Glow in the Dark Bracelets: Cheap But Brilliant

Glow in the dark bracelets are the kind of useful little gizmo that you might think are too expensive to use routinely. You may have seen other people wearing them, and you may even have picked up some yourself once in a while from one of the ubiquitous glow vendors who frequent any kind of big night-time gathering. (It doesn’t matter what it is, there’s always someone there hawking glowing dark bracelets, necklaces, wands and other similar items.) If that’s the case, then likely as not you will have ended up paying over the odds for them. Not that they weren’t worth it, but paying a pound a time for a glow bracelet or necklace – which is probably what they would have cost – is a bit too much to fork out if you want to buy and use them in bulk.

Well, it might not come as any surprise that the vendors who sell them from buckets at bonfire night and in pub gardens have been making a cheerful packet on them with a fairly hefty mark up. Fair game to them, that’s what a capitalist economy is all about, but if you want to buy glow in the dark bracelets for a sensible sum of money they take a look at one of the sites that sell them online, where you will be able to purchase them for the equivalent of about 9p each. 100 glow bracelets will set you back less than £9, and they only get cheaper if you buy larger amounts. If you think you’ll never get through 500 or 1,000 glow in the dark bracelets (at £72, that’s only just over 7p each), then think again. They last at least two years, guaranteed, and you can shift them in a number of easy and welcome ways.

Glow in the dark bracelets are the kinds of things that kids absolutely love, and they make a good (and very cheap) treat for children – whether your own or someone else’s, as a present or for a more utilitarian reason. Kids often have something against high-visibility vests of the fluorescent yellow variety, but walking or cycling home from school can be made safer by the addition of a glow stick bracelet or necklace. If your daily life puts you in contact with large groups of kids – at school, at parties, at boy scouts and girl guide meetings, to name just a few – then you’ll find yourself handing out dozens without any trouble. None of which needs to cost the earth, and which will almost always be appreciated. That’s the magic of glow stick bracelets.

Looking at it from the other side of the coin, if you’re heading out to an after-hours event with children then it might be smart to go prepared. The alternative is to get ambushed by one of the ever-present glow-merchants selling glow in the dark bracelets and other goodies at a vastly inflated price. If you balk at spending ten times more for a product than you have to, then a few minutes of online shopping should prepare you for all the night outings you’re likely to go on for some time (and you might endear yourself to you friends and neighbours, too).

All said, glow in the dark bracelets and their relatives (wands, necklaces, and of course the ever-popular glow sticks themselves) need not cost you a fortune. A product is worth what people will pay for it, which means that if you wait for bonfire night or that concert you will always find vendors asking a pound at time or so, but with a little planning and outside the influence of pester power you can pick up your own online for a fraction of that. Glow bracelets start at as little as 9p a time – hardly a sum that will break the bank.

Author Bio: Chris Phillips wrote the Article about glow bracelets and found the following website useful http://uk.ask.com/wiki/Necklace

Category: Entertainment
Keywords: glow in the dark, glow necklaces, bracelets, glow sticks, jewelry, fashion

Leave a Reply