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Friday, May 30, 2008

"Video jug" - offering instructional videos for many hobbies and leisure

Video jug is a community based video library with many hobby and leisure links for hobbyist.
At each and every link you may watch instructional videos for the topic.
It is a comprehensive library of free factual video content online.
The professionally-produced, high definition videos cover every conceivable topic and the site is the definitive online "encyclopaedia of life".

"Leisure and Hobbies" section is full with leisure and hobby ideas.
The topic are: art& craft, astrology, card and bar games, camping, comic books, knitting and needle work, magic and party tricks, digital photography, podcasting, video games, astronomy, writing and publishing, skates and scooters, skateboarding, kiting, horse riding, puzzles and more.

Every topic have more pages with videos.

Link to the page: Leisure and Hobbies

More about the site:

The video content on the site takes a variety of formats that include informative "How To" and "Ask The Expert" films that guide you, step-by-step, through everything and anything in life.
The “How To” format delivers easy-to-follow, bite-size tutorials on a wide range of topics from cleaning tips and sport, to relationship advice and recipes. These answer are provided by celebrities, professors, high-flying professionals, coaches, teachers, or consultants - who provide answers to common questions and concerns.
For hobbyist this site would be helping in providing how to videos for many hobbies.

What you get at the site?

You can share your own videos and take part in the discussion forum. Obviously you can get more information about your hobbies at the forum.
Link: forum
Sign up for their regular newsletter and updates on new VideoJug films:
Link: sign up here

Wednesday, May 28, 2008

Hobby ideas for kids at "Indian Child"

Kids need some activity or hobby ideas to keep them busy. And being an educator I know that as a parent or teacher your interaction with kids or children is very important. When you feel like playing or keeping them busy with a

Indian Child is an education and entertainment site for children, parents and teachers. The hobby section provides number of articles on variety of hobbies.

At hobbies page it says:
"Hobby is any leisure activity that diverts an individual from their daily strenuous like. Or it also plays the role of keeping the unoccupied, occupied with something to do. As, in the latter case an empty mind is a devil’s workshop. Indulging in a hobby actually does away with the boredom that sets in due to the monotonous life one gets used to. Certain hobbies also help release pent-up frustrations. Whatever the hobby maybe, it should be an activity that de-stresses and not add onto stress.

Maintaining a healthy mind and body is far more essential. Picking up a hobby and spending some time each week keeps the mind and body fit for all battles and struggles like offers"


Hobby ideas page provides interesting ideas for children and kids and at each page there are many useful links to other sites:

* Interesting hobbies

* Interesting Crafts & Hobbies for kids and parents: Hobbies for kids

Sunday, May 25, 2008

A directory to find and start a new hobby- "Discover a hobby"

At world wide web you can find every information you need, but sometimes information sources are scattered in a way that it is time consuming to search for the specific information and tiring also. If you are looking for a pastime and need to choose a hobby then it would take long to search for all or many hobbies. I am happy to share this useful source which is a hobby directory with you. And all information from the site are absolutely FREE.

Disover a hobby is a directory for finding and starting a new hobby!

You can find out how to start any hobby,
where to find free online lessons or regular lessons in your area,
free online instructional videos,
and the best beginners equipment, books, and videos.

There are more than 100 hobby pages at the site. Site is created by Duncan Davis, who tells more about the site:

"I have always been a hobby fanatic. Since I was little I have always had a passion for trying and learning new hobbies, anything, everything, ranging from extreme sports and music to the arts and collectibles.

I found that starting a different hobby was sometimes difficult and time consuming. Therefore as another "hobby" I started an online resource for people wanting to learn about and get started in different hobbies. I now have over 100 different hobby pages, where you can find free info and tips on how to get started, tutorials, lessons, beginner product recommendations, forums...etc

Hopefully this page can help you find something you love. I have found that the internet has tons of great (and free) information on just about anything you could want to learn. Hopefully people find Discover A Hobby helpful and they are able to learn and grow."


