Foam hand

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A fan raises a foam hand at a Cleveland Indians game.

A foam hand, commonly known as a foam finger, is a sports paraphernalia item worn on the hand to show support for a particular team. The most common version resembles an oversized hand with an extended index finger, and slits in their bases allow them to be worn over the hands. Usually the surface displays a silk-screened team name, logo, or other graphic or slogan, such as "We Are #1." Foam hands are made of open-celled foam.

History[edit]

Recent (2012) photo of the 1971 item, signed by members of the Ottumwa High School Class of 1971.

The first prototype foam finger was created in 1971 by Ottumwa High School student Steve Chmelar, who constructed a giant hand out of hardware cloth and papier-mâché for the 1971 Iowa High School Athletic Association Boy's State Basketball Quarter Finals, between the Ottumwa Bulldogs and the Cedar Rapids Kennedy High School Cougars. A senior in high school, Steve's photo was taken by The Ottumwa Courier (local newspaper) and published in The Ottumwa Courier on March 18, 1971 and in the 1971 Ottumwa High School class yearbook, the Argus, in Ottumwa, Iowa.[1]

In 1976, Geral Fauss, a teacher at Cy-Fair High School created foam fingers to show support for the team at the high school where he taught, to raise funds for the industrial arts club, and as a project that his industrial arts class could produce themselves. His first prototype foam finger was actually made out of plywood and had a painting of a "number one" done in the school's colors.

Fauss first sold his foam fingers at the 1978 Cotton Bowl in Dallas (University of Texas vs. Notre Dame),[2] and he later went on to found Spirit Industries for the large scale manufacturing of foam fingers. In 1979, the first polyurethane foam version of the product was produced by Spirit Industries.

Common shape variations[edit]

Besides being sold at all manner of sporting events and venues as souvenirs, foam fingers are used as fund-raisers for schools and booster clubs as well as corporate promotions.

To date, the majority of "foam hands" have been produced in a planar-like form. However, in early 2009, a product that more-closely replicates the dimensional form of a human hand (like Hulk Hands with an extended finger) was introduced and marketed under the trade name Radhand until 2010 when it was renamed UltimateHand, produced by a new company called BrettHand.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Kilen, Mike (2013-09-13). "Inventor wags his oversized finger at Miley Cyrus". USA TODAY. Retrieved 2017-10-08.
  2. ^ Abad-Santos, Alexander (2013-08-29). "Creator of the Foam Finger Is Deeply Upset with Miley Cyrus". The Atlantic. Retrieved 2017-10-08.

External links[edit]

Media related to Foam hands at Wikimedia Commons