#Building

3 items

Video thumbnail — Erector Set Commercial 1997
Toys 1913–present

Erector Set

Real metal girders, real nuts and bolts, and a tiny wrench that left dents in the kitchen table. While plastic bricks snapped together, an Erector set made you actually engineer something — and the name on the box was already the better part of a century old.

Video thumbnail — K'NEX: The "FIRST" Commercial; 1994
Toys 1990s

K'NEX

A construction toy of colorful plastic rods and connectors that snapped together to build structures, vehicles, and elaborate motorized contraptions like Ferris wheels and roller coasters. Invented by Joel Glickman and launched in 1992, K'NEX was the rods-and-connectors alternative to LEGO's bricks, and it rewarded imagination and structural thinking with click-satisfying mechanical systems.

Video thumbnail — Lincoln Logs By Playskool TV Commercial HD
Toys 1916–present

Lincoln Logs

Notched wooden logs that stack and interlock into cabins, towers, and forts — a toy essentially unchanged since 1916, when architect Frank Lloyd Wright's son John adapted his father's earthquake-resistant design into a 3/4-inch timber puzzle. By the 90s, that tin of logs was in every classroom, den, and grandparent's closet, a multi-generational constant.