Donate SIGN UP

Tell Me About Your Favourite Tin

Avatar Image
barry1010 | 16:37 Mon 06th Sep 2021 | ChatterBank
25 Answers
I have a nostalgic fondness for tins - every house and shed had tins when I were a lad. I kept my marbles in a big tin and my cigarette card collections, colouring pencils and crayons in other tins.
Christmas always brought new tins in to the house - I always had a tin of Bluebird toffees, and we were given gifts of a tin of Quality Street, a tin of chocolate biscuits and sometimes a tin of shortbread, too. Those were the days when a tin of Quality Street was an acceptable Christmas present and not plastic tubs you put in your shopping trolley by the dozen and ate in October. Dad had a tin of pipe tobacco.
Every Saturday Gran would give me a travel sweet from her tin - just one! Never knew why she had travel sweets, she never went very far. Never knew why they were called travel sweets, either.
She even gave me bit of snuff from her snuff tin once - never again!
Mom kept money in a tin, to pay the milkman, baker and window cleaner. Our first aid kit was in another tin - plasters, TCP and germolene, as far as I recall.
Dad's shed was full of tins - full of nails, screws, washers, bolts, drill bits.
The heaviest tin of all was the button tin. Kept me occupied for hours when I was a tot - mom would tell me to find all the white ones, or that she needed every button that looked like the one in her hand. It was the mangles that killed the buttons, not poor sewing skills. The sewing kit was in another tin.

Tins came in all shapes and sizes, all colours and patterns. I don't think we ever bought a tin - they just happened to contain the Bisto, Alka Seltzer, tobacco, snuff, biscuits, Elastoplast, golden syrup. The big round ones made great drums.

I bet if you are over 40 you, too, can remember a houseful of tins.

Gravatar

Answers

21 to 25 of 25rss feed

First Previous 1 2

Best Answer

No best answer has yet been selected by barry1010. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.

For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.
I remember tins, but I am more into boxes. I have several, different size & colours which I keep my knick knacks in.
The One by my bed is yellow and once contained French chocolates. I have a pink 4 drawer, this too contained chocolates and now hold some jewellery items.
If you want a hobby/fetish - how about this bloke who has featured on some Beeb Antiques programme ...... he has to take the top of the cream prize for this... https://www.wirralglobe.co.uk/news/17883311.milk-bottle-museum-needs-help/
Two empty drinking chocolate tins. Prise out and throw away the metal lids.

Get your Dad to poke a hole in the base of each. Connect them up with a piece of string.

Hold it taut. Instant telephone. Minutes of fun.
//I remember tins, but I am more into boxes//

So was I for an exhausting length of time. Still very fond of them but in a more relaxed fashion these days.
Question Author
choux - my mother also had me sewing buttons on to card - the card that came inside her packet of stockings or tights.

I had tin stilts, too, and tin telephones. My dad would snip little doors around the top edge of an oblong tin - placed upside down on the floor it was a great marble target, with different scores for different doors. He did the same with shoe boxes but I preferred the tin, a more satisfying noise.


21 to 25 of 25rss feed

First Previous 1 2

Do you know the answer?

Tell Me About Your Favourite Tin

Answer Question >>

Related Questions

Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.