To see if the site provides useful information about specific topic, I clicked on calligraphy link, and I was happy to find the page with many links and resources which can help anyone to start it as a hobby.

In Collecting hobby section there are pages about: Antiques, Coin Collecting, Comic Books, Fine Art Collecting, Model Cars, Movie Memorabilia, Music Memorabilia, Sports Collectibles, Sports Trading Cards, Stamp Collecting.

The arts page have these links:

Architecture
Calligraphy
Candle Making
Ceramics / Pottery
Crochet
Fashion Design
Film Making
Jewelry Making
Languages
Painting / Drawing
Photography
Quilting
Screenwriting
Sign Language

At games page you can find these games links:

Billiards - Pool
Board Games
Bridge
Card Tricks
Chess
Dominoes
Foosball
Magic Tricks
Other Card Games
Pinball / Arcade Games
Poker
Rakeback Poker
Radio Controlled Vehicles
Table Tennis - Ping Pong

So there is a lot to discover hobbies for your pastimes.

Thursday, May 22, 2008

Activity ideas to spend your free time

I remember the time when I was student and during exams, there were a lot of ideas to spend the free times, but as the exams were over everything became boring. At that time I kept myself busy with penpal, collecting stamps, coins and playing board games like scrabble, ludo etc. So it is a good idea to look for the ideas or tips, which could help us to choose a hobby or activity for our free time.

How to do things.com provides articles on ideas about hobbies or activities to enhance your past time. There are many "how to do?" posts which can guide you to start that activity.

Some of the article links:

* How To Learn Glass Blowing

* How To Macrame

* How To Collect Autographs

* How To Sell Model Trains

Wednesday, May 21, 2008

Learn paper craft from internet

I am always fascinated by origami or paper folding. The first paper toy, I learned at a very early age was a paper boat, which I made repeatedly for many days.

I am now a teacher and take nursery level class, and I teach origami+paper craft to my students. For the development of creative skills this activity or hobby can be offered or suggested by teachers or parents to their children.

There is a slight difference between origami and paper model, paper folding or paper craft.

According to definition by Wikipedia:

"Paper models, also called card models or papercraft, are models constructed mainly from sheets of heavy paper or card stock as a hobby. It may be considered a broad category that contains origami, and card modelling, with origami being a paper model made from folding paper (without using glue), and card modelling as the making of scale models from sheets of card on which the parts were printed, usually in full colour, for one to cut out, fold, score and glue together."

- Link to wikipedia definition of: paper model

I have collected many links and resources where you can not only learn paper craft or paper folding, provided by step by step tutorials, But you can also download and print out many craft projects. Almost all are FREE. The material required is easly available from nearest stationary, hobby store or from the online hobby stores. Mainly you would need paper, glue, scissor or crafters knife to make paper craft projects.

Links and resources for paper crafts:

1- Paperkraft
This blog is created by Ron Rementilla from U.S.

When did he started this hobby?
"He has been collecting papercraft books and kits since he was a kid, most of the old ones that he had were of the punch-out type and paper automatas. His collection of free downloadable papercraft patterns from the net only started in 1997.

Anout the blog:
Paperkraft.net guides people to find the best free papercrafts on the web and promote the works of prominent and up-and-coming paper modelers, even the obscured ones.
The main focus of this site is on 3D (three-dimensional) paper models. Whenever you see the word "papercraft" it refers to "3D paper models". The types of genre included are anime, manga, video game, PC game, cartoon, and film. Also included are origami, paper automata, pop-up cards, and dioramas.
Link: Paperkraft

2- Paper craft world is for free paper models and papercraft goods.
You can see a motorbike papercraft here, which is an example of the papercraft.

3- Creative park is from "Canon" company and a lot of paper crafts are given at the site which are free to search or download the models.

