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Search Results for: kickstarter

John Higby’s “Everybody Yo-Yos” Book on Kickstarter

April 4, 2019 By Steve Brown

Is it fair to say that John Higby is everyone’s favorite yoyo artist and performer and human being? We think so.

Everyone’s favorite yoyo artist and performer and human being, John Higby, is making a children’s book called “Everybody Yo-Yos” and he’s funding it with a Kickstarter campaign. The campaign is already fully funded, but if you definitely want one of these for that special child in your life (lol jk we know you’re buying it for yourself, all good so are we) then backing the project on Kickstarter is the best way to guarantee you’ll get one!

There are still 17 days to go in the campaign and some pretty sweet extras including painted yoyos, limited editions fro YoYoFactory, and original canvas paintings of the artwork used in the book. We highly recommend you scoop up one of those paintings…they really are a joy to look at and you’ll thank us later.

John Higby’s “Everybody Yo-Yos” Children’s Book on Kickstarter

Filed Under: Featured, General News Tagged With: childrens book, crowd funding, everybody yoyos, john higby, kickstarter, yoyo book

Kickstarter – YoYo Legacy Project

June 19, 2018 By Steve Brown

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To celebrate the 90 year anniversary of the modern yo-yo, our friends at theYoYo Legacy Project are offering a gorgeous set of exotic wood yo-yos that represent the historical milestones of our favorite toy. No dyes, stains, or tints are used; you’re seeing the natural color of sustainable, exotic woods from all over the world. While designed to be a beautiful desktop display piece, all yo-yos are fully functional. The Kickstarter will be running until July 9th, 2018.

In 1928 Pedro Flores, a Filipino immigrant, worked as a bellboy in a downtown Santa Barbara hotel. In his spare time, he hand-carved a small disc toy he called the Yo-Yo. On his breaks he would go out to the sidewalk and show passersby his toy and the unique tricks that could be learned. It captivated those who saw it! Americans loved the simple toy and Pedro Flores did not remain a bellboy for long.

On June 9th, 1928, Flores set up the first American Yo-Yo manufacturing operation in the Granada Building in downtown, Santa Barbara, California. Within two years he was producing 300,000 Yo-Yos a day at a cost of 15 cents to $1.50 each and promoting the first ever Yo-Yo contests throughout the area.

This project is a celebration of Pedro Flores and the 90th Anniversary of the Yo-Yo in America. It is also a tribute to my childhood love of the Yo-Yo and my lifelong passion for beautiful wood. How better to celebrate the 90th Anniversary of this wonderful toy than to create functional, desktop art with five historically significant Yo-Yos turned out of exquisite, exotic woods.

Backers have the option of quite a few cool rewards, including a reprint of the 1928 Flores trick booklet, a full set of the yoyos with a desk stand, and even a trip to their workshop to learn how to make wooden yoyos yourself!

 

Check out the full Legacy YoYo Project on Kickstarter and pledge your support today…the Kickstarter campaign ends July 9th!

And be sure to follow the YoYo Legacy Project on Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter for updates.

This post sponsored by the YoYo Legacy Project

Filed Under: Featured, Sponsor News, Video Tagged With: butterfly, duncan toys, flores, imperial, kickstarter, old school yoyo, wood yoyo, wood yoyo set, wooden yoyo, yoyo collectible, yoyo legacy project, yoyo set

Doc Pop Launches Kickstarter for The Bolt 2

February 2, 2018 By Steve Brown

Doc Pop has launched a Kickstarter project to fund production for the Bolt Part 2, the official follow up to his much loved plastic yoyo, the Bolt.

Originally manufactured by YoYoJam, the original Bolt was a fun plastic yoyo that was great for beginners and advanced players, and had that extra bit of charm that all of Doc’s projects seem to carry. The Bolt Part 2 looks like it will be another great, fun yoyo and with manufacturing by C3yoyodesign the quality is going to be top notch.

Check out the project description below, and then head over to Kickstarter to back the project and guarantee your own!

The Original Bolt was a hell of a throw, and was manufactured for over 5 years, with devout fans all over the world. After 12 years, we’ve taken the best of the Bolt design and updated it for modern play.

The final design is a collaboration between myself (Doc Pop) and Hadrien Bennaceur (who has designed some of my favorite yo-yos) and will manufactured by the awesome folks at C3 Yo-Yo Design, makers of the Re:Master Galaxy, FingerSpin, and Speedaholic (just to name a few). Big shout out to Hadrien, Walter, and Ron for working on this yo-yo with me.

