Back to Mobile View

Top 25 "It" products of all time: #16 -- The Mood Ring

Posted 7:00AM 02/09/09 Family Money
2 Comments Print Text Size A A A
The mood ring may be far out, man, but it has a practical, medical history. The ring was conceived in the 1960s, when Marvin Wernick went to an emergency call with a doctor friend, and watched him use a thermotropic strip to take a child's temperature. Aha! He thought. Jewelry!

Strange but true. Wernick got some thermotropic paper and fitted ovals of it into rings with glass "gemstones" to show off the color. He wrote up some incredible claims about the connection between body temperature and mood, and a new psychological accessory was headed toward American history.

In the late 1960s, the rings came into wide production, and soon were known as a symbol of the 1970s, changing from dark blue (happy! and passionate) to green (average) to amber (a little nervous) to gray and black (stressed out, man) as the bell bottoms changed from wide to enormous.
Today, thermotropic crystals are used, and they're calibrated for the average surface temperature of a typical adult; 82 degrees Fahrenheit. The hotter your skin is, the theory goes, the happier you are, and vice versa.

Do they work? Well, if don't believe, it won't work. And the medical community believes that, though body temperature does fluctuate a tenth of a degree or so, especially for ovulating women, there is no connection between mood and body heat. I guess that means right now my mood is silver for skeptical.

Add a Comment

*0 / 3000 Character Maximum
Newswire

Compare Mortgage Rates

Mortgage Rates by Zillow
Follow Us

Headlines From DailyFinance Partners

CNN Money
CNBC
Smart Money
Consumer Reports
Huffington Post
AOL Energy
AOL Jobs
Business News Personal Finance Investing Our Partners

DailyFinance Sitemap | Terms of Service | Privacy Policy | Trademarks | HELP | Advertise With Us

© Copyright 2012 AOL Inc. All Rights Reserved