4- Paper craft paradise is another paper craft blog offering some unusual paper crafts.

5- Paper craft models from "Yamaha Motor Co.Japan". You can download motor bike, animals, seasons and other models free from the link.

6- Paper Craft x offers paper toys.

7- Erick's Models provides opportunity of downloading paper models for Free.

More sites, blogs and links:

* Paper forest is an excellent blog with articles on paper crafts.

* Rommy-sloth paper toys
A forum for paper crafters

* Art wanted has many attractive paper models.

* Card modeling is about card modeling and more about at this community based site.

* Paper inside is from Cláudio Dias, who is from Brazil. He designs his own models. And all links are FREE to use.

* 100 exceptional free paper models and toys from "Creative close up". There are three dimensional paper models: Gadgets, toys, characters, cars, robots, spaceships, airplanes, buildings and even working photo cameras.

** Topciala is a search engine which helps you to find the sites you need. This link would take you to many links for paper folding sites.

- paper craft links

* At Paper folding 3D you can download many 3D paper folding models. There are a lot of beautiful paper craft models.
(In their own words)
"Paper folding is an art to make all kinds of shapes of things with paper. A simple piece of paper, when folded a few times by an artist, will deliver lively objects. Existing as a traditional craft for over one thousand years, Chinese people of different ages love it.

"Paper Folding 3D" is a 3 dimensional, view from any direction, multi-view guide program. When you use this program, no matter from front, back, or sides, every detail, can be seen very clearly. The program offers you 130 models, including birds, fish, and useful daily objects."


* Paper arcade

* Artsy fartsy an art/craft blog.
* Exciting blog with Paper Craft / Papercut Model Making at "Mirage Studio 7.

- Kids paper craft at "Parenting toddlers.com:

Few online hobby stores:

- Crafty devils papercraft


- Paper craft.org is an online store, which guides you through paper craft products, using paper craft. Papercraft, or pepakura, which is a method of crafting three-dimensional objects out of paper, similar to origami.

Site explains: "Papercraft differs from origami in that the final product is usually made from patterns cut out from paper and held together with glue. It is possible to import and convert 3D polygon models from various sources, making it easier to design and create your own papercraft models."


More links would be added!

Wednesday, May 14, 2008

Origami- An ancient art of paper folding

Origami is a popular hobby and I enjoy making origami models from many years. It is one of hobbies, which I like becuase of easy availability of material. You don't need to buy kits, hobby material or other stuff from hobby stores or malls.

Colouring square paper is enough to learn or have fun with this art. And white page can be used as well, as you can colour it yourself. I have tried origami simple models at my nursery class as art projects and I found that children are very happy to learn easy to follow paper folding models.

Do you know that origami or Paper folding has become an art form, because people are making paper craft models whick are itself a piece of art, from this easy available and cheap product "paper"?

Let's learn the definiton of Paper folding:

"Paper folding is the art of folding paper; it is known in many societies that use paper. In much of the West, the term origami is used synonymously with paper folding, though the term properly only refers to the art of paper folding in Japan."

Origami is very easy to learn from the web, as there are many useful and FREE sites, offering you to learn techniques of this popular hobby.

- paper crafts links

For skill development it can be used as a helpful hobby:

* Learn origami for development of creative abilities

* Learn origami at the internet!

Monday, May 12, 2008

Hobbies- Collecting out of ordinary-1

We all are familiar with normal type of hobbies like collecting stamps, coins, bank notes, books, models, toys and a lot more. But there are people around us who have "out of ordinary" hobbies. I have named this post as first post on this topi, becuase there is a lot of topics to cover, and better to distribute the links in more posts.