The Bolt Part 2 is made from machined delrin, with aluminum hubs and side caps for better play and longer spins. The caps feature a new “cubby hole” design for horizontal finger spins and delrin body has “schmoove grooves” to reduce string friction. It fits comfortably in your pocket, but still has a nice catch-zone.

Most importantly, it still feels fun.

Filed Under: General News Tagged With: c3yoyodesign, crowd funding, doc pop, doctor popular, kickstarter, the bolt, the bolt part 2, yoyo project, yoyo release, yoyo tricks

Doc Pop & Ernest Kahn Launch The Executive YoYo on Kickstarter

July 5, 2016 By Steve Brown

Doc Pop Ernest Kahn The Executive

Doc Pop and Ernest Kahn have teamed up to produce The Executive, a new pocket yoyo being funded on Kickstarter.

The Executive is so small that it fits comfortably in the fifth pocket of your jeans (or pretty much any other pocket you’ve got). Designed and produced in the USA, The Executive is meant to be the perfect everyday carry yoyo.

Doc Pop Ernest Kahn Kickstarter Executive YoYo

The Executive is being offered exclusively through Kickstarter, and rewards include a t-shirt designed by Paul Escolar, a special colorway of the yoyo available only to backers in the first 24 hours, plus some neat stretch goals.

The Executive YoYo on Kickstarter

The Executive Specs:

Diameter: 44.45mm
Width: 30.30mm
Gap: 4.30mm
Bearing: Size C (OD 10 Ball)
Response: OD Flow Groove Pads
Material: 6061 Aluminum

The Kickstarter campaign is officially live, so head over and back the project now!

Click here to back The Executive on Kickstarter


Doc Pop Ernest Kahn The Executive Pocket YoYo

Filed Under: Featured, General News, Video Tagged With: crowd funding, doc pop, doctor popular, ernest kahn, executive yoyo, kickstarter, yoyo drop

Back Ti-Yo on Kickstarter!

August 13, 2015 By Steve Brown

Sonny Patrick has teamed up with Honolulu-based product designer and machinist Mike Bond to create a new titanium yoyo, available for pre-order now via Kickstarter! That’s right, MOAR TITANIUM! THE SUMMER OF TITANIUM™ WILL NEVER END!

Based on the designs for the legendary and never released Kuntosh and the long sold-out BSP, this new titanium yoyo (called the Ti-Yo, but we’ll forgive them for that) looks like a slim, fast, stable player from one of our favorite yoyo designers of all time. And with Kickstarter rewards starting at just $175 for one of the yoyos, it’s also one of the best deals for a titanium yoyo we’ve seen yet.

The project is nearly fully funded, but you should get your order in now to make sure you get one because hey…who knows if production will continue after this Kickstarter ends.

Filed Under: Manufacturer, Video Tagged With: featured, kickstarter, mike bond, sonny patrick, ti-yo, titanium

RiotMouse YoYos on Kickstarter

October 25, 2014 By Steve Brown

Mark McBride is the guy who invented modern 3A yoyo play (that took off pretty well), was the first person to create a notation system for yoyo tricks (that didn’t catch on), and now he has a new project: custom built yoyos to your specs via a web interface.

Riot Mouse is basically like having your own personal modder at your disposal…you create your ideal yoyo via a fairly simple web interface, specify the material you want it made of, and plunk down your money…and in a week or so you get your yoyo in the mail. The plan seems to be to create yoyos from standard materials (maple, delrin, aluminum) as well as a variety of exotic and novelty materials (bone, composite plastics, a chunk of wood from The Man at Burning Man, etc). Sounds like a neat idea, and with the slow rise of 3D printing in yoyos it’s nice to see someone taking the idea of tabletop manufacturing to the next logical step.

Head over to Kickstarter for more details and to support the project. Good luck, Mark!

Support RiotMouse Toys on Kickstarter

Filed Under: General News Tagged With: custom yoyo, featured, kickstarter, mark mcbride, riotmouse

LearnKendama.com Kickstarter Project

October 17, 2014 By Steve Brown

The folks from YoYoTricks.com are launching a new website, and they’re looking for your help!

