How much do reflectors, like the funflector® ones, actually help? The sad truth is that there are no solid numbers available. As far as we know, no one is collecting data on whether or not pedestrians who were hit by cars in the dark, had reflectors or not. However, reflectors have been promoted in Sweden since the 70’s. Insurance companies have given away hundreds of thousands of them over the years, so one has to assume that they do some good and that the repeated giveaways are based on rational business decisions to improve their bottom line. What we have though, are some numbers that we can compare between Sweden and the US, one country where 30-50% of adults wear reflectors and one where very few do. In each country, infrastructure and culture is the same day and night. Sweden has better street lights, but they are rarely enough to make a significant difference to seeing pedestrians several hundred feet away.
So, here are the numbers (pretty rough, but give the order of magnitude): …
September has swished by with vendor shows, equinox, some days of cool weather and now, what a Swede would call, summer weather. However, the warm Chicago days are numbered and October is already knocking on our door. After a very busy week with our first in-house pedestrian reflector manufacturing, YAY!!!!! (proudly Made in USA), and Evanston Green festival, Sunday was a day for enjoying the outdoors. We had fun picking out fall pumpkins and taking a leisurely stroll through the Rollins Savanna Forest Preserve.
Let’s go back for a moment to equinox, which occurred a week ago, when day and night were equally long. From then and until March 20th, there will be more dark than light hours each day. In Chicago and New York, we are right now losing 17 minutes of daylight a week, in Miami 9 and in Seattle 23. You can look up your city at timeanddate.com/astronomy/ (Put in your city in the upper left, under the headline “Sun”).
Soon, if not already, you might go to or from work, run your errands, walk your dog or get kids to and from activities during the twilight or dark time of the day. If you drive, you know how hard it is to see pedestrians in the dark and it is not surprising that 70% of pedestrian accidents happens while the sun is gone. Luckily, it is cheap, fun and easy to make yourself visible with our funflector® safety reflectors. Goto our webshop and pick out some for yourself and your loved ones. We offer free shipping for orders over $9 to the US and Canada!
We are looking forward to October and are dreaming of apple pies, cosy sweaters, big mugs of hot tea, rosy cheeks, frosty red leaves and of course the crown jewel of the month: a spooky and scary but safe Halloween!
“I’m so glad I live in a world where there are Octobers.” ― L.M. Montgomery, Anne of Green Gables Elisabeth
We love colors and colorful reflectors are fun! So how do we make funflector® reflectors in all the colors of the rainbow when the 3M Scotchlite material only comes in clear (white), bright yellow and bright orange? (And the reason for that is that other colors result in material that does not reflect strongly enough to meet high standards).
funflector® reflectors are colorful because we put colored material under the clear reflective layer, as most manufacturers of EN13356 compliant reflectors do.
Some of our reflectors include a printed design and we also manufacture reflectors with custom logos and prints. There are different ways to do that and how it’s done matters to your safety. …
April 24th is Poem In Your Pocket Day, one of our favorite days! Put a poem in your pocket – or a poem in each pocket – and share with people you meet!
Portable Superhero
It glimmers and it shines
As traffic passes by
A portable superhero
So many places to hang it from
Backpacks and strollers and bags
Oh my
When you’re out at night
There’s no need to fret
With your portable superhero
So many shapes
So many colors
Which ones to choose?!?
Even ninjas want to be seen
When they’re out late at night
Their portable superheroes can help
A funflector can’t fly
But it can still stop
The unsuspecting villain
Behind the wheel Alice
Halloween is over, but it keeps getting darker later afternoons. Today, November 3rd, we’ll loose an hour at night after daylight saving time has ended. Here is sunset for some cities across North America. If your place is not on the map, look it up here. Type in the closest big city and then click on the tab “Sun & Moon”! The chances are quite slim that you’ll be home before 5 pm every day, so pedestrian reflectors will come in handy when you walk to and from your car, bus, train, house, work etc. Be bright when it’s dark and you need to cross a street! Our web shop is filled with fun pedestrian reflectors for everyone in the family. Hang reflectors on baby’s stroller, on grandpa’s walker and on jackets and on bags, purses and backpacks for everyone else!
