Product Info and Stories

The Making of The Ducc Yoyo

(Note - This is an excerpt from my book “How to Run a Boutique Yoyo Business”, available in Print on all Amazon platforms, Kindle, and most e-book platforms.)

The Ducc

The Yoyo design process is a blend of both science and art, mixing aesthetics and function. I am not a yoyo designer. I’m an ideator. My skills revolve around generating ideas and building a story. When planning a yoyo release for Rain City Skills, I work rather backwards. I first decide what idea I want to sell and start building the story. Then I narrow down a type of yoyo that will fit that idea. Then I connect with an experienced designer to turn that idea into a quality design. Part of success in business is knowing your strengths and knowing when to hire experts.

This section begins with the creation of a design and interviews with experienced yoyo designers. From there, we move into finding a shop and getting your yoyos made. I conclude with strategies for selling them, so you can move onto the next design.

For starters, I want to share a project from the beginning of 2018. This case study demonstrates the process of design, testing, and production, as well as some of the pitfalls to avoid.

Design by Committee

I decided to organize a community yoyo design with the Facebook group “Yoyo BST & Talk.” Devin Flores (A yoyo designer) offered to help out by creating the actual design schematics. We started with broad specifications and narrowed down to the small details. Each step involved a survey of the community, basing the next aspect of the design on that information — a total of twelve design questions listed below. In the end, we had a yoyo design.

Then I ordered a batch of prototypes. I decided to work with the company Magic Yoyo to machine the parts, as they are affordable. Prototypes are usually ordered in very small batches (four-five pieces) and cost far more than the full production run does. On average, I usually pay US$250–$300 — about US$60 per yoyo. But this yoyo was different. Over one hundred people helped design it, so I decided to invite them to test it as well and took pre-orders for prototypes.

We ended up with more orders than I expected and quickly reached the point where it was cheaper to make a hundred yoyos. Everyone understood that they were gambling and that the yoyo would likely have flaws. That is why you prototype your design after all.

I ordered the yoyos and waited. As soon as they arrived, I shipped them out to everybody who pre-ordered and then put the rest up for sale. I was very, very clear that they were prototypes and had flaws. I then send out a form with some key questions for feedback. And boy, was there ever feedback!

Testing a Prototype

This design had more flaws than any prototype I’d ever made. In hindsight, that shouldn't have been a surprise, considering how experimental the design process was.

There were 2 major flaws to consider. If you are a non-yoyoer reading this, forgive the jargon. I’ve provided a diagram in appendix A to assist with part names. The recess for the response pads was too shallow, so the pad stuck out a little bit. The gap was a little too thin to start with, so the response pads dragged against the string and cut down spin time. The thumb grind lip came out razor sharp. This had the double effect of being hard on the hand as well as having an easily damaged edge.

In the end, the prototype was not the best yoyo, but it was fun to play with, and everybody enjoyed it because they’d been part of the process. It’s a testament to how important engaging with the community you try to sell to is. I took all the feedback and put it into a re-designed yoyo. This time, I ordered the usual batch of a half a dozen prototypes to double check whether our changes improved the design. To my great relief, they did! I released another batch of a hundred of them.

It was a bit of a crazy process that I wouldn’t recommend to anyone. It required a lot of time on my part and on that of the designer I was working with. It didn’t make me any real profit, but it did pay off in other ways. I ended up with a much stronger presence in the community and a handful of new and dedicated fans.

The Questions

Here is an outline of the questions I asked the community to vote on. Each step informed the next. I would put a poll up for two days, then hand the results to Devon Flores to come up with some “renderings” or computer-generated images of the design. Then I’d pose the next question, gather results, and he’d use the chosen design to start adding details. Here are the questions I asked, having decided to use 6061 aluminum to keep the product as affordable as possible:

 

Question 1: General Shape (O, V, H, or W). This was a starting point, with each of these broad shapes having a huge number of potential variations. The result was close, with 38.5 per cent in favor of an H shape. The next closest option (O shape) had the support of 30.4 per cent.

(See appendix A for examples of the general shape options).

 

Question 2: Ballpark specifications. For each of the three choices, I offered four options in 2 mm increments: diameter range (50–58 mm), weight range (58–68 g), and width range (38–48 mm). These needed to be rough, as later design decisions would affect the final specifications.

 

The result was 54–56 mm diameter, 64–66 g weight, and 44–46 mm width.

 

Question 3: Hub design. We were choosing among fingerspin friendly, Lego compatible, and rounded bump or spike. Lego was the clear winner.

 

Question 4: Gap design. We offered four computer-generated options as the shape of the gap. The one close was actually closer to a “W” shape than the “H” shape we initially chose, but the design would be refined back towards the “H”.

 

Question 5: Inner thumb grind lip (Yes or No). They chose to have a lip.

 

Question 6: Wall height (distance from the outside of the response pad to the point where the yoyo curves outward). The vote was overwhelmingly for a low wall.

 

Question 7: Since we chose a Lego hub, I provided some options for what logo I’d include. They chose a Lego head and a small rocket engine. This was the only step where I disregarded the poll. Once the name was chosen, I tracked down some yellow 1x1 blocks with an eye on them that resembled a duck eye.