They’ve got a Kickstarter project online right now to fund their new site, LearnKedama.com, and they’ve got some great rewards including new kendamas from Catchy. Check out the details below, and then head over to Kickstarter.com to support the project.

For the last 5 years we have been running YoYoTricks.com and filming tutorial videos to teach people how to yoyo. We even launched our own yoyo, the Civility, through Kickstarter, which has helped us take our tutorials to new heights. It has been our pleasure to hear story after story of kids and adults finding our site and mastering tricks they never thought possible. We have been amazed and humbled at how meaningful our site has become to our users. We often receive emails from customers who share with us how the yoyo has helped them gain personal confidence, stem the tide of boredom, and even how parents are connecting with their kids as the whole family learns to yoyo together. While this certainly reaches far beyond any goals we had for the site when it launched, it has made the work more gratifying than we ever thought possible. Our hope is that through LearnKendama.com our users will experience the same joy and camaraderie others have through YoYoTricks.com.

Our Goals

Our long term aim with LearnKendama.com is to build the most thorough and engaging place to learn kendama on the planet. In the short term, through this campaign our goal is to get kendamas into the hands of interested people, and have enough tutorials released on LearnKendama.com by Christmas to familiarize those players with the fundamentals. The funds we raise through this campaign will not only help us launch LearnKendama.com by Christmas, but will supply us with our initial stock of products so that we can continue to run this business and make tutorials for the foreseeable future.

 

Filed Under: General News, Kendama Tagged With: kendama, kickstarter, learnkendama.com, video

Doctor Popular & Matthew Lesko Talk Kickstarter

March 18, 2013 By Steve Brown

Long-time yoyo innovator and demonstrator Doctor Popular successfully funded “American Analog”, a zine of his film photography via Kickstarter, and  got a chance to talk to Matthew Lesko (the “FREE MONEY” guy) about his experience.

We’re super proud of Doc for getting his project funded, and we’re even more excited that he was able to find someone to talk to that makes Doc seem like the most normal guy in the world by comparison. It’s remarkable how one guy in a Riddler suit can downgrade all of your eccentricities in a heartbeat. Amazing.

Filed Under: Video Tagged With: american analog, doc pop, doctor popular, free money, instagram, lomography, matthew lesko, photography, zone

Civility YoYo on Kickstarter

January 11, 2013 By Steve Brown

Colin Leland (OneDrop Project, TMBR Toys) has teamed up with old-school player Adam Bottiglia and his website, YoTricks.com, to produce a new metal yoyo called “Civility”.

This yoyo is being crowdfunded through Kickstarter, and has already reached 162% of its funding goal with 30 days to go!

You can still pledge and pre-order a Civility for only $75, though, so get in now and guarantee yours before production begins.

Filed Under: Manufacturer Tagged With: Adam Bottiglia, civility, colin leland, crowd funded, kickstarter, one drop project, yotricks.com

UNPRLD x Renta Motoyama ft. Clarity

January 24, 2017 By Steve Brown

Japanese player Renta Motoyama gives up some truly lovely offstring tricks for us in this new video. Really smooth style, and fun to watch!

Yoyo used is the Unparalleled Clarity (which you can back now on Kickstarter!)

Filed Under: Manufacturer, Players, Video Tagged With: kickstarter, offstring, renta motoyama, unparalleled, yoyo tricks, yoyo video

SPYY Returns….with titanium

October 4, 2015 By Steve Brown

SPYY Titanium yoyo

As the Summer of Titanium™ comes to a close, we’ve got one more model sneaking in under the wire and I think it’s safe to say that none of us saw this coming.

SPYY has returned with a titanium yoyo.

That’s right, the defunct Canadian manufacturer, long known for their impeccable quality, is back for one last gasp with a brand new design in titanium. Is this a return of the company? No, says owner Steve Buffel, just a hell of a cool one-off project to fill the time. Steve has been teasing this out for a while now, but this is our first look at the full, completed yoyo.

The Summer of Titanium™ has played out well beyond the possible dreams of any yoyo player or collector. For those of you who haven’t been keeping track, we’ve had the YoYoFactory Dream, three versions of the Luftverk Evora, One Drop Citizen, iYoYo TIger, Something Anglam TISS, Something Anglam Zero, Yoyorecreation Seventh Heaven, Ti-Yo, and now…this.

No word yet on specs or release date, but it’s safe to assume we’ll see these in stores before the end of the year.

