Anyone growing up in the 50s and 60s, living in the South and who did any car traveling will likely remember being on the lookout for those rare, but highly sought after, Stuckey’s signs. A chance to get out of the car, get some candy or something else to eat, a hot dog, maybe even some breakfast, use the restroom, and most important of all to a kiddo under 10…. TOYS!!! Once in awhile, though, if you were traveling through Georgia or South Carolina, you would be fooled by a pretender to the kid-mecca, Rawl’s. I would always be so mad every time I saw one of those signs. The main reason was they used the same color scheme and a similar font to the Stuckey’s signs. My hopes gotten up sky high only to be dashed. Rawl’s did NOT have TOYS, or not that I know of. They most likely had heavenly candy… Who knows. Anyhow, for the first time since we have been living here, I notice on US 17 about 8 miles south of our house and about 2 miles north of Woodbine, GA, this hiding in the woods.
How could I have traveled this road numerous times and NOT noticed it? Beats me. Some research indicated that the Rawl’s factory was located in Woodbine. Now, how about that? The building also still stands, but no vestiges remain of its former occupation.
Funny thing is, the same week I took this picture, I also passed by Stuckey’s original headquarters in Eastman, GA, now occupied by the Standard Candy Company. See, that competition is still in place, I guess.
Switching gears, here are my yarn singles from the Fiber Candy.
Here is a skein of it, 3 plied. Truly now yarn candy. I spun it semi woolen and fulled it and whacked it around to stabilize the neps in the yarn and to open up its woolen character.
The turquoise/green is more of the same fiber in an alternate colorway.











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March 13, 2009 at 10:51 pm
ruth
The yarns really look like cotton candy. they’re good enough to eat!
We once drove down to Hilton Head Island, and I was thoroughly bemused by all the South of the Border signs.