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Monday, May 12, 2008

Find your favorite childhood candy at Max and Quinn’s Atomic Boys Shop-O-Rama

The West Seattle shop is stocked with oldies but goodies like Sky Bars, Candy Buttons and bubblegum cigarettes

April 11, 2008

Max and Quinn's Atomic Boys Shop-O-Rama

Alison Brownrigg

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Max and Quinn's Atomic Boys Shop-O-RamaMax and Quinn's Atomic Boys Shop-O-RamaMax and Quinn's Atomic Boys Shop-O-RamaMax and Quinn's Atomic Boys Shop-O-RamaMax and Quinn's Atomic Boys Shop-O-RamaMax and Quinn's Atomic Boys Shop-O-Rama

Everyone's got a favorite candy from childhood -- a confection that stirs up sweet, nostalgic memories. Give me a strip of Candy Buttons, those colorful little dots that always seemed to bring up a bit of the paper backing as I scraped them off with my teeth, and I am transported back to carefree summer afternoons spent playing in my front yard.

At Max and Quinn's Atomic Boys Shop-O-Rama, it's highly possible that you'll find your favorite childhood candy. The store is stocked with oldies but goodies like Sky Bars, the aforementioned Candy Buttons (both 99cents ) and bubblegum cigarettes (50 cents to $1.25), and each confection is accompanied by a small sign that tells its history. (Did you know that Squirrel Nut Zippers were named after an alcoholic drink popular during Prohibition, or that Tootsie Rolls were first created in 1896? To a candy fanatic like me, that's some interesting stuff!)

But it's not all about candy at Atomic Boys, which is named after the owners' skateboarding sons. Those owners are West Seattle residents Kent and Parris Sadow, retro-loving entrepreneurs who have put together an impressive collection of reproduction tin robots and spacemen ($20-$27.50), classic games such as Tiddledy Winks ($5.50) and Steel Builder, the original erector set ($22). Novelties abound, like my personal favorite, the very magnetic Hairy Gary ($4.95) and the stress-relieving squeezable Martian Popping Thing ($8.95).

Max and Quinn's also hopes to continue in the tradition of their store's previous tenants, Hart's Cards and Gifts, which provided West Seattle with cards and party supplies for 25 years. Vintage-inspired greeting cards and party basics are already available, and soon to come are hip lines like French Bull, creator of cool, colorful melamine platters, as well as festive napkins and paper plates from Design Design.

So now you know just where to go when you're in the market for a nostalgic candy fix, a classic horn for your bike or a Whoopee cushion just for laughs.

If you have a shop, sale, event or great product tip you'd like to share, e-mail seattleshopping@nwsource.com.

Copyright © The Seattle Times Company


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Please help me I think that I am going crazy. When I was a little girl my mom would stop at this ole grocery store to pick up a few groceries and I would always get a candy bar named "Scrunch". I thought that it was made by Willy Wonka but they have informed me that they had never had a candy bar by that name.I know that I did not make this up on my own so where am I getting this name for this candy bar from. No one has heard of it. Please e-mail me back and tell me if you know anything about a scrunch candy bar. The candy bar was about as long as a 3 musketeer chocolate on the outside rice-krispi on the inside and peanut-butter.Very delicious. I would love to have another just to reminise about the days when I was a child. My age at that time was 9,10 or 11. Now I am 43. Thank You.

Lana,
I Googled the name "Scrunch candy," and you are not crazy. It appear that such a candy did exist, though info on it is scarce; it certainly is not in production anymore. However, one website suggest that the new Butterfinger Crisp bars are very similar. Having never tried either, I cannot confirm that, but good luck trying it out!

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