 

Question 8: Accessories case. This question was a filler while I waited for the designer to generate examples for the next question. Still, it was an important question, since Rain City Skills is all about the extras. We settled on a fluffy duck zip-up coin pouch.

 

Question 9: Refined gap design. This step was more about the aesthetics of the gap design. Four choices with a similar overall shape but with some detailed “cuts” (shallow grooves) were proposed to change the look.

 

Question 10: Sticker Design. I put a call out for artwork. Then, we voted on which drawing to use.

 

Question 11: Cup Design. We offered three design options. This was the part of the design, which had the most room for variation, and we could have spent weeks on it.

 

Question 12: Laser engraving. I called out for artwork and then offered five options for voting. We actually ended up with a different logo, and as I look back, I can’t remember how. I think someone submitted a design after the fact, and everyone loved it.

 

Those were the main survey questions I ran through Google drive. I also did a less formal survey directly in the Facebook group to decide on the name and on the spot where the engraving would be placed on the yoyo.

♦♦♦

The whole process could have gone on for a lot longer. In the end, I ended up walking the fine line between having (1) enough community involvement and (2) fatigue from reading and analyzing too many survey posts. I still had a skilled designer generate renderings for me (3D pictures of the yoyo based on the drawings). Overall, it was a very successful project, and I’m glad I undertook it.

12 Days of Easter - Giveaway!

Congrats to Day 11 winner Blake Walker! The number was 99, he was the closest with 88.

Day 12, your last chance to enter for a chance to win a mystery egg, and an additional entry in the grand prize treasure chest.

Give me a suggestion for Rain City Skills

-Yoyos to make

-Advertising strategy to reach more yoyoers

-Player to sponsor

-etc

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Don’t forget to include a method of contact. I’ll draw the winner in the morning and give them 6 hours to respond. So if you give me your email address, please make sure to add Raincityskills@gmail.com to your contacts. Don't forget to follow Rain City Skills on Facebook and Instagram, as well as Mryoyothrower on YouTube and sign up for my our mailing list at raincityskills@gmail.com for discounts and news!

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Click Here to Enter the Contest

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I was originally going to make this a bonus with orders, but I figured with the whole Apocalypse it’d be more fun to do a series of giveaways.

12 Days
12 Easy contests
13 Prizes

Each day I’ll run a mini contest and draw a winner. Everyone who enters is also entered in the grand prize draw for the treasure chest full of goodies with a Rain City Skills “$”

Each of the smaller prize eggs contain a collection of goodies. lego figures, string, pads, conterweights, etc.

Each one also has a few bearings. These are from my big jar of “dud, clean and test” bearings. When you order bearings by the 100’s there are always a few that don’t play right. I cleaned and tested them all, and i”m giving away the good ones!

Finally, two of the eggs have a Rain City Skills “Loonie” in them!

Day 1 - Post a picture of either
- A rain City Skills yoyo in your hand
or
- Your empty hand holding a piece of paper naming the RCS throw you wish you had.

Post the picture to any social media with #raincity12daysofeaster. Then use the form below to submit a link to your picture. Don’t forget to include a method of contact. I’ll draw the winner in the morning and give them 6 hours to respond. So if you give me your email address, please make sure to add Raincityskills@gmail.com to your contacts.

Click Here to Submit your picture

Contest time!

*Update - Contest has ended, waiting to confirm the winner

To enter for a chance to win a Rain City Skills “$” - What’s your Sign edition, click this link and follow the instructions. I’m giving away a yoyo and this diamond Box full of accessories (Lego, Bearings and string)

I’d love to hear any thoughts you have on Rain City Skills, my books, or any suggestions for marketing yoyos and building the business up!


If you haven’t already, take a moment to click this link to join my yoyo mailing list. You can choose a weekly newsletter with tutorials, yoyo history and more, or a monthly release update.

If you are interested in following my journey into professional authorhood, I have a separate mailing list over at Jdmckay.com. I’m in need of Beta readers (you get to read the book before anyone else in exchange for reviews) so join up! I only mail out once a month, so it’s not too onerous.

Giveaway2.jpg

The Rain City Skills "$"

Last year I had a crazy idea. A horoscope themed yoyo. 12 colours, 24 engraving options. I also had the crazy idea to re-make the Infamous Dollar Tree Yoyo (click for that story). So why not combine them!?

The challenge with 12 colours is volume. With the exception of the Gamer, every rain city release has been around 100-150 pieces. For this throw, I made 600. The bonus is that with Magic Yoyo making the yoyos, once you get past 500 yoyos, the price drops. So I’m able to offer this throw at a lower than usual price, in the spirit of the original Dollar Tree Yoyo.

There will be 2 editions of this throw.

  1. The DTYY edition will retail for $40 with the full extras package - 3 colourways. Black/gold and red/gold reflecting the original Dollar Tree Yoyo will be released in early February. The blue/orange colour is exclusive to The Monthly Throw. Surprise!

  2. The “What’s Your Sign” edition will retail for $30. Just a yoyo and string. You will have the option of adding the unboxing experience for $10 more. This edition comes in 12 colours, with a total of 30 options.

