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10 everyday smells every ’80s kid remembers

10 Everyday Smells Every ’80s Kid Remembers

Memory can be strange. You might forget what you wore on the first day of school or what you got for your 10th birthday, but one unexpected smell can suddenly transport you back decades.

For kids who grew up in the 1980s, childhood had a very specific scent. It smelled like freshly opened plastic toys, mimeographed worksheets, hot vinyl car seats, and the mysterious chemical cloud that followed you out of the neighborhood video store. Here are 10 everyday smells that can still send an ’80s kid straight back in time.

Open Crayola crayon box with colorful crayons on a white background.
Photo by Erick Ortega

10. A Freshly Opened Box of Crayons

Opening a new box of crayons released a waxy smell that instantly meant coloring time.

Whether you were working on a classroom assignment or sprawled across the living room floor, that unmistakable scent seemed especially strong when the crayons were still perfectly pointed and arranged in neat rows.

A room filled with lots of tables and yellow chairs
Photo by Dominic Kurniawan Suryaputra

9. The School Cafeteria Before Lunch

Long before you reached the cafeteria, you could usually smell what was waiting.

Pizza, tater tots, canned vegetables, disinfectant, and industrial-strength cleaning products somehow blended into one unforgettable aroma. It wasn’t always appetizing, but every ’80s kid knew exactly what it meant.

Explore the classic interior design of a 1966 Chevrolet Caprice, featuring blue seats and nostalgic elements.
Photo by AP Vibes

8. Hot Vinyl Car Seats

Cars left in the summer sun had a smell all their own.

The combination of heated vinyl, plastic, gasoline, and whatever air freshener was hanging from the mirror hit you the moment you opened the door. Then came the challenge of sitting down without burning the backs of your legs.

Plastic toys from the 80s
Openverse

7. A Brand-New Plastic Toy

New toys didn’t just look exciting. They had a distinctive smell.

Fresh dolls, action figures, plastic playsets, and inflatable toys emerged from their boxes carrying a strong factory-fresh scent that somehow became part of the thrill of getting something new.

Blockbuster VHS video rental store
Openverse

6. The Neighborhood Video Store

Walking into a video store meant entering a world of possibilities and a cloud of very specific smells.

Plastic VHS cases, carpeting, popcorn, candy, and the faint scent of cleaning products combined into an aroma that will forever be associated with wandering the aisles and hoping your first choice was still available.

Colorful scented markers
Openverse

5. Scented Markers

For a generation of kids, markers were apparently not exciting enough unless they smelled like fruit.

Cherry, grape, blueberry, and lemon scents filled classrooms and bedrooms, though the actual aromas didn’t always have much in common with the foods printed on the labels. Naturally, everyone had a favorite.

Public swimming pool
Openverse

4. The Public Swimming Pool

Few smells announced summer quite like chlorine.

It clung to your hair, your swimsuit, and your skin long after you left the pool. Mixed with sunscreen and hot concrete, it created one of the most recognizable scents of an ’80s childhood.

Woman using photocopier for school worksheets
Openverse

3. Freshly Copied School Worksheets

Before classroom printers became standard, many students received worksheets made with older copying machines.

Freshly duplicated pages could arrive cool, slightly damp, and carrying a strong chemical smell. Kids often lifted them to their faces for a quick sniff, a classroom ritual that would seem extremely strange to anyone who missed the era.

an escalator in a shopping mall with people walking down it
Photo by Marcus Reubenstein

2. The Mall

The 1980s mall was an entire world, and it had its own atmosphere.

The smell of pretzels, pizza, department-store perfume, new clothes, indoor fountains, and sometimes cigarette smoke drifted together beneath the fluorescent lights. You could practically smell the mall before you even reached the food court.

play doh
Openverse

1. A Box of Play-Doh

Few childhood smells are as instantly recognizable as Play-Doh.

The salty, slightly sweet scent escaped the container the moment you pulled off the lid. Decades later, one whiff can bring back memories of tiny plastic tools, mixed-up colors, and trying to keep the dough from drying into a useless brick.

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This article originally appeared on Resourcebuzz and was syndicated by MediaFeed.co.

 

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