes…that was a pitfall of them…stuck in the thick shag carpet!
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(So, in some ways the 70s did suck?)
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Yes…in that way!
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Exactly!
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Lol…aaahhh, I can still hear that song in my head. ‘Lite Bright making thi-iiiings with liiii-iights’…what a song. Never played with it or knew anyone who that also. But what a classic 70’s commercial jingle that it was.
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Carl you missed out! I loved mine… I like anything with lights…and this probably is the reason
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Lol…I was too busy watching my electric football players buzzing around face down on that metal field back then…lol.
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Oh I loved that game…and then the Matel football electronic game came out…I also liked the table hockey game
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Oh ya’…we were on the same page as kids back then.
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My “electric” hockey game had a goal light but that was the only electric part of it. That was when the NHL consisted of six teams.
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Wow! That’s classic The original 6 game.
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I love those old games like that.
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My best friend had that. It was way less fun than I thought it would be. I had Foto-Electric Football, where you actually chose plays and defensive alignments.
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I don’t remember that game…my younger brother & I loved playing our ‘Talking Football’ from Mattel with Dick Enberg doing the announcing. John Brodie was the pitchman for that game.
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Those are very cool toys. I never had one, for some reason, but always kind of wanted one when I was of grade school age. I didn’t even know they came with instructions on how to make a creepy clown – I just assumed you made up your own designs
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Yea I remember the designs…I didn’t go by them though.
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Primitive fiber optics?
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You know…I never thought about it that way!
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Either before my time or it never was marketed here- I don’t recall anything about it, it sounds a decent toy though. Anything that gets kids thinking imaginatively is a good toy.
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We did all sorts of designs on it. You know obbverse…a few years ago I posted Saturday Morning kids shows. What I didn’t realize is…there was an age range to those shows…and many people didn’t know them that were older or younger than I was…. Same as certain toys as well…they all don’t encompass everyone…except the timeless ones like bicycles or something like that.
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Here in New York when I was a kid, Saturday morning cartoons would end around 10 or 11 am, and the local station that aired the cartoons would immediately segue into old, poorly dubbed kung fu movies, which in retrospect were shockingly violent. Definitely not appropriate for kids.
My brother and I would watch them, then spend the next few hours mimicking the kung fu and the mismatched audio dialog.
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That is a great story…yep…I’m in Nashville and ours ended at noon. They would play the poorly dubbed Kung Fu movies as well. Thats where I found Bruce Lee.
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I certainly remember the catchy jingle, but I never had one, nor did I play with one. The only somewhat similar thing I had was a blue plastic pegboard that had little plastic squares, rectangles and triangles that you could press in to make pictures and designs. They looked almost like tiny LEGO. Don’t know if it even had a name.
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They did look like round legos, you are right. From this toy…it led me to collect soda clocks and anything that lit up.
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Ahh…Lite Brite…never had one (my cousin told me it was a rip off) but I loved the commercial and the jingle. Bozo, the rooster and Bugs were the standouts to me.
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It was really fun for me…I liked the different designs…I credit it for me collecting soda clocks later on that light up…I like anything that lights up almost. That probably came from this game.
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I don’t think we had that over the pond?
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Thats a good question. I’ll have to look that up.
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My company had a product called BrightView which was essentially lipstick on a pig for our legacy applications. Some of us called it “Lite-Brite.” I borrowedthe line from the Three Stooges’s “Dizzy Doctors”:
BrightView! BrightView! Makes old software new! We’ll sell a million copies! Woo woowoowoowoo woowoo!
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That is hilarious! Thank you John…after the day at work I had…I needed some Three Stooges.
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I remember the commercials but I don’t think anyone in our family ever had one.
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Holy frigg! My mind is blown haha… got mine for Xmas one year..
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You are one of the few commentors who actually had one like me! Loved it.
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I always wanted that! Ha!
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It’s never too late!
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I had one of these. Even bought the kids one, but I’m sure I played with it more!!
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I still have one in my closet…a yard sale find!
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I never had one, but pretty much every other kid in my neighborhood had them, and they were all old and missing half the colored pegs. We had to be very creative with what was left.
Lite Brite was like Etch A Sketch, Constructor Sets and Atari consoles: toys from the last generation that were handed down from older brothers and sisters.
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Came out too late for me. I seem to recall a version of it in our house when the girls were young but it didn’t get a huge amount of use. Very innovative toy though.
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I have one in my closet…it’s never too late!
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Lol thanks anyway
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