Here is the full list of sunset for November 3rd, 2013: Boston 4:35 pm Montréal 4:38 pm Anchorage 4:41 pm Chicago 4:42 pm New York 4:50 pm Portland 4:54 pm Denver 4:55 pm Los Angeles 4:58 pm Minneapolis 4:58 pm St. Louis 4:58 pm Toronto 5:05 pm Vancouver 5:05 pm Washington 5:05 pm Calgary 5:06 pm San Francisco 5:09 pm New Orleans 5:11 pm Salt Lake City 5:21 pm Dallas 5:34 pm Phoenix 5:34 pm Miami 5:38 pm Atlanta 5:43 pm Honolulu 5:54 pm
What’s the best way to to be visible to drivers on Halloween – and on other dark nights? Many Halloween safety tips suggest flash lights, glow sticks or safety reflectors as equally viable options. We wanted to figure out how bright glow sticks from the local supermarket are compared to our funflector safety reflectors. This is what it looks like along a highway:
This is what we used : a thin multicolored glow necklace, a thick pink glow stick on a string, a thick green glow stick with a sword’s handle attached to it, 4 reflectors and two funflector wraps.
Interesting observations on glow sticks and safety reflectors:
When there are no cars around, the reflectors sometimes catch the light from a nearby traffic light. That’s why they give a reddish glow.
In the video, you can see how the light from passing cars only light up the lower half of the kids. That’s why it’s important to have reflectors low down. And you must have noticed the benefit of letting the reflectors dangle!
What you cannot see in the video is that the green glow stick, which was the brightest one, lasted less than 4 hours. The pink one had stopped glowing the next morning. The necklace, which only lid up half way around, kept glowing for several days. But you might have noticed that the necklace did not glow strongly enough to show up show up in the video…
Glow sticks are fun for kids to play with and they did light up a corner of a dark room. But, for traffic safety, you need to make sure they are significantly brighter than those we got.
Sadly, we now have a pile of glow sticks to add to landfill. The safety reflectors can be put on jackets and backpacks and provide safety for the whole dark season.
This is the 7th year we celebrate Halloween in the US and I keep being surprised about longs lists of Halloween safety tips that circulates in media. When we look at statistics of what accidents actually happens on Halloween, there is one type that stands out: pedestrian accidents. Cars are the number one threat to trick-or-treaters and sadly, Halloween is the deadliest night all year for kid pedestrians. The graph below shows fatalities per day. Look at October 31st! The threat from cars and drivers is real. For every fatal accident, there are also about 10 seriously injured kids…
Let’s focus on the most important Halloween safety tips that make a significant difference:
#1 – Be Reflective (The Most Important Halloween Safety Tip!)
Here is what you need to know before buying reflector or reflective tape:
The power of reflectors depends on the reflective power per square inch and the size. A lesser quality reflective material needs a larger surface than a good quality material to reflect equally strongly back to the driver. There is no American standard that takes into account both the material and the surface, so we we follow EN13356, a European standard is for visibility accessories for non-professional use. All funflectors are made with 3M Scotchlite (one of the best reflective material on the market) and fulfill EN13356.
How many reflectors are needed for trick-or-treating?
One reflector can make wonders, but it may just as well be on the “wrong” side of the kid when a car comes by. We recommend at least two, one front and one back or one left and one right. We hang 4-5 on our kids, that’s still cheaper than most co-pays at the ER, less pain and more fun! If you use reflective tape, you also need to make sure it’s enough to be seen from multiple directions.
#2 – Follow Traffic Rules
Most pedestrian accidents happen in the middle of the block. 1. Cross at intersections. 2. Use sidewalks and avoid busy streets without (or add another 3 reflectors to the outfit if you have to walk there). Practice, practice and practice BEFORE Halloween and supervise if your ghosts and goblins can’t handle it. With ADHD kids, you need to practice even more since they don’t always manage to judge the situation with approaching cars in safe manner. PRACTICE all year around!
#3 – Talk Safety with Kids
Studies shows that while most people talk about Halloween safety with their kids, only 1/3 do it every year. You need to talk about it several times in the weeks leading up to Halloween, not only when the kids are about to head out for trick-or-treating, too excited about costumes and candy to listen.
