Gulf News

Pool floats are THE summer accessory

Lounging on a novelty pool float has become visual shorthand for a carefree lifestyle

- By Sanam Yar

“Everyone looks cute on a float,” Laudati said. “It’s not just, ‘Hey, I’m standing on this body of water.’ It can go wih your outfit.” MARISSA LAUDATI | Floats & Boats co-founder

In the beginning, there were inflatable waterfowl. Then came the doughnuts, the Pegasus floats and the novelty coffins. Children have drifted out to sea and across lakes on them. They have terrorised highways, carried by the wind. And last year, on Fish Lake in Chisago County, Minnesota, a group of four women stranded on a rainbow unicorn were rescued by local deputies.

With each passing summer, more and more bodies of water are invaded by the species known as the polyvinyl chloride inflatable pool float.

Search #poolfloat on Instagram and there’s a near endless scroll of babies, dogs and fully grown adults reclining on inflatable­s of all shapes and sizes. Celebritie­s do it. Influencer­s do it. Even ferrets and tiny inanimate dolls are doing it.

The act of lounging on a novelty pool float, or, more specifical­ly, the photograph­ic evidence of one lounging on a novelty pool float, has become visual shorthand for a carefree, idyllic lifestyle. The phenomenon shows no signs of deflating; there has been a spike in searches for “pool float” on Google every summer for the past three years, according to Google Trends. (Popular related search topics include “unicorn,” “swans” and “pineapple.”)

And unlike luxury cars or designer clothing — or other expensive objects that appear in the social media streams of people who are glamorous for a living — floats are relatively accessible to the average person. No beach is safe.

While other buoyant devices (see: the humble

pool noodle) existed long before photogenic floaties took over, the rise of Instagram-worthy inflatable­s can be traced back to Taylor Swift.

The year was 2015, and Swift posted a picture of her and Calvin Harris (a DJ, and her boyfriend at the time), riding a large inflatable swan on Instagram. That same summer, a flock of floats appeared at Swift’s star-studded Fourth of July party. Pool-float stalwarts like Swimline, founded in 1971, and newer entrant Funboy saw interest in their merchandis­e spike after Swift’s outings. Blake Barrett, a founder of Funboy, called the incident “a huge social media moment” for the young company, which was founded in 2015. “Then it was off to the races,” he said.

Pool parties and mass gatherings like Coachella are the floatie’s natural habitat. In New Jersey, Floats & Boats is a popular festival at Tices Shoal that, as the name implies, celebrates both floats and boats.

In a Facebook post, the organisati­on behind the event, now in its fourth year, encouraged attendees to bring only “really cool” floats, adding that

“round tubes and noodles are not allowed unless they are doughnuts or seamonster­s of sorts.”

The festival is the brainchild of Nicole Cesario, 26, and Marissa Laudati, 27, childhood friends who grew up on the Jersey Shore. They first got the idea to throw one after seeing how much attention their personal pizza floats drew from beachgoers in 2015. “Everyone looks cute on a float,” Laudati said. “It’s not just, ‘Hey, I’m standing on this body of water.’ It can go along with your outfit — it just adds to your outfit appeal or aesthetic, your brand, in a way.”

Cesario said that each year brings new styles of floats with references to pop culture, like ones inspired by Stranger Things and by the Kardashian­s. “You keep seeing new ones you want to buy even if you already have one,” she said. “It’s like a lifestyle.”

Though Cesario and Laudati consider pineapples “basic float bait” — that is, not very original — they said fruit-themed floats and oversized inflatable­s continue to be big trends in the float-osphere

In the pool inflatable­s industry, it’s a competitio­n to see which company can generate the one float design to rule them all.

In 2008, the Australian lifestyle brand Sunnylife debuted an inflatable rubber duck. Barry Glick, the company’s CEO, said it defined the company as “leaders in the design-led float space.”

Five years later, Sunnylife unveiled a popular pink flamingo float that Glick said has been copied so many times that the flamingo, as a covetable inflatable, “is at the last end of its lifespan.”

 ?? Photos by New York Times ??
Photos by New York Times
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 ??  ?? Taylor Swift in one of her music videos. She’s largely credited for popularisi­ng the pool float craze.
Taylor Swift in one of her music videos. She’s largely credited for popularisi­ng the pool float craze.

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