He’s created more than 400 pieces of art with the toy, including detailed renditions of every U.S. Since then, Etch-A-Sketch art has become George’s passion. “Soon I had a group of kids coming around each night to watch me draw.” In the playroom, he found an Etch A Sketch and began doodling for his daughter, drawing Charlie Brown and other cartoon characters. He looked around the hospital for something to entertain the 4-year-old. However, the Clintonville, Ohio, resident didn’t begin Etch A Sketching in earnest until 1988 when his daughter, Ellie, was recovering from heart surgery. Etch A Sketch-has learned to be patient, precise and persistent while mastering the popular baby boomer toy.Īs a child, George played with one of the first Etch A Sketches manufactured in 1960 by the Ohio Art Co. “It’s a matter of patience.”ĭuring the last 25 years, George-known as Mr. ![]() ![]() ![]() “If you make a mistake, there’s no selective erasing,” George says. Twirling the white knobs on an Etch A Sketch, Tim George, 63, creates a near-perfect circle, demonstrating the mechanical drawing toy for a small group of spectators at Blendon Woods Metropolitan Park in Columbus, Ohio.
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