Here are some out of ordinary links and description of those hobbies:

1- "Mickey Ivanovitch's "Ripley's Believe it or not" collectors site":
This site is from Mickey Ivanovitch, who is a collecter of "Ripley's believe it or not" bookd and memorabilia. There are over 60,000 items in his private collection. I has the first 2 books that Ripley illustrated and the 2nd series paperback printed in 1933. He has 99% of Ripley's cartoons from 1908 until 1948 and most of the ones published after his death. There is a lot to discover at his site.
Mickey Ivanovitch's "Ripley's Believe it or not" collectors site

2- Fun Band aid site:It is a site about fun band aid collection. The site owner "Jen Hochhauser" has been collecting adhesive bandages since he was a kid. Only decorated or colorful ones interested him, so he has NO plain or flesh colored plasters in the collection. The site describes history of bandaid which might be interesting to know:

"History: The Invention of the Bandaid

In 1920 there was a man named Earle Dickson who had a young wife that was always getting hurt in the kitchen. Every night Earle had to cut up bandages for all the cuts and burns she would get from cooking dinner. So he came up with a way for his bride to cut her own bandages when she was hurt.

A roll of cloth medical tape, a scissor and some cotton were the only tools he needed. Earle placed the cotton along the center of the tape and rolled it back up for his wife to cut for herself as needed. He worked at a company called Johnson & Johnson and they heard about his invention. The first adhesive bandages were handmade and sold this way. Unfortunately they did not sell very well. Not long after, in 1924, Johnson & Johnson produced and sold the first individually wrapped adhesive Band-Aids."


Site link: Fun band aid

3- "Pocket Calendar Collecting site"
It is site from a pocket calendar collector. The site owner has mentioned 10 reasons to collect pocket calendars:

1- Collecting of pocket calendars is a rather original hobby. How many pocket calendars collectors do you know personally?

2- Pocket calendars collecting is very easy. Just tell all your family, friends and other contacts about your passion, and calendars will come to you instantly.

3- This kind of collecting is quite cheap. Most calendars are spread for free, other cost very little.

4- Collecting of pocket calendars contains no risk: your collection will not get stolen, you will not go bankrupt if your collection burns down (it may be of a great value to you, but in money sense such collections hardly have any value). You should not be afraid of falsifications: who is going to falsify pocket calendars?!

5- Pocket calendar is called like this because of its compact size. This is the reason why pocket calendars are easy to store: a photo album can easily fit several hundreds of calendars and a shoe box - thousands of them! Your collection will not take much space.

6- A very attractive aspect of pocket calendar collecting is their great amount. In every land (even where pocket calendars are not the most popular advertising tool) there are hundreds of calendars issued every year. In Russia and Spain one can speak of thousands.

7- If you do not want to collect just anything, you can chose a topic. Pocket calendars are to be found on all possible topics: actors, hockey, trains, Coca-Cola and even beer!

8- Pocket calendars are some kind of reflection of time. With their help you can find out much about political and cultural life of the country, follow the events and see how fashion develops. Time is gone but its reflection is still here with us.

9- Pocket calendars collecting will not only tell you about the past, but also help you to widen your horizon in the present. You can find friends-collectors from all over the world if you don't mind to swap via ordinary mail. By the way, such exchanges are very effective: in an ordinary envelop one can send up to 50 calendars, and consequently, get the same amount back.

10- At last you can order your own calendars to be printed. In this way you can make your dream of an ideal pocket calendar come true. In this way you also make sure you have a rare calendar in your collection. And there are enough copies for exchange.

You can get more links to other site related to pocket calendar collectors.
Site link: Kalendariki.net

4- Collecting Antique Mouse and Rat Traps:
It is another out of ordinary hobby.
Rick Cicciarelli's Website

5- This site is about collection of newspapers from "Sebastian Luning" at Bremen, Germany. He has about 700 entries in collection.
What is collected?

- The collection is restricted to DAILY NEWSPAPERS (that means newspapers which are published at least five days per week).
Weekly newspapers (such as „Die Zeit“) or Sunday-only titles (such as „Bild am Sonntag“) are not included.
- From all valid daily newspapers, only the TITLE PAGE (and associated back page, which if possible is not torn off) are collected.