    -Each colour reflects a given month’s birthstone. For that colour, you have the choice of either of the astrological symbols that fall on that month. For example January is a dark red “Garnet” colour, with the option of either the Capricorn or Aquarius symbol (or both if you are born on the cusp date).

    The Unboxing experience

    If you opt for the DTYY edition, or purchase the $10 extras pack you will get:
    -The usual trading cards/stickers
    -extra Rain City edition Sochi string
    -a slim bearing and shorter axle for responsive play
    -assorted lego bricks to attach to the lego hub
    -a yoyo holster
    -maple candy
    -a cheap yoyo that is similar to the original Dollar Tree yoyo.

Specs:

Weight - 56.4g
Diameter - 54.9mm
Width - 37.7mm
Bearing - Concave (slim bearing optional)
Features - Lego hub

Release date is Friday February 7th at 6pm Pacific time

To launch this throw, I’m giving one away! Contest ends Feb. 1st. It’ll take you to a 3rd party contest site where you will have choices for multiple entries. Winner will be chosen at random and will receive a fancy diamond shaped box of extras (bearings, strings, lego accessories) and their horoscope sign and month of the “$”

Check out the gallery below for pictures!

The Year in Review

It’s been a heck of a year! 12 retail yoyo releases, my first book release (and 2 more), and the Boutique Yoyo Collective’s first World Championship table!

I’ve been learning a fair bit about marketing, and decided to change how I use instagram. My @mryoyothrower account will now be for day to day randomness, and the @raincityskills account is going to feature a more cohesive brand image. Waylon Crase create a border for me to use to tie everything together. Here’s the year in review, check out all 12 releases in order!

How to Run a Boutique Yoyo Brand - Now Available Worldwide!

How to Run a Boutique Yoyo Business

*Update - eBook is free on all Amazon platforms until March 22nd

We have liftoff!

The book is now available worldwide in print and ebook format.

Ebook

Amazon Kindle - See the list below for your country’s link

Print

Autographed edition is available at raincityskills.com in paperback and hardcover.

Amazon - Take your pick. See the list below for your country.

USA
Canada
UK
Germany
Spain
France
Japan
Italy
Netherlands
Mexico
Brazil
Australia
India

The Convoy

The Convoy is the September release in the year of maddness - 12 months, 12 yoyos.

Quick review:
The Ducc, The Loonie, The Retro-Rocket, The Metalhead, The SETI, The Loonie (American Edition) The Sk8r (SB Edition), The Author.

I’m stunned and delighted that not only have I managed to keep up the rate of releases, but you all have been so supportive! Much thanks!

Onto the Convoy

I’ll get into the backstory on the name below, but we’ll start with the release details.

The convoy is a hybrid ‘0’ shape yoyo. The gap curves out from the bearing area, then flattens out for the rim. This makes for a really comfortable feel in the hand, as well as a unique weight distribution. We opted for 7075 aluminum for this release, a decision I’m very happy with. Aside from the increase in durability, 7075 aluminum can be machined thinner than 6061 and allows for different weight distribution options (Learn more about yoyo materials in my book “How to Run a Boutique Yoyo Business”).

Weight - 64.2g
Diameter - 54mm
Width - 47.5mm
Bearing - Groove Concave

We initially decided to offer 2 colourways. Cory picked a Navy blue and sand fade for the USA, and I selected colours based on the Canadian Red Ensign, Canada’s flag during World War 2. Since September ended up being the release month, it only made sense to release it on ‘International Talk Like a Pirate’ day, Sept. 19. So we added a solid black yoyo with Skull and Crossbones engraving. Waylon Crase did the design for the engraving, as well as the fantastic release logo.

The unboxing experience is exactly what you’ve come to expect from a Rain City release. Cory and I put some serious effort and a lot of facebook discussions into packaging. As alway, I wanted to be able to offer an affordable yoyo with an amazing experience. We decided to deliver your yoyo in a packing crate. A durable craft paper box with a yoyo packed tight with shredded wood for extra protection for those long sea voyages!

The box also includes a bunch of rain city stickers and trading cards, a small wood piece (anchor or steering wheel) and a mini figure. We matched those to the colourways. For the Canadian yoyo I picked a British sailor with musket (old school, right?). Cory went the other direction. I didn’t catch it until they arrived, but he picked a Star Trek figure! Which kindof fit the stereotype of the US military vs Canadian. Of course, there had to be a pirate, so the black yoyo comes with a set including a pirate, treasure, parrot and a skeleton!

You can find the Convoy on September 19th at

raincityskills.com
yoyoexpert.com
yoyosam.com
yoyostorerewind.com

The Story

Cory Gardener (the madman behind Broke Village) approached me a while back. I usually try to relate the theme of a yoyo to something about the people involved. The Sk8r fit Coffin Nachtmahr becuase he’s an avid skateboarder. The Metalhead was a great fit for Thomas Velto becuase he’s a guitar player and a heavy metal enthusiast.

Whilst brainstorming, Cory’s day job (The USA Merchant Marine) came up and there was our connection.