Filed Under: Manufacturer, YoYo Drop Tagged With: featured, spyy, summer of titanium, titanium, yoyo drop, yoyo release

3D Printing and the Future of Yo-yo Design

September 5, 2015 By Rafael Matsunaga

Awesome as it is, it seems that 3D printing hasn’t quite changed civilization as we were promised. It is, however, quickly becoming the prototyping tool of choice in numerous industries, and that includes yo-yos.

Quite a few people with access to a 3D printer have designed and made a yo-yo at this point, with varying degrees of success. That includes a set of 100% printed fixed axle yo-yos from Microsoft, part of the tech giant’s initiative to add 3D printer support to the Windows operating system.

But simply printing regular yo-yo designs is not where the power of 3D printing lies, it is a very time-consuming method of making yo-yos. The true power of this technology is breaking the boundaries of conventional industrial design. One of the earliest approaches to custom printed parts for yo-yos came from Werrd Alliance’s Yu Tsumura, which can be found in his YoYoTopology account on Shapeways.

3D printed covers for the YoYoFactory Supernova by Yu Tsumura

3D printed covers for the YoYoFactory Supernova by Yu Tsumura

A 3D printer may not be as good as a lathe when it comes to producing perfectly circular objects, exciting new designs are possible thanks to the ease of printing complex details. The “Future”, which was covered here on YoYoNews before, is a great example. Printed in stainless steel, the design by Adam Blanchard features an amazing honeycomb design, which not only improves weight distribution, but is also impossible to replicate on a lathe!

3D Printed Metal YoYo by Adam Blanchard

The honeycomb pattern can also be seen on the creations of one of the most prolific printed yo-yo designers on the scene, Mr. Hideki Toho, a.k.a “East”, under his Yo-yo Maker initiative.

eastbooth

We’ve featured Mr. Toho’s designs several times, including his beautiful hybrid nylon-steel “Three Dimension Type 1”, a set of Yin Yang loopers, and the impossibly cool Lego caps for the Freehand Zero. Be sure to follow his blog (in Japanese), for more awesome designs, and insights.

While it is too slow for mass-production, there’s another area where 3D printing absolutely shines, which is customization. You can think of a crazy design, and print it right away, without requiring the resources and effort to find a machine shop. Like this yo-yo from last year’s Taiwan Yo-yo Contest, featuring a 3D printed shape, metal weight rings, and the YoYoJoker lock crest:

tyyc143dprint

And even if you are not CAD-savvy, Kyle Weems has got you covered. Check out his mind-blowing system at kyostoys.com: you can design your own yo-yo from any combination of shape parts, response types, and bearing sizes, and order a print, all inside your browser! This truly feels like the future!

kyostoys

You can even design a completely unique shape if you want, by following the template available on the website!

Another designer who’s been exploring and pushing the limits of 3D printed yo-yos is Jeffrey Pang, who runs both Luftverk Titanium Supply and Fluid Print Dynamics. Here’s Jeffrey’s approach to 3D printed yo-yos in his own words:

How can I design a product that can not be manufactured by any other means (Machining, Injection molding, etc) except 3d printing?

That’s exactly the mindset that pushes the limits of design and brings fresh ideas to the industry! Check out two of his designs, the Kayto 2 and Glocadius. These can’t be manufactured by any other means!

The Kayto 2. Note the hollow section near the hub!

The Kayto 2. Note the hollow section near the hub!

The Glocadius. The parts are disconnected! Or are they?

The Glocadius. The parts are disconnected! Or are they?

Another strength in 3D printing technology is that it allows quick prototyping and testing of new ideas. We’ve recently seen it employed on a couple of Kickstarter yo-yo projects: the wildly successful Ti-Yo, and the interesting YOYODrone.

And finally there are the odd 3D printed projects that just wouldn’t happen without the help of 3D printers, like the collapsible yo-yo from yours truly:

A video posted by Rafael Matsunaga (@rafaelmatsunaga) on Aug 30, 2015 at 7:53am PDT

And this super cool “Emergency Yo-yo“, featuring 3D printed halves, a paper axle, and coins for weight distribution!

emergencyyoyo

Will 3D printing ever become the technology of choice for yo-yo manufacture? Probably not, but we are excited about the possibilities it opens for yo-yo design!

