"View-master"@en . . . . . . . . . "The Op-Yop was a toy marketed in the 1960's by a company based in Royal Oak, Michigan called Kramer Designs. The company's original location was an office on Adams in the neighboring community of Birmingham. The history we could find was based on a Time Magazine article in 1968 where it was stated that a million of the Op-Yops had been sold and another million were expected to sell by Christmas. In my travels, I have found some additional information including an internal memo relating to some six months worth of advertising that was done on the Soupy Sales Show with Soupy doing the commercials shot in Detroit. There were also memo's to retailers advising them to stock up on the toy to be in sync with the Soupy Sales ads. I tracked down the original molder who made the parts and talked to some home workers who assembled them at their homes from 1967 through 1968. The toy was labeled as a psychedelic sensation and was skin packaged on 4-1/4 inch by 14 inch printed chipboard. More can be found out about the recent reincarnation of the op-yop at WWW.op-yop.com"@en . "View-Master"@en . . "View-Master (Virtual Reality) is a developer-made sponsored ROBLOX event, sponsored by View-Master. In order to obtain the prize, players must have had to get all of the three badges in three different games."@en . . "View-Master (Virtual Reality) is a developer-made sponsored ROBLOX event, sponsored by View-Master. In order to obtain the prize, players must have had to get all of the three badges in three different games."@en . . . "The Op-Yop was a toy marketed in the 1960's by a company based in Royal Oak, Michigan called Kramer Designs. The company's original location was an office on Adams in the neighboring community of Birmingham. The history we could find was based on a Time Magazine article in 1968 where it was stated that a million of the Op-Yops had been sold and another million were expected to sell by Christmas. In my travels, I have found some additional information including an internal memo relating to some six months worth of advertising that was done on the Soupy Sales Show with Soupy doing the commercials shot in Detroit. There were also memo's to retailers advising them to stock up on the toy to be in sync with the Soupy Sales ads. I tracked down the original molder who made the parts and talked to "@en . . . . . . "Over the years, five licensed Star Trek-themed projects have been made for the standard View-Master viewer. The first, adapting the episode TOS: \"The Omega Glory\" , was shot on set with a stereo camera while the episode was being filmed, whereas the second, Mr. Spock's Time Trek (adapting TAS: \"Yesteryear\"), consists of drawn art based on the Filmation animated episode. The two movie-based sets (based on Star Trek: The Motion Picture and Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan) feature 2-D publicity photos processed into \"layered\" 3-D images. The final set's images (adapting TNG: \"A Matter Of Honor\" ) appear to simulate 3-D via computer manipulation of the paired images. The first three sets were released in the original square paper envelopes (complete with story booklets or a trivia booklet), while the latter two saw release exclusively on \"blister cards\" (long cardboard cards with the reels held on in plastic \"blister\" bubbles) and with two different release numbers."@en . . . . "Over the years, five licensed Star Trek-themed projects have been made for the standard View-Master viewer. The first, adapting the episode TOS: \"The Omega Glory\" , was shot on set with a stereo camera while the episode was being filmed, whereas the second, Mr. Spock's Time Trek (adapting TAS: \"Yesteryear\"), consists of drawn art based on the Filmation animated episode."@en . .