Aren't friendship bracelet's awesome?Three Female Ghosts Handcrafted by your bestie to prove that you'll be BFFs forever.
Of course laced in among the multi-colored threads are all the tears shed while trying to make the thing. Consider it binding material.
SEE ALSO: Talking Trump mask appears at New York Toy Fair even without winning the popular voteBeing friends and making these bracelets should be easier. WowWee, a company best know for creating balancing and farting robots, agrees and has unveiled on Saturday at New York Toy Fair what may be the first app-connected friendship bracelet machine: The Digiloom.
It is, as the name suggests, a real loom that handles the messy job of keeping all those threads straight, organized and separated at the right times to accept the perpendicular threads. Though, you still have to feed them through.
The battery-powered Digiloom starts with custom, pre-threaded bracelets, with a flexible, plastic backing and pre-attached clasps that you feed into the machine. On the Bluetooth connected app, users can choose from among pre-made patterns or create their own by typing in a message.
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Once the pattern is selected, you hit one of the buttons on the Digiloom and it separates the threads so that they are perfectly positioned for you to feed through the opposing, usually reverse-colored thread.
Essentially, you keep hitting the button, waiting for the loom and its tiny plastic, blue fingers...er...hooks... to quickly separate the threads and then you feed your thread through the opening, creating a friendship pattern bracelet, complete with a custom message, one thread-line at a time. We put in "Mashable," but only had time to create an "M."
So it's not fully automated, but it is easier than, say, taping threads to a table or trying to keep them organized in your hands.
Making one friendship bracelet with the loom can take roughly 25 minutes.
WowWee plans to ship Digiloom in August for $49.99.
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