Filed Under: General News, Uncategorized Tagged With: 3d print, design

We Are Throwers – Trailer #1

March 17, 2015 By Steve Brown

Piotrek Smietana, one of the most celebrated and respected videographers in the yoyo scene, is working on a new documentary about our community, our industry, and the people who hold it together.

We Are Throwers will begin fundraising soon on Kickstarter to raise money for gear and travel for Piotrek and his crew to visit players and events around the world to truly document what it means to be a yoyo player in the modern age. Check out this amazing trailer, and we’ll be sure to update when their Kickstarter page is live!

Filed Under: Players, Video Tagged With: documentary, featured, Piotrek Śmietana, video, we are throwers, yoyo tricks, yoyo video

Interview – Doctor Popular

April 22, 2014 By Matt McDade

Photo by Steenaire.

Photo by Steenaire

If a yoyoer were to create a list of tricks that included Skin the Gerbil and The Matrix, they may be listing all of the tricks that they learned early in their yoyoing career. Potentially unbeknownst to them, however, they would actually be making a list of tricks invented by the infamous Doctor Popular. Doctor Popular is without a doubt one of the most creative yoyoers ever, with an extremely extensive catalog of awesome things that he’s done both within and outside of yoyoing. The creator of Moebius, Doc has proved his creativity in yoyoing many times over in the 10+ years that he’s been involved in the community. Doc agreed to do an interview, and I was extremely excited to learn more about this interesting yoyoing legend!

Doc, in being around the scene for well over a decade you’ve done more interesting things in yoyo than I can summarize in just one paragraph. How did you start playing with yoyos?

Thanks! I flew up to Seattle on my 21st birthday and was visiting the Space Needle. I picked up a yo-yo from the gift shop and played with it during the whole trip. When I flew back to Tennessee I happened to bump into a guy who was opening up Nashville’s first yo-yo store that same day. He hired me and I got plenty of (paid) practice time early on. It’s funny to think what would have happened if I had picked up a snow dome as a souvenir instead.

Even during the “boom” of the late 90’s you were innovating other things in yoyoing amidst the heavy popularity of competitive 2A freestyles of the time. What was yoyoing like at that time?

Yo-yoing was kind of awesome during the boom. I started yo-yoing right after ball bearings were a standard feature, so after learning the hardest tricks in the Split The Atom book, I figured everybody was just supposed to make up their own tricks from there. Making tricks back then was especially easy. I’d do a trick where the yo-yo accidentally came off the string and I all I had to do was figure out how to do it again on purpose. Everything seemed like a new trick.

How did you originally become known in the community?

When I first went to the National Yo-Yo Contest I believe I was still unheard of, but I could be wrong about that. I didn’t have my own computer and hadn’t yet started making online videos. Luckily the SuperYo guys were filming their Kicking Tricks video and spent a lot of time following me around, maybe because of my bright blue hair. When that video came out, I was heavily featured, along with Chris Neff, Steve Brown, David Capurro, and others. That’s probably how a lot of the community first saw my stuff. A blue haired nerd that calls himself Doctor Popular tends to stick out.

For sure, even some of your tricks in that video like Skin the Gerbil and The Matrix stood out, and it’s pretty cool that now they’re both common tricks for players just starting out to learn. What came next for you in yoyoing?

I made some awesome friends at Nationals that year, like my pal David Capurro. What a blast. Eventually I moved to Minneapolis and started posting my yo-yo videos online. Mostly just one trick at a time. The next big milestone for me was working with Glasseye on the Experiment #4 video. My friend Josh helped me shoot a bunch of footage in the Mall Of America and around MPLS, which we sent to Glasseye to work his magic on. He created a custom soundtrack and put together a video I still love watching. It was fun and largely inspired by skate videos, which often times would focus on personality as much as they did on tricks.

I was about to mention Experiment #4, that’s actually one of my favorite videos although it was done many years before I started yoyoing. I totally know what you mean about skate videos, certain videos from the late 90’s/early 2000’s are my favorites.

Another unique style that you invented was referred to as “Paperclip”, right? I hope I’m not totally wrong but I think I’ve seen videos of it on Sector Y. What was the inspiration behind that, and how did it work?

At the time, it felt like yo-yoing was full of unexplored areas. Moebius, Washing Machine, and Paperclip where just dabbling around in uncharted territories. “What can do with this end the of the string? That’s neat… What can I do with the other end?” As soon as you identified one new section, a whole bunch would reveal themselves too. Paperclip was really just built around the idea of “what can you do if you intertwine a counterweight with offstring?”.

