Introducing "Nimble"
On days when my pain
levels are hitting the ceiling and I simply cannot be bothered with anything
except to try and get through the day with as little stress or physical torment
as possible, it’s often made much worse by the fact that I have to open
something as simple as the foils on my tablet strips – have you tried to push
them through from the front recently? – it seems as though they’ve started
making the foil out of 10mm stainless steel
– and having to prepare and cook a
meal for myself can often result in the most unhealthy of meals – The Pot
Noodle, 375g of dehydrated mush that looks much the same going in as it does
coming back out. Opening a packet of bacon – you know the ones with the little
loose corner to enable you to ‘peel back’ the plastic cover that no man (or
woman) has EVER in the history of ‘peeling back’ the plastic cover, been able
to complete without the need for some heavy, sharp bladed and downright
dangerous, intervention! It seems as though, in the fight for ever more ‘child-friendly’
packaging, manufacturers have lost sight of the need for easy access to their
products by those less able among us – the elderly and the disabled.
But wait, before you
all rush off to your laptops to pen a strongly worded letter of complaint to
the guilty parties, here’s something that’s child friendly AND makes opening
packaging a breeze – even for my gnarled old fingers.
It’s called “Nimble” – I assume because it returns us less nimbled people back to the land of the sprightly – and it makes opening things like bacon and tablet foils SO much easier. More importantly, you won’t run the risk of stabbing yourself and bleeding out onto your freshly opened bacon.
These aren't my gnarled fingers! |
It’s called “Nimble” – I assume because it returns us less nimbled people back to the land of the sprightly – and it makes opening things like bacon and tablet foils SO much easier. More importantly, you won’t run the risk of stabbing yourself and bleeding out onto your freshly opened bacon.
I got my “Nimble” in
the post on Tuesday, just in time to take it to work with me – I work in a
retail environment where opening sealed containers is an everyday, if not every
minute, occurrence, but do they supply box-cutters? Well, yes, but can you ever
find one when you need it? No, and when you do it's usually blunt – and I
used it during my shift to open sealed tinned and bottled goods ready for
putting on the shelves. The “Nimble” sliced through the seals on crates of beer
and pop bottles, trays of tinned goods and the selotaped seals of boxes with
ease. I couldn’t tell you how many times I’ve snapped my nails back when trying
to do this without a cutter in the past! When not in use the “Nimble” slips off
your finger and into your pocket ready for next time – I even developed the ‘skill’
of putting it on whilst still in my pocket so that I could whip it out, cut, and
slip it back in without anyone really noticing! (Though my practicing raised a
few eyebrows, especially whilst I was working the tills!))
The beauty of the “Nimble”
finger cutter, as I’ve affectionately named it, is that it won’t cut your fingers – believe me,
I tried several times – the blade is so small that it just won’t penetrate your
skin, but, when firmly pressed against a slightly harder surface like tape,
plastic or paper it slices with the precision of a crafters knife. I
absolutely loved it.
At home I’ve used it
to open cellophane packaging, envelopes, crisp packets, packs of bacon (of course!) and those other ‘easy-open’
packs that never work - the ‘Tear Here’ strips around biscuit packets! It makes
things so much easier!
You can find out more about “Nimble” by visiting Version 22. The product is being launched via a Kickstarter campaign today, so you’ll be one of the first to see it. Kickstarter is a fantastic way to get new products onto the market – you pledge an amount to support the project – if it reaches its goals the manufacturing process begins, you are charged what you pledged for the product and you become one of the first people in the world to take ownership of your very own “Nimble” (If the project doesn’t reach the required goal you are not charged, obviously!)
So, let Nimble point the way to an easier future. Pledge to buy one, two or three to make this product a reality for all those who struggle with packaging!!