
A
mood ring is a novelty ring which changes color in response to body
temperature, using a thermochromic liquid crystal. The mood ring is a
form of biofeedback and supposedly indicates the temperament of the
wearer, indicated by the ring's color. Mood rings were a fad whose
popularity peaked in the United States in the 1970s, and they are now
seen as an icon of 1970s culture.
There are many different types of mood rings, and it generally depends
on the manufacturer which mood the colors represent. The ring has
however, also appeared as other forms of jewelery including in
necklaces, earrings, and toerings. In present day, the finger rings and
the earrings are the most popular.

The Mood Ring was invented in the late 1960s by Marvin W. A mood ring
is a novelty ring which changes color in response to body temperature,
using a thermochromic liquid crystal. The mood ring is a form of
biofeedback and supposedly indicates the temperament of the wearer,
indicated by the ring's color. Mood rings were a fad whose popularity
peaked in the United States in the 1970s, and they are now seen as an
icon of 1970s culture.

There are many different types of mood rings, and it generally depends
on the manufacturer which mood the colors represent. The ring has
however, also appeared as other forms of jewelery including in
necklaces, earrings, and toerings. In present day, the finger rings and
the earrings are the most popular.
The Mood Ring was invented in the late 1960s by Marvin Wernick, when he
accompanied a doctor to an emergency nearby. The doctor pulled out a
strip of thermotropic material to gauge the child's temperature by
applying the strip directly to his forehead and jewelery designer
Wernick knew he had the makings of a winning item.

Wernick encapsulated ovals of the material within clear glass cameos
and glass domes set in brushed gold and silver ring settings. His
signature "hang-tag" explained the ring's amazing properties. (Pictures
are not original Mood Rings, but independent manufacturers using the
concept.)
While some attribute the invention of the mood ring to Joshua Reynolds,
Reynolds won't take credit for it, as he's aware that he was one of the
many to jump on the Mood Ring craze, copying a winning (and
unfortunately for Wernick, unpatented) item.

Joshua Reynolds reportedly invented the Thighmaster, and was the heir
to the Richard Joshua Reynolds tobacco fortune. Reynolds envisioned the
mood rings as "portable biofeedback aids", and managed to sell $1
million worth of them in a three month period in 1975. Even so,
Reynold's company went bankrupt, victim of a flooded market of
imitations.

The "stone" in a mood ring is, essentially, thermotropic crystals
covered or surrounded by glass. These crystals are very sensitive, and
when the temperature changes, their components change, or "twist". Light
that hits upon the crystals will have different wavelengths absorbed
and reflected. The heat from the wearer's finger is conducted to the
inside of the ring, and "twists" the crystals inside. The crystals then
reflect different wavelengths of light, thereby changing the color of
the ring.

Due to fluctuations in the making of mood rings by various companies,
interpretation of mood ring colors are not universal. However, a certain
standard is fairly prevalent, and is the only one commonly found in any
form of documentation. This standard is based on the crystals being
calibrated to have the color green reflected at 82 degrees Fahrenheit
(27.7 degrees Celsius), which is the typical surface temperature of
people. Variations of the actual "neutral temperature", caused by
differing surface temperatures among different people, as well as
effects from outside temperatures, cause mood ring measurements to
differ, and make their readouts rather unreliable.
Black: Tense, nervous, harassed, overworked; may also indicate a damaged ring
Grey: Anxious, nervous, strained
Amber: Nervous, emotions mixed, unsettled
Green: Average reading. Active, not under great stress
Blue-green: Emotionally charged, somewhat relaxed
Blue: Relaxed, at ease, calm
Dark blue/Purple: happy, romantic, passion

When people undergo stress, their surface body temperature drops. This
is represented in the mood ring's color phasing from the neutral green
to amber, to grey, to black. Conversely, a passionate mood causes one's
capillaries to move closer to the surface, raising surface temperature.
This is rendered in the mood ring by the color moving toward blue-green,
blue, and then a darkened blue.
A mood ring plays a key part in the 1991 movie My Girl, and the actors that were in the movie now wear mood rings.
"Mood Ring" is a song by Paul Thorn from his 1999 album "Ain't Love Strange"
"Mood Rings" is a song by Relient K about emotional girls and their unpredictability.
Rhythm and blues singer Mýa named her third CD Moodring because she felt that each song represented a different color.
Skate-Gate, an episode of The Replacements, reveals that Dick Daring, Riley and Todd's father, wears a mood ring.
The episode of the TV series "Aladdin" titled "The Flawed Couple"
features a villain that uses jewels known as "Mood Stones" which
actually change the mood of the person wearing it.
*From
Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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