When I was one year old my mom divorced my biological father and moved back up to Canada from the USA. We moved into my grandparent’s basement suite (I’ve go a picture somewhere of me age 3 holding a hammer because I was ‘helping’ with renovations). My grandfather was the main male influence in my life. He is where I get my terrible sense of humour from (allll the puns). One of my must amusing memories of him was the many times my grandmother would be yelling for him across the house. I’d run in and tell him. He’d take a minute to turn his hearing aid back on, then go see what she wanted, muttering about the hearing aid needing a new battery.
Grandpa lost his hearing as a result of his time in the Canadian Merchant Marine during World War Two.

For those who don’t know what that is, the merchant navy was arguably the deciding factor in Britains survival during the war these ships carried supplies across the ocean that kept the English fed and armed in the year before the USA finally joined the conflict. These boats were prime targets for German submarine attacks. According to this article, over 50% of the Merchant ships were sunk. Sailors who managed to survive the initial sinking all too often died in the freezing Atlantic Ocean.

The really crazy thing was that these sailors (including my grandfather) weren’t considered veterans, and thus didn’t receive any of the government support or recognition the rest of the armed forces did after the war. It wasn’t until the year 2000 that my grandpa was recognized and received a small pension. The money wasn’t the issue, it was the acknowledgement.

The United States Merchant marine transports supplies all over the world in support of military efforts. One of the reasons you’ll Cory posting about this yoyo only intermittently is because he’s often out at sea and out of range of internet!

Stop Competing with yourself!

12 Months - 12 Yoyos.

It’s nuts. In the short term it’s bad business. There is no question that I'm competing with myself with so many releases. Few people can afford to buy a Rain City Skills yoyo every month. Especially with so many other amazing brands releasing yoyos.

In the short term.

This mad dash of releases is a long-term gamble. I’m trying to do 2 things.

  1. Be active and get seen - a release a month with a wide range of shapes and styles means that there is something for everyone to talk about. I’m also able to collaborate with a bunch of company’s and post photos and content regularly without being repetitive.

  2. Take a page from the Indy Book Publishing industry (see what I did there?) and create a backlist. The logic is this. If I spend money on an ad, or give away a couple yoyos to reviewers and contests to promote a yoyo release, I can quickly spend all the profit from the run of 100 yoyos.
    But….
    If I have a backlist of unique and interesting yoyos available, people aren’t just going to buy one yoyo and move on. They are at the very least going to browse the catalogue. They will see that there is a lot more to offer from this brand they just discovered. They might buy a second yoyo then and there, or they plan to come back and shop next payday.

In preparing for the publication of my books, I dove headfirst into learning about the indy book publishing industry. One of the keys to success seems to be backlist.

-If you spend $5 on ads to sell one book, you are losing money. But if that person buys the first book, and the next 5 in the series, now it's $1 per book and you are making good money.

The idea is next year to release bi-metals quarterly, with some restocks of monometals in between. Then I've got more time to properly promote each release. Once new people buy a yoyo, they'll go looking and find that I've got an available back-catalogue to shop through. I'm sure a few of you have fallen into that trap already ;)

If you have a minute, I’d appreciate it if you’d fill out this quick survey to help me make decisions about the brand moving forward.

CLICK HERE FOR THE SURVEY

The Author, The Sk8r and The book - How to Run a Boutique Yoyo Business

It’s release time! 3 drops today

  1. The Author - The new signature yoyo of Mryoyothrower. - Click here

  2. The Sk8r SB - Jeff Anderson Dye - Click here

  3. The Book - How to Run a Boutique Yoyo Business

    1. Ebook - Free with the purchase of The Author Yoyo

    2. Paperback - Autographed Pre-order

    3. Hardcover - Autographed Pre-order

Add either the Paperback or the Hardcover book to your cart with THe Author and get 30% off the book! Pre-orders will ship mid-late September. Ebook download will be provided by a Bookfunnel download link that will be emailed out shortly after ordering.

Any questions, please find me on Facebook or Instagram @mryoyothrower, or via email at www.raincityskills.com

Happy shopping!

Rain City Skills "Loonie" - American Edition

In February we released a micro yoyo called the Loonie. I thought this would be a fun little release that would catch little attention. Instead it sold out right away. I would have left it at that, but Andre at Yoyoexpert asked if he could carry them, so a 2nd run was in order. I took the opportunity to upgrade the design. Since it’s named after the Canadian Dollar and it costs $1.30 Canadian to purchase an American dollar, I thought we’d do an American version that was 30% wider!

The Loonie is a tiny throw that packs a big punch! Small enough to fit in the pocket, stable enough to work on precision training your combos.

The Loonie was inspired by a YoYo from 10 years ago called the “Littles”. It was a pocket throw that played big. We took that idea and refined it with a unique design modern play requires. We’ve tested through 3 variations to get to this version and we think it’s fantastic!

The Loonie plays best with a thinner string, but works fine with your favourite brand of bulk string.

We like to have fun at Rain City Skills, so the hub of the Yoyo is designed to be Lego compatible. This allows you to throw on some small decorative pieces or bigger pieces to adjust the weight. Each Loonie comes with a pair of lego plates that are great for fingerspins!