That’s all so true. Ky Zizan has really been bringing that ideology back to the forefront with his Double Dragon style, which uses one yoyo with two strings. Moebius is one other style that you invented which has maintained a somewhat underground following in the yoyo community for many years with yoyoers like Zammy staying dedicated to it. If you had to pick, what’s your favorite Moebius trick?

I have a few Moebius tricks I really dig, but one of my favorite moves is actually Zammy’s. It’s a beautiful little repeater called Un-Ending that was in his Infinitum video. So good!

You’ve been involved in so many great things over the years, both in and out of yoyo. If you had to pick, what’s your favorite thing you’ve done in yoyoing?

There was a bunch of small things that I had a hand in (beefcake mods, tutorial vids, yo-yo cases), but I personally am most proud the Moebius thing. It never really caught on, and probably never will, but I still love the style and play Moebius about as much as I play Single A or Freehand. If I only had one dent in yo-yoing, I’d love it to be Moebius.

I totally agree with you there.  Another thing that comes to mind for me that you were involved in is the YoYoJam Bolt collaboration, what’s the story behind that?

I loved working with the YYJ folks on doing my own yo-yo. Just having a yo-yo that I could be proud of and sell for so cheap was a huge win for me. It also gave me a chance to do things the way I wanted to. They kept making a lot of requests, but ultimately allowed me to do the colors/shapes/styles I wanted.

Doctor Popular - Destroy All Presets Chiptune Album

Aside from yoyoing, you’ve literally been involved in SO many different, awesome projects throughout the years. Most recently, I know you released an album of your music that can actually be played on a Gameboy Advance. Can you share anything about that?

Making music has been my longest hobby, it’s even what got me up to Seattle that time I bought my first yo-yo. I just released a new album called Destroy All Presets that was made using a Nanoloop music cart on a Game Boy Advance. My album before that was made using iOS apps on my iPhone. I like making “micro music”, or basically music on tiny devices, because it’s portable. It’s really similar to yo-yoing actually. Whenever I’m in line somewhere or waiting for a bus, I just pull out my Game Boy and work on a track. I love the sounds of these things, but really it’s all about the portability and ease of getting in and out of. I’m really proud of this new album by the way, it’s nerdy and catchy and just plain neat.

That’s really awesome, I’ve never heard of anything like that but I’ll definitely have to check it out. I think it’s great that you were able to fund it via Kickstarter too. Another project you have is your photography zine, American Analog. I’m a huge fan of zines, and have been messing around with making my own for a while. How did you get the idea for that? I think it’s a really well put together project.

Thanks! I guess the common thread between most of my hobbies is portability. I get bored easily and have a mind that frequently wanders. So it’s great to have a hobby that you can carry with you anywhere. I got started in photography just with shooting on an iPhone. I still like that, but I’ve since jumped into the world of film photography. My favorite cameras are pocket sized and I always have one with me. It’s really fun to just wander through a city and capture little moments. After my first year of shooting film, I thought it would be great to put it all together in a little zine called American Analog (named after one of my favorite bands). So far I’ve put out two issues and I’m working on my third. Along with the traditional street photography stuff, I still like to mess around with glitch art and digital experimentation. In a few weeks, I’ll be doing a show in SF that is a mash up of film photography and glitch art.

That sounds great, I think it’s good for you to do what you want while also having your name attached to so many great things in the process. Aside from American Analog #3, what else can we expect to see from you in the future?

I’m planning on doing a lot more projects this year, including a few more crowdfunding projects. Possibly even something yo-yo related. If folks want to follow that, they can sign up for the mailing list on http://canwekick.it/ (which should be live and fully ready soon). I have a yo-yo project in mind that could be really fun… but I’m keeping quiet about that for now.

That so great. It’s awesome that you’re always coming out with something new. Lastly, what’s any advice you could share for any aspiring yoyoer/creative person out there?

Be consistent. Don’t sit around waiting for a spark to hit you, instead create a regular habit of being productive. For me, it’s each weekday morning… I grab a cup of coffee and sit and make things for two hours. What sort of stuff isn’t important, it’s about the ritual an teaching yourself to be creative on demand. Once you build up a routine like this, staying productive is so much easier.

I totally agree. Thanks Doc!

Filed Under: Interview Tagged With: doc pop, doctor popular, featured, Interview

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