#4 – Educate Drivers
Here are some very good points from the State Farm Halloween Tips that you need to think about as a driver and talk to with friends and colleagues, especially those who don’t have kids at home. 1. Be alert for children and eliminate in-car distractions (cell phones, music, radio, friends,…) 2. Pull in and out of driveways carefully. 3. Slow down! 4. Practice extra caution at intersections and corners. 5. Discuss these and other driving pointers with your teen driver – or hide the car keys. Drivers ages 15–25 were involved in around one-third of fatal accidents involving child pedestrians on Halloween, according to the study.
— That’s it, Let’s Recap —
1. Use reflectors. If you don’t remember how many you need, just think that there can never be too many. 2. Follow Traffic Rules. You should know them, if not: study! 3.Talk Safety with Your Kids – start a week or two BEFORE Halloween 4. Remind Drivers, especially teen drivers, on being careful and alert every single minute they are in the car. So how about the flash light, tainted candy, ration the kid’s candy, inspecting candy and more? In our opinion, they are well meant, but draws attention from the real danger!
Whether or not you expect to have some bad luck coming your way this day, we’d like to let you know that we have some really neat stuff to increase your luck not to get struck by a car in the dark! Our funflectors® and are colorful, fun, lightweight and powerful pedestrian safety reflectors. They will work on Friday the 13th and on all other nights too! Buy them in our web shop, get free shipping within the US and hang them on zipper pulls of jackets and backpacks or on bags, purses, strollers, wheelchairs, picnic baskets, dog collars or anything else that is out and about after dusk. It is that simple! The funflector team
Before buying homeowner’s insurance, have you ever checked if it covers damages from a moose stepping into your living room? This was the topic of the consumer section on the first day we got our newspaper after moving to Stockholm. My American hubby had been there for two days and almost turned around. He’d thought we moved to the suburbs of a capital, not to the back woods.
Well, during the next 11 years, he learned that moose are a big part of Scandinavian culture and everyday life. Moose accidents were a huge topic when he had to retake his driver’s license. You can’t drive anywhere in forested areas without seeing moose warning signs – unless they have been stolen by over-excited tourists. We occasionally met moose on the neighborhood streets and we even had one visiting our back yard. Luckily, it did not get drunk after nibbling on our apple tree!
We’ve asked some of our customers and friends what they say to strangers when asked why they are wearing their fun safety reflectors on their jackets or bags. Here is our ABC of good reasons (some real, others made up): “I wear funflectors because …
… they are cool” – Alice, 12
… it is a cute way to be safe” – Beth, mom of 2
… I love pink and purple peace signs” – Claire, 14
… I don’t want to get run over” – Daniel, dad of 3
… they are fun and the rest is a no-brainer” – Erin, mom of 4
… this is my ghost buddy” – Fernando, 4
… campus is so dark” – Gabrielle, 21
… I know which backpack is mine” – Hannah, 7
… they look cool when I skateboard” – Ian, 15
… I saw someone wearing them in the dark and realized what a difference they make ” – John, dad of 2
… if I’ve had too many beers to drive, it’s too dark to walk home without reflectors” – Keiran, dad of 5
… I always love the idea of guardian angels, these are better than most” – Lauren, 26
… my wife put one on my jacket” – Michael, dad of 5
… the moose reflector match my bear skin” – Ned Neanderthal
… I want the garbage truck driver to see me” – Oscar
… I like to run after work and sometimes it gets dark before I’m done” – Peter, 32
… I cross a busy road in the dark to get to high school band practice early. Go Tigers!” – Quincey, 18
… I like walking, but sometimes I’m a bit slow crossing the street” – Richard, 78 and grandfather of 8
… woof” – Spot
… I’m a paramedic and I’ve seen too much of what happens when you don’t wear reflectors” – Tom, 28
… I wear lots of black so drivers don’t notice me even in parking lots and that can get scary. I love black reflectors on my purse!” – Ursula, 53
… I got mine from Santa” – Vera, 5
… I have a deal with my dad: I wear reflectors all year and he won’t put reflective tape on my Halloween costume!” – Will, 9
… fafa” – Xavier, 15 months, while pointing at the reflector hanging on his stroller
… my mom says she loves me so much I have to wear them. I love my purple ghost reflector!” – Yolanda, 13
… I don’t want to be hit by another car” – Zoe Zombie We are curious to know what you would have said. Feel free to comment! The funflector team
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