With many
thanks to Paul Mundy, who gave me permission to use his extensive data base
and who is author of the descriptions, except the one for his own web site, which compares badly
in descriptive brilliance with Paul's.
Airsicknessbags.dk: Listing of 2000+ bags from Thomas Homer
Goetz's massive collection. Includes his swaps, but sadly, no bag
pictures.
Baghecht:
Joint collection of German Tütologen Thorsten Hecht and Gerhard Lang.
Extensive collection. Click on the thumbnails to see a larger scan and
details of each bag.
Bagistan:
Reiner Schulz's Bagistan National Museum of Bags.
Bagland: Alan Howlett's collection
of over 550 bags, all displayed
in widescreen format in glorious Technicolor®, so you can see every
fold, crease and ethnic food stain.
Bagophily:
Paul Mundy's web site, the best one in my opinion, witty, accurate and
always up to date
Bagstage: The collection of German baggist Walter Brinker. List of
bags and swaps. Scans are promised for the future.
David Shomper's Barfbag Site:
Imaginatively named site belonging to David Shomper: claims to be the
world's highest (above sea level)
DesignForChunks: A site rich in potential bag designs, rather than real bags. Some awesome designs to inspire airlines that offer boring plain white bags. Check here for a quick taste.
fmd's Air and Sea Sickness Bags Collection:
Italian collection by Fulvio Dossena, with some bags scanned.
Fred's
airsickness bags: "Belgium's first website dedicated to the
wondrous world of airsickness bags". Nice, clean design by Frédéric
Courtay, with over 100 bags.
Fredy Thürig:
This Swiss collector has an extensive bag gallery.
Inflight:
Very nicely designed site displaying Christian Annyas's collection.
Kotztuete.net: Collection curated by Martin Zeil and Thomas Krämer, divided into German, European and non-European bags.
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Kellys
airsickness bags Alaskan collector Bruce Kelly with the
biggest collection online
Michael Cooper's Barf Bags: This University of Berkeley professor lends a bit of academic kudos to the profession of baggery.
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Rainer
Schwartz Rainer Schwartz's collection from Hamburg
Rolf
Thalmann's site: Features poetry as well as
large-sized bagscans so you can check every flaw and crease in Rolf's
collection.
Russell Buckley's swaplist: This British safety card collector
also trades bags.
Sam's Airsickness Bags: This young Israeli collector's site boasts hundreds of bags. Clickable pictures of some.
Sickbagman: By UK collector Steve James,
but has not been updated since he sold his collection to US baggist Earl
Waibel. Some memorable items on display.
Takeshi and Tomoko Muto's sickbag page: Specializes in Japanese bags. A pity they don't
trade.
Torby na Pawia:
Leszek Szałapak's site, in English and Polish. Apparently the Poles think
that barfbags have something to do with peacocks.
ULC's Airsicknessbags: Danish baggist Ulrik Christensen's
collection. Listing of bags, but sadly no scans.
Virtual
Vismod: A collection that has now been donated to Steve
Silberberg's Virtual Museum.
Includes wallpaper to download.
Wolfgang Franken: Useful bilingual (English and German) site, with big list of other sites, a bulletin board and news of collectors' conventions.
Yaho de Ville: If you speak Polish, this is the bagsite for you. The Torebki link in the menu leads to the
bags.
Yahoo: The folks at Yahoo have finally seen fit to give bagophily the prominence it deserves.
Zio Guido's site: This Italian collector offers visitors a barfbag postcard.