How did this collection start?
(In his own words)

"As a student I worked as an statistics interviewer on trains allover Germany. I travelled to many places on the German railway system and after a while I thought I, in a way, have to document that I have been in all these places. Obviously, newspapers serve this purpose very well. Later, there were times when I turned into a classical “deskworker” and I had to modify the collection rules. This is when I started pestering my relatives, friends, colleagues etc. with the request to get me newspapers from the phantastic places they all went. Well, the next step is clear, produce this web page and work together with the huge web community."

Site link: The Daily Newspaper Collection

Continued at ----- :Part 2

Tuesday, May 6, 2008

Learn about YO-YO and playing tricks


Yo-yo is an ancient hobby and those who are in love of playing it and learning yo-yo playing tricks are yo-yo hobbyists. There is no doubt that Yo-yos are one of the most popular toys around, evern after hundreds of years.

According to the definition by Wikipedia:

"The yo-yo is a toy consisting of two equally sized and weighted disks of plastic, wood, or metal, connected with an axle, with a string tied around it. First becoming popular in the 1920s, "yo-yoing" is still enjoyed by children and adults alike.
The basic design of a yo-yo consists of: a round body, which holds the axle that is connected to a string, which is held by the player."


Tom Harris says in an article How Yo-Yos Work
:
"On the surface, the yo-yo is an incredibly simple toy -- it's really nothing but a spool attached to a length of string. But in the right hands, it can be something extraordinary: An accomplished yo-yoist can send the yo-yo flying out in all directions, make it hover in mid air, then snap it back into his or her palm. Ordinary string and wood (or plastic) are brought to life!"

Yo-Yo is not only a sill toy but it is a favourite hobby or pass time of new generation.

What more we can get from this hobby?

A yo-yo is a perfect toy for learning skills that involve coordination, balance, eye-hand coordination, and dexterity. Children gain self-confidence and self-esteem as they learn to do tricks with their yo-yos. That is a lot of value for one of the least expensive and most enduring toys around. Yo-yos are perfect for taking along on a trip. They demonstrate gravity and encourage observation, patience, and follow-trough.                   

Learn the yo-yo playing tricks


Following sites can help you learn yo-yo playing tricks:

* At Yogema is an online store for yo-yo supply, but it provides many tricks in form of videos, so you can learn it easily. Site suggests that you cannot master the tricks within few minutes, but it needs constant practice of it. Pick one new trick you want to master. Then spend at least one hour every day watching the video and practicing that trick. There are around 47 tricks you can learn from the site.

* Begin 2 spin

How to Yo-Yo

* Check the Yo-Yo.net for a lot of yo-yo related tricks and other information.

* You can find more site links at this link page provided by "Yoboy.com.au"

* Museum of Yo-yo history

* About chinese yo-yo

Sunday, May 4, 2008

The History of “YO-YO for yo-yo lovers!

Yo-yo fever is again taking the young ones into its grips. Young generation is in love for yo-yo and its tricks. For hobbyist of yo-yo the history of yo-yo would be interesting to know. I have omitted some unneccessry details from the original text, but if you want to read full article, then at the bottom of the post you can get the link.

Many love to collect different types of yo-yo, and it is one of the hobbies, which is very popular among kids and young children. It is also called skill toy, because
Do you know how yo-yo was first created and what is the history of it?

It is believed that the yo-yo most likely originated in China. The first historical mention of the yo-yo, however, was from Greece in the year 500 B.C. These ancient toys were made out of wood, metal, or painted terra cotta disks and called just that, a disc. It was customary, when a child turned of age, to offer toys of their youth to certain gods. Due to the fragile nature of the material, it is presumed that the disks made of terra cotta (clay) were used for this purpose rather than for actual play. A vase painting from this time period shows a Greek youth playing with a yo-yo. Such vases, as well as an actual terra cotta disk can be found in the National Museum of Athens, Greece.
Even in ancient Egyptian temples, drawings of objects have been seen in the shape of yo-yos.

