17 Majestically Useless Items From The Innovations Catalogue

    So many crap gadgets.

    During the '80s and '90s, the Innovations catalogue sold a vision of the future as lived through gimmicky inventions.

    When it folded in 2003, regular readers were distraught. One left the following comment on a BBC article:

    I have admired Innovations from early childhood and am genuinely distressed by this turn of events. Luckily, I am wearing sponge-lined spectacles with integral FM tuner to absorb my tears (while I listen to the latest pop hits in style and comfort).

    Here are a few of the heroically pointless gadgets that graced the pages of Innovations.

    1. A personal astrologer.

    2. A levitating pen.

    3. A hand-held fishing simulator.

    4. A "Milk bottle planter".

    5. A zippable tie.

    6. A spider scoop.

    7. "Bathrobics".

    8. "Ionic Shoe Freshener".

    9. A phone in the shape of a frog.

    10. "The Gemini Skin System".

    11. "Chin Gym."

    12. A big toe straightener.

    13. A facial exerciser.

    14. A dressing gown, but with trousers.

    15. A cat lead.

    16. A device to monitor the freshness of your breath.

    17. The deeds to an acre of the moon.

    Taken from The Very Best Of The Innovations Catalogue, Bloomsbury Publishing Plc.

    What do you think?

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    Comments
    • Top Comment
      In America we have the Harriet Carter catalog. Sells the same kind of stuff. I get a new one every couple of months.

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