Flypaper < No Ads >

Before mass production, people made their own. A common 19th-century recipe: boil water, add sugar and ground black pepper (attractants), then stir in powdered resin and a bit of flour to create a paste. Smear it on yellow paper (flies see yellow as a bright, flower-like signal), and hang it up.

You know that smell. That sweet, cloying, slightly caramelized scent of rosin and castor oil. The smell of a summer kitchen in 1952. The smell of your grandmother’s back porch. That is the smell of flypaper — an invention so simple, so brutally effective, and so disgusting that it occupies a unique space in both industrial history and the human psyche. Flypaper

There’s a reason horror movies love flypaper. It’s visceral. It’s the opposite of sterile. It shows you the accumulating evidence of death, slowly, one leg at a time. Before mass production, people made their own