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Violet Wand Advertising, 1927

Wednesday, October 21st, 2020 -- by Bacchus

There has been plenty of discussion of violet wands — both vintage and modern — here on ErosBlog. Originally marketed as a quack medical cure, they’ve seen fair persistence in the market as a dramatic e-stim (electrosex) sensation toy. But here’s an advertisement from a 1927 issue of Physical Culture magazine that leans heavily into all the original bogus medical claims. The Violetta Violet Ray from the Vi-Rex company could cure just about anything, supposedly:

early violet wand advertisement

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Deep In The Coils

Wednesday, July 11th, 2012 -- by Bacchus

Last year when I first noticed and mentioned the then-new-to-the-market Neon Wand electrical sex toy device that competes with the venerable violet wand at a much cheaper price point, I had a few people in meatspace ask me “So, what’s the difference?” And I was all “Umh, well, ya, it’s like, cheaper y’know, and solid state, no moving parts, and, um, maybe a little less powerful they tell me…” I’m good at interfaces and software, but I’m not the sort of guy who has to know how stuff works at the hardware level. (I own several screwdrivers, but when I’ve got one in my hand, something has gone seriously wrong, and odds are, some new shit is getting purchased real soon.)

Fortunately, mad scientists who do understand that tricky hardware stuff abound. One of them is Franklin Veaux, whose review of the Neon Wand contains the essential electronics/hardware discussion you’d never get out of me:

A lot of folks say that a violet wand is a Tesla coil. That’s not actually true. A Tesla coil is an air-cored resonant coil in which the primary and secondary windings share the same air core. You vary the output of a Tesla coil by varying the primary winding.

A violet wand is actually an Oudin coil–an iron-core resonant coil where the primary and secondary winding share the same iron core, and the primary winding is attached to a mechanical interrupter. You vary the output of an Oudin coil by changing the interrupter. In a violet wand, the interruptor is a magnet that vibrates very quickly; you change how strong the output is by turning a knob connected to a screw that actually changes the height of the vibrating magnet. That’s why violet wands always make that characteristic buzzing noise; you’re hearing the magnet vibrating.

The neon wand doesn’t use an old-fashioned Oudin coil at all; it’s entirely solid state. It uses a circuit board with electronics that are more similar to a camera strobe than they are to a resonating coil, though that’s a bit of an oversimplification. Basically, they’re an entirely different technology that does pretty much the same thing. These differences mean that the neon wand is way, way cheaper than a violet wand.

The more you know, right?

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Classy Violet Wand Set

Monday, November 7th, 2011 -- by Bacchus

When the control panel for your violet wand set is made of solid marble, you know you’ve found one of the good ones. As if the explicit penis-shaped probe (see highlighted area) wasn’t a pretty clear hint!

vintage wand set with penis probe

Thanks to @FranklinVeaux for snapping the photo in a Portland antique shop.

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Vintage Violet Wand

Tuesday, September 20th, 2011 -- by Bacchus

Given the recent discussion of violet wands of various vintages, I thought you all might enjoy seeing this ancient version:

ancient violet wand found in an antique shop

Adele Haze posted it to Twitpic.

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A Spark To The Nipple

Monday, September 12th, 2011 -- by Bacchus

Playing with violet wands and cheaper-but-similar plasma bulb electrosex toys offers a lot of possibilities — but it’s not easy to photograph. This shot from Wired Pussy does a better job than most:

a spark for her nipple

(Don’t forget to click the photo for a larger view.)

Picture is from this photoshoot (see also this view and this one.)

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Neon Wand Electrosex Toy

Thursday, August 18th, 2011 -- by Bacchus

If you’ve spent much time at all on the kinky web, you’ve seen the Violet Wand in use — a early-20th-century quack medical device that gets more action these days as a kinky sex toy. (Even here on ErosBlog!) However, even the modernly-manufactured versions seem to be based on ancient designs — they’re large and clunky and very expensive.

Thus was I amused and entertained to learn of the new Neon Wand. It’s the 21st century glowing-glass-electrode sex-toy device, with solid state electronics, a lighter-weight wand, and your choice of different glow-colors. Better yet, at $150, it’s a tiny fraction of the cost of the traditional wand kits:

neon wand electrosex toy

Obviously I haven’t played with these new Neon Wand devices, but I have been “zapped” with a traditional violet wand and I can understand why people made sex toys out of them. The glass electrodes glow, and if you put a finger (or whatever) near them, an arc will flow that pulses and buzzes, as electricity will. The intensity is variable; it can be painful if you want it to be, but it’s usually just a sharp, strong, unique sensation. The combination of something that is visually stunning, sensationally intense, and just a little bit frightening? Instant sex toy.

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A Mouth Full Of Light

Saturday, July 10th, 2010 -- by Bacchus

Sorry, weedy kids, that’s not some sort of nifty illuminated vaporizer she’s smoking. Nope, she’s got a mouth full of the purest kinkiness in the form of glass-encased plasma, courtesy of Wired Pussy:

violet wand electrode in her mouth

And speaking of pussy, would it be crass to point out that her mouth is not the only place that the highly-charged electrode gets put, in the photoset from which this photo is taken?

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