VINTAGE AND THRIFTED ITEM ALERT

The vintage Fisher-Price is beautiful.
The lead paint on it is not.

Before 1978 there was no federal limit on lead in paint. A toy from 1970 can legally contain 50,000 parts per million of lead. Today's legal limit is 90 ppm. That's a 555x difference.

Test Before the Blood Test → Get 2 Kits $88
THE CRITICAL WINDOW

Your pediatrician tests blood lead at 12-24 months.

If the number comes back elevated, the exposure already happened. The doctor will say "reduce sources" , but won't tell you which ones, or where they are. The window to prevent the damage is before the blood test, not after.

NOWFind sources. Remove them.
12 MOBlood test ordered
AFTERDamage already done

Lead accumulates silently. There is no pain, no rash, no symptom until the damage is severe. The only way to know is to test the sources.

What lead does to a developing brain
These numbers are not projections. They are measured outcomes from studies of hundreds of thousands of children. Lead is not a risk factor for cognitive decline , it is a cause.
50,000 ppm
lead allowed in paint on children's items before 1978. Today's federal limit is 90 ppm.
555x
the concentration difference between a 1970s painted toy and one made today
2009
CPSIA finally brought limits to 90 ppm , 31 years after lead paint was banned from homes

This is what lead did to an entire generation.
The curve follows the gas pump. Leaded gasoline, burned in 200 million cars for 70 years, exited tailpipes as airborne particulates and entered children through air, dust, and soil. Press play.
Child blood lead in the US, 1925-2020
Geometric mean µg/dL for children ages 1-5 (NHANES II/III/Continuous) overlaid on tetraethyl lead added to US gasoline (EPA). Sources: NHANES CDC, ATSDR, Annest 1983, Mahaffey 1982.
1925
824M
IQ points erased from the US population by leaded gasoline exposure (McFarland et al. 2022, PNAS)
$50.9B
estimated annual cost of lead-attributable cognitive losses in the US (Trasande & Liu 2011)
0.65
µg/dL , today's geometric mean for US kids. Down from 15+ in 1970. Proof that removing the source works.
How a vintage toy doses a modern child
Lead paint on old items does not stay put. Handling, mouthing, and the natural wear of a child playing with a toy releases it continuously.
1

Pre-1978 painted toy or item made

Lead carbonate and lead chromate pigments created bright, durable colors. Toy manufacturers used them extensively with no federal limits.

2

Paint ages and becomes unstable

Lead paint on well-used toys deteriorates faster than on walls. Chipping at edges, crazing of surfaces, and general wear release particles.

3

Child handles and mouths toy

Children ages 6-36 months put virtually everything in their mouths. A single small chip of lead paint can contain 1,000-10,000 µg of lead.

4

Dust from handling settles on floor

Even toys that are not actively chipping shed lead dust during normal play. That dust settles on floors and is ingested during crawling.

5

Exposure accumulates over playtime

A child who plays with the same vintage toy daily receives repeated exposures. Blood lead rises incrementally until the 12-24 month test catches it.

Lead content in painted children's items by era
Parts per million (ppm) of lead in paint on children's products. Pre-1978: no federal limit. 1978: CPSC set 600 ppm. 2009: CPSIA reduced to 90 ppm. Vintage painted toys can exceed modern limits by 500x.
Tap dish to simulate
FluoroSpec test
FluoroSpec reagent causes lead-containing glaze to fluoresce bright green. No lead = no glow.

The damage is dose-dependent. And there is no safe dose.
Both charts below represent the same body of research looked at two different ways: IQ loss as a function of blood lead level, and ADHD risk by exposure quartile. Neither has a zero-risk threshold.
How lead erases IQ points
Lanphear et al. 2005 (n=1,333): IQ loss is steepest at the lowest exposures. There is no safe level. Hover a point for details.
0 µg/dL , no detectable lead 3.5 µg/dL , CDC reference 20 µg/dL , 1970s US average
Lead exposure and ADHD diagnosis risk
Braun et al. 2006 (n=8,413 NHANES): top blood-lead quintile had 4.1x the odds of ADHD. Confirmed by Mendelian randomization (Nigg 2016). Effect persists after adjusting for income, parental education, and home environment.
Low blood lead (<2 µg/dL)1.0x baseline
Moderate blood lead (2-5 µg/dL)2.3x
High blood lead (top quintile >5 µg/dL)4.1x
Adjusted odds ratio of ADHD diagnosis. Source: Braun JM et al., Environ Health Perspect. 2006.
The earnings effect
Salkever 1995 calculated a 2% reduction in lifetime earnings per IQ point lost. At 5 µg/dL , slightly above the CDC reference , that is roughly $80,000-$190,000 in lost lifetime earnings per child (Boyle et al. 2021, adjusted for current wages). Lead is not a health problem. It is an economic problem wearing a health problem's coat.
Find the source before the blood test does.
FluoroSpec is a perovskite quantum dot reagent. When it contacts lead , in paint, glaze, dust, or soil , it forms fluorescent crystals that glow bright green under UV. Positive result in 30 seconds. No lab. No waiting.
30s
Result time per surface
Green glow = lead present
Tests per kit (30-50 surfaces)
EPA
TSCA LVE L-25-0206 registered
TEST IT BEFORE THEY PLAY WITH IT

Know in 30 seconds if a vintage item is safe.

FluoroSpec tests painted surfaces, toys, jewelry, and pottery. If it glows green, there is lead. If it does not, you can put it in their hands without question.

DishesPotteryToysPainted surfacesSoil JewelryVinylImported items

Double Kit , recommended

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Single Kit

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Tested by 50,000+ parents across 38 states. Results in 30 seconds. EPA TSCA LVE L-25-0206.