Historical records indicate that 16th century hunters in the Philippines hid up in trees and used a rock tied to a long cord, up to 20 feet in length, to throw at wild animals beneath them. The weapon was able to be pulled up and thrown back down for multiple attempts at the prey. This gave rise to the widespread idea that the practice was the true forerunner of the yo-yo, but this is a stretch of imagination and has no real basis in fact. It is extremely likely, however, that the yo-yo did travel from China not only to Greece, but also to the Philippines, where the yo-yo is known to have been a popular toy for children over a very long period of time.

The next historically dated mention of the yo-yo is a box from India made in the year 1765. This miniature box was hand-painted with the picture of a girl in a red dress playing with her yo-yo. Within the next 25 years, the yo-yo traveled from the Orient to Europe, specifically to the aristocracy (upper class) of Scotland and France and on to England. As it traveled, it became known by a variety of names.

The yo-yo’s value as a stress reliever is also seen through history. While being a fashionable toy for the French nobility, those less fortunate are said to have played with their emigrettes to reduce the understandable tension of their one-way trip to the guillotine. Dating through the 1780’s, there are drawings of General Lafayette and others with their troops flinging their yo-yos. The yo-yo arrived in Paris in 1791 as it spread through France and was called the “joujou de Normandie.” Some believe that this term may reflect possible roots for the modern American name of “yo-yo.” High interest in the toy continued as evidenced by the famous French playwright, Beaumarchais, in his treatment of “The Marriage of Figaro” in 1792. There is a scene where the nervous Figaro enters and conveys his tension, not by the conventional
wringing of his hands, but playing with his emigrette! When asked what the emigrette is good for, Figaro responds, “It is a noble toy, which dispels the fatigue of thinking.” Even on June 18, 1815, at the famous Battle of Waterloo, Napoleon and his army are known to have been seen relaxing with their yo-yos before battle.

The yo-yo craze traveled throughout Europe to England by way of Scotland and France. The English used the French word bandalore, the term quiz, and the word incroyable which means ‘a French dandy’, to identify the toy. In 1791, a print was circulated of the Prince of Wales, future George IV, whirling his bandalore. Because of the toy’s popularity as well as the prince’s power to sell, the toy also became known as the Prince of Wales’ toy and soon became a toy that any person of fashion had to own. The toy’s ongoing popularity in England is shown as late as 1862 when an illustration appeared showing two young lads terrifying an older woman with their quizzes.

The first recorded reference to any type of yo-yo in the United States was in 1866 when two men from Ohio received a patent for an invention called “an improved bandalore,” in that it was rim weighted. One year later, a German immigrant named Charles Kirchof patented and manufactured the return wheel. From then until 1911, although various patents were awarded in the United States related to the yo-yo, nothing notable occurred. In 1916, the Scientific American Supplement published an article titled “Filipino Toys” which showed it and named it a yo-yo. This was explained by some as the Filipino word for “come-come” or “to return.” Significant events were soon to happen in the United States.

Meanwhile, back in the Philippines, the natives were becoming experts at making and using the toy. They became excellent wood carvers of the yo-yo and playing with a yo-yo, beginning early in childhood, became a national pastime. Not surprisingly, it was from here that the yo-yo as we know it today was truly introduced into the United States. In the 1920s, a man named Pedro Flores brought the first Filipino yo-yo to the U.S. and in 1928, began a yo-yo company by the same name in California.
These yo-yos were hand-carved from a single piece of wood. The yo-yo was unique because it was the first yo-yo that did not have the string tied to the axle. Instead, the string was looped around the axle, allowing the yo-yo to spin or “sleep” at the end of the string. This concept is at the heart of yo-yoing today. Rather than being able to only go up and down, the yo-yo was now capable of doing an infinite number of tricks.

