Etch A Sketch® is a toy invented in 1959 by Frenchman Arthur Granjean that was introduced commercially by the Ohio Art Company in 1960. Granjean originally called it "The Magic Screen".
Etch A Sketch® is relatively flat and rectangular, looking somewhat like a small television screen. Introduced near the peak of the baby boom, the classically simple Etch A Sketch® is one of the best-known toys of that entire generation and remains popular to this day.
The toy works as a simplified version of a plotter. The inside surface of the glass screen is coated with aluminum powder and styrene beads which are then scraped off by a movable stylus leaving a dark line on the light-gray screen. The stylus is controlled by the two large knobs, one of which moves it vertically and the other horizontally. To erase the picture, one simply turns the toy upside down and shakes it, thus recoating the surface.
Creating a straight diagonal line or smoothly curved line with an Etch A Sketch® is notoriously difficult and a true test of coordination. One solution is to carefully alternate horizontal and vertical lines in very small increments, a technique somewhat reminiscent of how such lines are drawn by raster-scan computer displays.
Etch A Sketch® Animator, which debuted in 1987, featured a low resolution raster display and used two knobs for drawing like a regular Etch A Sketch® with several buttons to manipulate said drawings. It had a few kilobytes of memory, capable of storing 12 frames of pictures in any combination up to 96 times. It contained a speaker, which made static-like sounds when the knobs were moved and during animations. As with any sort of Etch A Sketch® toy, the animations created would not be very smooth, unless used in the hands of those who have mastered the use of an Etch A Sketch®.
There are a few practicing artists who use the Etch A Sketch® to produce professional work. *
Art and craft toys | National Toy Hall of Fame | 1960 introductions | Etch-A-Sketch | Telesketch
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