Each Loonie comes packed in a small zip up coin pouch including:

-1 Loonie YoYo
-1 foil-wrapped chocolate Canadian Dollar coin
-An assortment of Rain City Skills stickers
-A random selection of Mryoyothrower trading cards
-a few Rain City Skills thin strings.

Release date is June 20th at 6PM Pacific Time!
You can find the Loonie: American Edition at
www.raincityskills.com
www.yoyoexpert.com
www.yoyosam.com
www.yoyostorerewind.com


May- 12 Months 12 Throws - The SETI

The Rain City Skills “SETI” started life a year ago as a random design inspired by a yoyo Jensen Kimmet handed me to try at Worlds. I came home and messaged Justin to say “We need something with a really big diameter. He sent me a design and I threw it at a new shop to see if they were worth working with. They weren't, the YoYo came back with a bearing seat too narrow. We had an oversized, responsive slimline!

While I didn’t use that shop again, I did throw some old Yoyojam Shims in the prototype and try it out. I was stunned. I was expecting a half-decent, silly YoYo. What I got was a really, really good silly YoYo. It went on the list while we tried to work out a theme.

My first idea was to call it the cereal bowl. Theme it around Saturday morning cartoons. I’d get some custom packaging made in the fashion of old single-serve cereal boxes (the kind you could actually use as a bowl). Perhaps even include a compostable plastic spoon!

Unfortunately (or fortunately) I waited too long and another company released a YoYo called “The Bowl”. I sat on it for a bit. While waiting for just the right theme to appear I sent it off to another shop to test and it came back perfect.

At some point Waylon Crase and I were chatting and he suggested the name SETI, since the shape also resembled a satellite dish. It was perfect! I’d get some alien lego figures, and have some fun with the colourways!

I can’t recall when I had the idea for the engravings, but I suspect it came out of my frustration with anodizers. A far too large percentage of each run of yo-yos ended up b-grades because of anodizing flaws. Solid colours and engravings avoided that issue.

When it came time for packaging Waylon scored again with the ridiculous, almost origami boxes. They’ve been a pain to ship, and I can’t package up the run and shelve it because the boxes are too big! I instead have to assemble the package for each YoYo as it ships out. But they are really cool, so it’s’ 100% worth the extra time!

I’ll leave play and performance up to the reviewers, suffice to say it’s definitely not the YoYo you will win the world championship with. But it is one you’ll have a really good time playing with.

Specs:
Width: 40.5mm
Diameter: 67.8mm
Weight: 67.8g
Groove Concave Bearing

What's in the Box?

2x Rain City Skills Thin String
1x SETI sticker
1x Lego compatible Alien Figure
A grab bag of assorted lego pieces to customize your throw!

You can get yours exclusively at www.raincityskills.com, just follow the link below.

Don’t forget to sign up for my mailing list to be the first to get updates and sneak peeks, as well as deals and give-always!


April - 12 Months 12 Throws - The Metalhead

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The Metalhead. Last year Magic Yoyo released Dylan Kowalski’s signature YoYo, the Hotdiggidy. Within a week Thomas Velto and I were chatting and decided he needed a signature YoYo as well! The Metalhead was born. I left Thomas to create the basic design. Joey Serrano of 2Sick Yo-yos lent a hand to draw up Thomas’s design. We talked about a nice big, wide performance YoYo.

The first prototype played great, but had too many sharp edges and cuts. It lacked a refined feel. So We worked a little more to round out the edges without compromising the play. The decision to use a traditional hub instead of a Lego hub was actually something of an oversight. I legitimately forgot to add he design feature. When we got the 2nd prototype I brought it up with Thomas. We agreed that we didn’t want to mess with how great the throw played, so we left it. As it turns out that was the right decision, we accidentally ended up with a really good finger spin cup!

The theme. I’ve been wanting to make “The Metalhead” for a while, but didn’t have a YoYo to go with the design. One of the local Yoyoers in Vancouver, Joey Hockin, is also a growing force in the BC heavy metal community. I wanted to make a YoYo he could sell at shows. When Thomas and I started talking, it clicked into place!

I asked Joey if I could share his story, here it is!

My first experience with yo-yoing was in the summer of 2001 when I was 12 years old. There was a booth set up at the Calgary Stampede sponsored by Duncan. It featured future world champion Jensen Kimmitt. I became instantly addicted and spent that whole summer practicing in my backyard. A few years later, around 2008, we had the first Alberta Yoyo club (YORAD) meeting with myself, Jensen, Steve from SPYY, Chris from CLYW and Michael Witteman. I was introduced to the unresponsive style of play and the competitive side of yo-yoing. Over the next couple of year, I placed top 10 at a couple of competitions including western regionals and nationals. I decided to step back from competitions and treat yo-yoing as more of a creative endeavour than a competitive one. This is where I’ve always found the most joy in yo-yoing anyways, as the creative aspects of it align more with my interests. This brings me to the other big hobby in my life, METAL!