In 1928 or 1929, a businessman named Donald F. Duncan Sr. saw his first Flores yo-yo while he was in San Francisco. He saw the potential of the toy as he witnessed the crowd that Pedro was able to draw by doing a few tricks. He purchased not only the idea of the yo-yo, but the Pedro Flores company itself. And, as they say, “the rest is history.”

Donald Duncan was an excellent businessman. He developed advertising campaigns and had demonstrators working for him in the U.S., as well as Western Europe. “Duncan Yo-Yo Professionals” traveled throughout the United States teaching and demonstrating yo-yo tricks and conducting contests in an effort to promote sales. Competition grew as other companies began to see the toy’s potential. In 1932, in an effort to protect his interest, Duncan filed for and was assigned a trademark for the word “yo-yo.” Not able to use the term “yo-yo,” competitors were forced to use terms like “come-back”, “return”, “returning top”, “whirl-a-gig”, and “twirler” for their versions of the toy.

In 1946, the Duncan Company moved to Luck, Wisconsin, which quickly became known as the “Yo-Yo Capital of the World” producing 3,600 yo-yos per hour. They produced the original maple wooden yo-yos using 1,000,000 board feet per year. In 1960, plastic yo-yos that we still see today began to be manufactured. Sales grew and grew. By 1962, the Duncan Company alone sold a record 45 million yo-yos in a country with only 40 million kids, and still could not keep up with the demand. High television advertising expenses and excessive expenses in overtime wages and materials to keep up with the demand hurt profits. There was also the continual legal expense in trying to hold onto the trademarked word “yo-yo.” Competitors fought hard to use it in describing their products. Finally, in 1965, the Federal Court of Appeals ruled that Duncan’s trademark for the word “yo-yo” was no good. The term yo-yo had become so widespread that it was now a permanent part of the language and it no longer only described the toy. It, in fact, WAS the toy.

In recent years, technology has affected a multitude of the products we use, and the seemingly simple yo-yo has been no exception. Beginning in the 1970s, yo-yo manufacturers, seeing the benefit of periphery weight distribution, began rim-weighting their products for a longer spin. In 1978, Tom Kuhn patented the “No Jive 3-in-1” yo-yo, the first take-apart by hand yo-yo and the first having a replaceable axle. In 1980, Michael Caffrey patented “The yo-yo with a Brain.” In addition to a free-spinning sleeve bearing for long spin times, “The Brain” has a centrifugal spring loaded clutch mechanism that causes an automatic return of the yo-yo to the hand when the rotational spin slows to a pre-determined rate. And by the 1990s, transaxle yo-yos were available with ball-bearing axles, increasing spin times once again.

But this is not quite the end of the story. On April 12, 1985, the yo-yo was first taken into space by NASA on the Space Shuttle Discovery as part of the Toys in Space project. A basic spinning yo-yo was used to see what effect microgravity would have on it. What they discovered was that a yo-yo could be released at slow speeds and gracefully move along the string. However, the yo-yo refused to “sleep.” Without the downward force of gravity, the yo-yo could not spin against the loop at the end of the string and so, rebounded up the string. It was also found that the yo-yo must be thrown, not dropped, as there was no gravity to pull it down. And on July 31, 1992, the yo-yo (an SB-2) again made its way into space, on the Space Shuttle Atlantis, this time for an educational video including slow-motion yo-ing.

Whether the yo-yo was a Chinese, Greek or Filipino invention or some combination is difficult to prove. By the same token, it is also difficult to say with certainty whether the toy spread from country to country or whether the same basic pattern for the toy appeared in completely different parts of the world for no obvious reason. We do know that its use as a toy around the world and throughout history is unmatched. And, although the yo-yo has gone through periods of hibernation in its trek through the ages, its popularity, just like the toy itself, always comes back

Compiled by Valerie Oliver
Source link:
History of yo-yo

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