Right!
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Right! Hard toilet paper!
People of a certain age from Britain (and maybe elsewhere) will remember with horror having to use toilet paper that resembled tracing paper. It was hard and crinkly, not at all absorbent, and you could literally use it for tracing.
I'm curious how many people remember the trauma of using this appalling invention.
If you did encounter it, please state the offending country in the comments.
[Boost for larger sample, please!]
"So hear me out here team: Glossy toilet paper!"
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Right! Hard toilet paper!
People of a certain age from Britain (and maybe elsewhere) will remember with horror having to use toilet paper that resembled tracing paper. It was hard and crinkly, not at all absorbent, and you could literally use it for tracing.
I'm curious how many people remember the trauma of using this appalling invention.
If you did encounter it, please state the offending country in the comments.
[Boost for larger sample, please!]
@bodhipaksa the midlands of uk. Glad to see izal stopped making it in 2010
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@luddchem It was Izal. I've never heard of the other one. Where was that?
βBronco, for the bigger wipeβ,
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Right! Hard toilet paper!
People of a certain age from Britain (and maybe elsewhere) will remember with horror having to use toilet paper that resembled tracing paper. It was hard and crinkly, not at all absorbent, and you could literally use it for tracing.
I'm curious how many people remember the trauma of using this appalling invention.
If you did encounter it, please state the offending country in the comments.
[Boost for larger sample, please!]
@bodhipaksa England and NZ; public toilets and school toilets. As a girl at the time, I can confirm it was totally unsuitable for any toiletary use.
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Right! Hard toilet paper!
People of a certain age from Britain (and maybe elsewhere) will remember with horror having to use toilet paper that resembled tracing paper. It was hard and crinkly, not at all absorbent, and you could literally use it for tracing.
I'm curious how many people remember the trauma of using this appalling invention.
If you did encounter it, please state the offending country in the comments.
[Boost for larger sample, please!]
@bodhipaksa in Great Yarmouth! Iβd moved to Norfolk, UK from New Zealand and was horrified to discover this instrument of torture that was of no usd at all as toilet paper and only caused pain. Wasnβt it labelled as medicated? What on earth was the point of it?
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Right! Hard toilet paper!
People of a certain age from Britain (and maybe elsewhere) will remember with horror having to use toilet paper that resembled tracing paper. It was hard and crinkly, not at all absorbent, and you could literally use it for tracing.
I'm curious how many people remember the trauma of using this appalling invention.
If you did encounter it, please state the offending country in the comments.
[Boost for larger sample, please!]
@bodhipaksa Yes, I remember it well. I used to prefer the squares of newspaper on a hook if there was the luxury of a choice.
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Right! Hard toilet paper!
People of a certain age from Britain (and maybe elsewhere) will remember with horror having to use toilet paper that resembled tracing paper. It was hard and crinkly, not at all absorbent, and you could literally use it for tracing.
I'm curious how many people remember the trauma of using this appalling invention.
If you did encounter it, please state the offending country in the comments.
[Boost for larger sample, please!]
@bodhipaksa While my government spends about $100 million per fighter jet, I am stuck using very similar TP because the government is too cheap to buy anything better for its employees.
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Right! Hard toilet paper!
People of a certain age from Britain (and maybe elsewhere) will remember with horror having to use toilet paper that resembled tracing paper. It was hard and crinkly, not at all absorbent, and you could literally use it for tracing.
I'm curious how many people remember the trauma of using this appalling invention.
If you did encounter it, please state the offending country in the comments.
[Boost for larger sample, please!]
@bodhipaksa my grandad's house was opposite the Izal factory in Chapel town, Sheffield.
Only recently did I have the revelation that there was a reason (beyond spreading poo & suffering around) behind the application of Izal in UK toilets.
Namely that if you keep a roll of Andrex in an outside brick privy it tends to not survive well in the damp. Ending up bloated, fluffy & not fit for purpose.
lzal solves this problem by being impregnable to damp. Alas this rather degrades its usefulness for the job in hand (so to speak).
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Right! Hard toilet paper!
People of a certain age from Britain (and maybe elsewhere) will remember with horror having to use toilet paper that resembled tracing paper. It was hard and crinkly, not at all absorbent, and you could literally use it for tracing.
I'm curious how many people remember the trauma of using this appalling invention.
If you did encounter it, please state the offending country in the comments.
[Boost for larger sample, please!]
@bodhipaksa in Czechoslovakia during comunist era, we used to have probably somenthing similar. One side waxed-like the other one not that much sliding.
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@noodlemaz @avatastic The 80's and 90's! Incredible! We had it in school in the 60's and 70's. I don't remember seeing it after that.
@avatastic @bodhipaksa were you a teacher? Or maybe it's just because you weren't at school anymore

I used to go the whole day without going to the loo (partly) because of that.