I started out like most metalheads my age, listening to Linkin Park, Sum 41 and the like back in 2001. I worked my way through every style of heavy music you can imagine until I found my love for European styles of metal. In September of 2009 I was lucky enough to see Edguy, Stratovarius, Dragonforce, Sonata Arctica, Epicurean, Luna Mortis, Viathyn and Kobra and the Lotus all within a week. Since then I couldn’t get enough of that feeling and my life has pretty much revolved around metal since.

Every single year I’ve managed to make it to at least a couple of festivals. My travels have taken me to a dozen different countries to see epic shows and be more a part of this global metal community. After trying to get my own band off the ground I decided it was time to make the move to Vancouver where the metal scene is much more alive. I finally formed my band, Apprentice, and started playing shows in early 2015.

In 2016 I started Journeyman Productions (a logical name to follow Apprentice) and started promoting metal shows in Vancouver. Now we have a small team of people that are dedicated to fostering the growing metal scene. We enjoy every second we spend making sure bands have opportunities to grow and get to play in front of a larger audience. In late 2018 Apprentice finally released our first album “The Strength of Mortality” which is the culmination of the work of most of my adult life. If you get a chance we’d really appreciate you checking us out online at any of our social media. Give our album a listen on pretty much any major platform where you can find music!

I’m unbelievably stoked to have in my hands a toy that brings together 2 of my life’s biggest passions in a high quality package. This will definitely be my main throw. I look forward to introducing yo-yoing to members of the metal community as well as metal to members of the yo-yo community. The similarities between the 2 might surprise you as they both involve a lot of creativity and personal style! So get on your favourite band’s shirt, throw on our album and give the Metalhead a spin!“

Joey gave me a discount on downloads of “Strength of Mortality” so I could include it with the Apprentice engraved edition of the metal head for half price. If you choose a different colour, you can still pick up the album and their merch at

Apprentice - Bandcamp

If you are looking to score a metal head, click the “Buy Now” button below to take you to the Rain City Skills store.

Yoyo Accesories Brands - Sochi

Luckey Yulin Li is a 4 time Canadian 1A Champion. That’s a heck of an accomplishment. So when he told me he was starting a yoyo accessories brand, Sochi, he had my attention. Sochi sells high-quality bearings, pads, string and axles. To be honest I wasn’t initially sure how successful he’d be.  I mean, bearings and strings are cheap and plentyful. And who buys new axles unless they lose them? But it turns out people are tired of cleaning seized up bearings, fighting with poorly made string, and missing binds becuase of cheap pads.

Luckey is from China originally but has spent much of his life in Canada. He’s travelled the world competing in, and winning contest. He’s tied in to the global competition yoyo scene. In 2018 he organized the first ever Chinese National Yoyo Contest that wasn’t run as an exclusive event by a company. He has worked for years designing yoyos for a number of different brands. He started Sochi because he saw something missing. He sourced out high-quality gear and purchased in large enough quantity to keep the price affordable. I am not a competitor and am a rank amateur in comparison to Luckey, but I can still see the value of a quality upgrade.

Sochi currently sells

Pair of pads: Blue $2.50, Pink $2.99

String: 3 thicknesses, available in 10, 25, 50 or 100 packs. With a 100 pack at only 18.99 it’s easy enough to buy a bundle to try out. The quality is solid and it holds up well.

Axles: Titanium.

Bearings: Concave or Center Track for $11.99.

The bearings are noticeably better. I really drilled him on what justifies the price and he stressed the difference in the quality of the materials. A cheaper bearing material is going to contain flaws and isn’t going to be as smooth and balanced. When it comes to string, there is a difference between types of polyester and blending the right types at just the right tension makes a big difference.

So I’ve decided to stock Sochi accessories at raincityskills.com. Luckey gave me a deal on a sample pack priced at $15 that will give you a chance to test out his gear.

Thanks for reading and don’t forget to sign up for my mailing list for weekly info, release notes, sneak peeks and deals!

12 Months 12 Throws - March - The Retro Rocket

2019 is the year of Maddness at Rain City Skills. 12 Months, 12 yoyos. January was the long awaited production run of The Ducc. February brought the instant hit, The Loonie. Now we have the Retro Rocket.

Over a year ago Daniel Kessler approached me with an idea for a yo-yo collab. My only criteria was that we come up with something unique, something no one else has done. We ended up close, something that, from what I could tell at the teme, no one but me had done (King Yo Star Morpheus was my previous throw with that shape).

The Retro Rocket is an undersized powerhouse. It’s got full size performance in a pocket friendly package.

We tossed around a whole lot of names and themes, but when we stumbled on “The Kessler Run” I knew we nailed it. From there the Retro Rocket theme assembled itself. Daniel drew up a delightfully simple design logo.

We went with 3 colourways based on our favourite shows. The Kessler Run for Star Wars, The Redshirt for Star Trek and the DHD for Stargate!

You can get yours direct at Raincityskills.com

as well as Yoyoexpert.com and Yoyosam.com

Below you can watch a couple reviews and check out one of my latest tutorials!

