Boomloom: Think with your hands

Think with your hands… or your 3D printer? Price sparks craft chaos

TLDR: Boomloom’s tiny two-piece loom promises easy weaving with five pattern bars. Comments split over the $100 price, the “I’ll 3D‑print it” crowd, and practical questions like placemat size—plus confusion over “think with your hands”—turning this into a flashpoint for beginner-friendly craft tools.

A tiny two-piece weaving gadget called Boomloom’s “Boss” just dropped, promising instant, do-it-yourself fabric by turning a bar instead of wrestling with complicated levers. It’s like training wheels for weaving—five bars for patterns, beginner-friendly, and small enough to stash away. But the community? They’re weaving drama faster than scarves.

The hottest thread: the price. One early commenter called out the sticker shock—“at least $100”—and the floodgates opened. Some argue you’re paying for clever design that makes weaving accessible; others say that’s a steep tax for a palm-wide loom when a cardboard frame or a beginner kit exists. Enter the DIY rebels, waving their spools: “I am inspired to 3D print this,” one user declared, triggering a playful standoff between pay-for-it purists and print-it-at-home hackers.

Then there’s the practical crowd: “Does this scale to dining placemat size?” Translation: is this a real tool or a cute toy? Meanwhile, the title “Think with your hands” sparked a mini existential crisis. One commenter deadpanned, “does looming help you think,” while another cheered, “This is the hackernews I desire!” In short, it’s a perfect storm: a chic, compact loom that promises creativity for beginners—plus price angst, maker mischief, and placemat ambitions all tangled in one very online yarn.

Key Points

  • The loom uses a bar-and-knob mechanism that separates warp threads, simplifying plain weaves like tapestry.
  • Rotating the bar between rows enables pattern creation similar to a 4-shaft loom without levers or reading drafts.
  • Five distinct bars each produce different weave structures, allowing extensive pattern variations.
  • A model called “The Boss” consists of just two pieces, emphasizing simple setup and use.
  • The tool is compact, light, and stackable, designed for homes, studios, and classrooms for beginners and experts alike.

Hottest takes

“These seem to cost at least 100$.” — Nzen
“I am inspired to 3D print this” — y-curious
“does looming help you think” — bodge5000
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