A new water yo-yo transformed into a ‘cute Reiwa’ version.

2024.07.01

Yo-Yo Fu-Sen Glitter Heart Pink Assortment, a transparent water yo-yo with heart-shaped confetti, was launched on 21 June 2024 (Friday) by long-established toy wholesaler Kissies Ltd.

Water yo-yos evolved from standard products.

Water yo-yo, a staple of fairgrounds
Stick balloons with confetti

The water yo-yo has become an icon of festivals with its appearance and traditional patterns, loved by many not only for its own sake but also as a motif. Combined with the recent retro boom, the ’emo’ aspect of festivals is attracting renewed attention.

In this context, the water yo-yo, which combines a stick balloon with confetti, has emerged and is causing a boom at summer festivals in 2025.

Yo-yo Fuusen, glitter heart pink assortment.

The Fu-Sen Glitter Heart Pink Yo-Yo range has been created by carefully selecting high quality materials and colour combinations. This water yo-yo has a beautiful appearance when inflated.

Price: 1,100 yen (incl.tax)
Contents: 10 yo-yo balloons with confetti, 10 pink thread elastic, 10 patch clips, 1 patch stand, 1 special pump.

>Click here to buy.

New

New

Featured articles

Yamagata

Travel

Iide Town, Yamagata Prefecture] “Submerged Forest of Lake Shirakawa,” a Mysterious Spring-Only Scene 

The mysterious scenery of Lake Shirakawa in the town of Iide in southern Yamagata Prefecture can be seen only during two months in spring. In spring, a large amount of melt water flows into Lake Shirakawa from the Iide mountain range, one of Japan’s 100 most famous mountains, where there is heavy snowfall. When the lake is full of water, it creates a fantastic sight of white willow trees as if they are growing out of the water.

Tokyo

Travel

[Hoshinoya Tokyo] “New Year’s Kabuki Stay” brings the hospitality of an Edo Period theatrical teahouse to the present day.

Hoshinoya Tokyo, a Japanese-style inn located in Otemachi, Tokyo, will again this year host the “New Year Kabuki Stay” program, a two-day and one-night stay from January 5 to 26, 2024.
For people living in Edo, one of their New Year’s pleasures was to watch Kabuki, and it was a chic way to spend the New Year. Theatrical teahouses supported this way of enjoying Kabuki. In addition to arranging tickets to the theater, the teahouses delighted patrons by providing a complete range of services, including plot notes, tea, sweets, makunouchi box lunches, and snacks and drinks (*1). Hoshinoya Tokyo offers a stay to celebrate the New Year with hospitality similar to the theatrical teahouses of the time.

*1: Tomizawa, Yoshihide and Fujita, Yosuke (2012). The Latest Kabuki Dictionary. Kashiwa Shobo.

Pick Up

Pick Up