Check it out at Rain City Skills: https://raincityskills.com/collections/rain-city-skills/products/retro-rocket?variant=21075083657305 Follow me on Instagram!!! https://www.instagram.com/throws.n.br... New Shirts @ the Throws N' Brews Shop: https://throwsnbrews.bigcartel.com/ New Stuff @ YoyoBESTBUY: http://yoyobestbuy.com/yoyo-store/?re... Leave me some comments and LIKE THE VIDEO!!!! Check out SW Randall Online: https://www.swrandalltoys.com/ Buy Zipline Strings: http://ziplinestrings.bigcartel.com/ I'm a YoyoBESTBUY affiliate now!

ASMR #Definitiveyoyo #Yoyo Review Jeremy reached out at a time when I was weighing whether I would come back to reviewing. I'm glad he did and I think you'll be happy with this little Pocket Rocket.

Fun picture trick with my current favourite mount. Enjoy! Yo-yo used- Retro Rocket - available at http://www.raincityskills.com String used - Rain City Sunshower strings Don't forget to subscribe!

The Duck: How to Make Them Pay - A guide to the coming Duckpocalypse

So this is only peripherally yoyo related, except in that it's part of the saga of me learning how to publish for my upcoming yoyo book. so if it needs to be deleted let me know.

TL;DR I engaged in amazon book publishing trollery. Buy it if you want, or not. It's mostly there to amuse me.

So it started with this book (https://amzn.to/2T2jpRb) that appears to be a 100+ year old book on how to raise and sell ducks. The review on this was what made it for me.

"Not the Duck Specific revenge manual I was hoping for"

I get a lot of Duck related funny things sent to me (thank you all for the laughs) and this has turned out to be one of the best.

This would not do. I hated the idea of someone so disappointed by a book! So on a whim I started writing the Duck specific revenge manual my new friend (Amazon user eoin) clearly needed.

I got sucked in. It ended up being really over the top. I did a fair bit of reading things on the internet so I could pay lip service to reality. I ended up writing a farcical guidebook/manifesto/conspiracy theory about 20 pages long. It took me far longer than I’ll admit, but it was a hilarious romp to write.

Then it occured to me. I needed to learn how to publish a book independently, so why not do a practice run while waiting for the yoyo book back from my editor (which I received today!)

In any event. If you are interested in reading my little adventure in creative writing and publishing it's now available in print and kindle format. I think I get 30 cents per kindle purchase and about $1.50 per book, so this 100% isn't a push to buy it. It's me sharing a laugh.

Print Edition

Kindle Edition

Closing Down Return Top Shop

Life is Change. 3 years ago I took a leap and decided to start an online store. In the beginning the intent was to provide access to yoyos for kids in Vancouver at affordable Canadian prices, without having to deal with shipping from the USA. The store quickly grew as people across Canada got excited about having a Canadian store. As I branched out and got some interesting different brands into the store, people outside of Canada started buying from RTS. The business grew to the point where it is mostly breaking even. The problem is time. It takes a lot of my time to manage inventory, promotion, shipping and accounting. Time for which the only compensation is the enjoyment I get from interacting with customers who are excited about what they get.

I’ve come to a point where I want to do other things with that time. The yoyo market has been changing. When I started yoyoing 10 years ago, the only real options for buying yoyos were yoyonation.com and yoyoexpert.com with a few smaller retailers. Beginners couldn’t just grab something off amazon or eBay, they had to go to a Yoyo retailer. Now there are a lot more options for online retail as well as the option to buy directly from manufacturers. This means competition, and I don’t have the cash flow to put into the advertising needed. There are more brands than ever before, so the ability to stock enough variety that will sell through is challenging. Brands are selling direct, which means that not only do I compete with the other online retailers, but with the brands themselves. This isn’t a complaint, as with Rain City Skills I understand the other side of the equation, but it’s an additional challenge. What it really boils down to is where I want to put my time.

Rain City Skills has been more successful than I expected, and I want to see where that goes. I’ve got other yoyo world projects I want to explore, like more writing, starting a podcast, making T-shirts, yoyo fundraisers with schools and a long list of other things. So it’s time for Return Top Shop to go. What I will be doing is shifting a very limited selection of products to mryoyothrower.com, mostly so I have options for the local Vancouver community as was my original intention. Rain City Skills products will still be available through yoyoexpert.com and yoyosam.com, as well as now through the raincityskills.com website directly. Thank you to everyone over the years who have supported the store, I’d been a fun ride and I appreciated all of you!

The Sk8r - Rain City Skills x Oh Yes Yo

The Sk8r will be available at yoyoexpert.com, yoyosam.com and returntopshop.com for $64.99.  I’ll also be selling extra colouring books at Returntopshop for a limited time, just in case you wanted one to keep as a collectable.  Or give to a friend. Or if you wanted to colour a 2nd one yourself ;)

The Sk8r comes in red, white or black with either purple or black hubs.

