Candy raver

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An example of Candy Ravers
An example of Candy Ravers

A candy raver (sometimes "kandy raver", "kandi raver", "Candee Child", "candykid", or "kandi kid") is a rave attendee who exchanges or shares small gifts, primarily beads, necklaces, bracelets, or stickers.

Candy ravers are most widely known (and sometimes identified) by their brightly coloured, often childish or even cartoony fashions, such as day-glo phat pants, black light reactive or glow-in-the-dark gear, and t-shirts featuring cartoon characters. Almost all can be spotted wearing a large number of homemade bracelets of plastic beads, known as "kandi". The bracelets are often given as gifts to remember past raves and commemorate new friendships.

Contents

[edit] Origins of the culture

A smiley

Candy ravers can primarily trace their style of fashion to the late 1980s culture and the "Summer of Love" in the United Kingdom. Fashion in clubs at the time were primarily day-glo colored attire, smiley face clothing, and whistles.

Many spelling variants occur throughout the rave scene when referring to this subculture, although the actual origins of the term are unknown. Use of the term on Usenet alt.rave shows earliest reference to the spelling "candee"[1]. With alternates "kandy"[2], "kandi"[3], "candi"[4], "candy" [5], following later.

Several of the Hyperreal mailing lists have posts predating the use on usenet such as this one by Vladimir Katz dated October 21, 1994:

Everyone felt free to be themselves do what they want be free with no fear of being looked down on. People came in costumes people gave out candy people introduced themselves to random others!!

[6]

[edit] Beadwork

Typical Kandy bracelets
Typical Kandy bracelets
A pile of typical kandi bracelets and necklaces
A pile of typical kandi bracelets and necklaces

[edit] The Making Of

Kandy (or "kandi") is generally made of plastic pony beads with various other beads. Heart and star shapes, pom-pom beads, letter beads, and glow-in-the-dark beads are popular choices when making kandi and are generally made with elastic string to stretch. Candy ravers will sometimes hold parties just for the sake of making kandi, generally as gifts for friends.

Kandi has two main functions.

[edit] Visual effect

The first is the visual effect that kandi creates. They are usually very bright day-glo colours chosen especially for the purpose of the visual effects created when someone dances wearing them while being illuminated by different types and colours of lights. The sequence of colours chosen will often appear jumbled and somewhat random but the beads are typically chosen to contrast with other beads making them visually jump out. Some beads will also be UV reactive and glow in the dark.

[edit] Community

The second function of kandi is a gift that a raver will give or swap with new friends, and new ravers they have just met. In the rave culture of certain areas, this exchange will be performed by connecting fingers with the recipient of the gift and sliding it from their own arm to the other's, otherwise known as a 'kandi kiss'.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Usenet post dated October 4, 1998
  2. ^ Usenet post dated December 30, 1998
  3. ^ Usenet post dated March 30, 1999
  4. ^ Usenet post dated April 1, 1999
  5. ^ Usenet post dated October 16, 2000
  6. ^ Email dated October 21, 1994 [1].