Specs:
Diameter 52.95mm
Width 42.2mm
Gap 4.2mm
Weight 62.4g
Bearing Size C Flat
Material Delrin

The Story

Rain City Skills x Oh Yes Yo

      When I approached Coffin Nachtmahr Of Oh Yes Yo with the idea to do a collaboration called the skater, he was 100% on board right away.  His first suggestion was that the name needed to be spelled Sk8r.  From there, designing the yoyo to look like a skateboard wheel was a given.  Justin Scott Larson went to work taking Coffin and My ideas and giving them shape.  The design he came up with was nearly perfect, as always!  What wasn’t a given was finding the right machine shop.  This is the most prototyped yoyo I’ve ever made.  We started this process in the beginning of 2018.


     We started with one shop that I’d worked with before for begleri.  We sent them 2 variations, one 59g, one 63g.  They did a good job of the body, but were unable to make the hardware properly (the hub wasn’t snug against the body, so it tended to slip instead of screwing together tightly).  It did give us the opportunity to bring the prototypes to PNWR in Seattle where we learned that the yoyo community was of no help making decisions.  We had 2 weights options and we left the contest with pretty much a 50-50 split between people that liked one or the other!


     Onto a 2nd machine shop.  This time I used the same shop that made the Rain City Skills ‘Showgirl’.  Again, we tested 2 variations to make sure the hub design would work.  This time they nailed it, fantastic!  Except in the time between ordering the prototypes and actually getting them the shop seems to have run into some trouble.  As soon as I got the prototypes my contact stopped responding.


      Finally we ended up at Yoyoempire.  I really should have started with them, they have made more Delrin yoyos than just about any other brand on the market and have the experience needed to get it right.  So a 5th prototype was made to make sure they had the design right and bam, ready to go!


      In the interim between the various prototypes I was busy crafting the unboxing experience.  This is where Coffin had his chance to shine.  He is a professional artist.  He makes his living with his art and yoyo sales.  He drew up the sticker logo, blending the 2 brands and the skateboard concept.  I hunted and found lego skateboards and paired them with an assortment of mostly horror or science fiction villain themed Minifigures.  There are about 50 varieties spread amongst the 150 Sk8rs made.  Jack from “Nightmare Before Xmas” makes an appearance, the Scream guy, Donald Trump, various mad scientists, there may even be a Sith or two in there.


      The idea for the big ‘enxtra’ came at USA nationals in 2018.  Coffin was drawing up label cards for the Boutique Yoyo Collective table and we came up with the idea to include a yoyo colouring book!  I sent him home with a list of yoyo words (bind, whip, slack, etc) to outline in graffiti format.  So each Sk8r comes with a collectable colouring book that even has a drawing of a Coffin and I!


      The finishing touch was packaging.  Coffin sent me a photo of skateboard wheels shrink-wrapped and pointed out that this was do-able at home.  I popped onto amazon, got some shrink wrap and tested it.  You can do it at home with a hair dryer, but it’s not super effective.  So next stop was the hardware store for a heat sealer and heat gun.  I then spent most of the Canadian Thanksgiving long weekend splitting my time between packing to move and shrink wrapping yoyos.  As you can see in the images below, I added in a basic fingerboard that makes a perfect display stand!


     All in all this has been a really fun project.  At some point I’m sure I’ll run out of ideas for interesting themes and accessories, but I’m really digging the creativity that goes with it.  I’m looking forward to my next collaboration and where 2019 takes Rain City!


     Just for fun, The Sk8r drops on October 24th, my birthday!  So if you needed any more incentive to grab one, think of it as my birthday present! 


     

Rain City Skills Gamer - Round 2

Round 2 of the hugely popular “Gamer! The first run of themed ‘splash’ colourways sold out in a weekend, so by popular demand we did a second run!

I like to stay tuned in to the community online and one piece of feedback that was overwhelming was a desire to have a beadblasted finish, so we added that. I also opted for a slightly thicker but better quality carry case that should hold all your accessories.

For the second run we chose 3 new games and 1 repeat from the first run.

The repeat is the “Space Invader” colour. The first time around the anodizer forgot a colour, and I wanted it just right, so the 2nd run includes 3 colours of aliens!

The Hero in honour of The Legend of Zelda, another game which has occupied many, many hours of my life! 
It’s Dangerous to go alone! Take This!

The Plumber in honour of Nintendo’s flagship gaming franchise, the Super Mario Brothers! Yes, we’ve left out Luigi, but I was an only child growing up so all I played was player 1 ;)

Finally, I can’t take the credit for this one. This colourway came back from the anodizer differen’t than I’d originally planned, so I asked facebook. Overwhelmingly the response was for a World of Warcraft themed throw. Specifically...
Leeeeeeeeeerooooooooooy...Jaaaaaaaaannkiiiiiiiiins
Check out the video and if you have ever played the game seriously you’ll be face in hands sighing, becuase we’ve all raided with a Leroy.

If you missed the story of the Gamer yoyo and how it came aboutclick here to read up. The first run actually had 500 yoyos in it, most of which were earmarked for schools and a charity project Free Hinton of Eternal throw works with.

Since people seem to like their solid colours, I’ve decided to release a small quantity of what remained from the first 500 as mix/match colours. These are not bead blasted as they came from the first run. To the left is all the combos you can make with green!

Where to shop:
www.returntopshop.com
www.yoyoexpert.com
www.yoyosam.com