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Hagan Walker and Department of Art student Kaylie Mitchell are behind the drink-lighting device Glo. (via sunherald.com)
Pascagoula millennial鈥檚 invention a glowing success in Starkville bar scene
BY JEFF CLARK |
A 2012 Pascagoula High School student is literally lighting up the beverage world with her new invention.
Kaylie Mitchell, a senior graphic design student at Mississippi State University, is one half of the duo that created Glo, the first liquid activated lighted drink infuser.
鈥淚 had to do a project and I came up with the idea to have glowing tea bags that would illuminate when you pull the string to steep them,鈥 Mitchell said. 鈥淏ut I kept working on it and I met my partner (Hagan Walker) who is an engineer and we came up with Glo.鈥
The concept of is simple 鈥 once the device hits liquid, it lights up and goes through a cycle of five colors.
Mitchell said her invention has been popular with the bar crowd in Starkville.
鈥淭he product has been doing really well in Starkville,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t stops glowing when the drink is empty so it鈥檚 a way for bartenders and waitresses to know when someone鈥檚 drink is empty.鈥
Millennial moguls
Mitchell, who will graduate from MSU in December, said she has always looked at design in a functional sense.
鈥淭o me, there鈥檚 a lot more to design than people think and I try to approach design in a way to create things that have a function,鈥 she said.
Although both of the Glo team members are in their early 20s, they are already making a name for themselves.
They received $10,000 from the MSU Entrepreneurship Center for their start-up. Glo is manufactured through their LLC, Vibe.
鈥淲e started making prototypes in a closet in an apartment,鈥 Mitchell said.
Vibe has so far produced more than 10,000 Glo units.
Yes, it鈥檚 safe
One of the biggest stumbling blocks in getting a patent for the product, Mitchell said, was getting the product FDA-approved.
鈥淭here was so much red tape to go through with the FDA,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e even had to find someone who would insure us before we could get the patent.鈥
She said the Glo product is completely non-toxic and is manufactured according to strict FDA guidelines.
鈥淲e make our devices in an FDA-approved facility and it is perfectly safe to use,鈥 Mitchell said.
The next step
Mitchell said they are developing a capsule that will provide flavorings into drinks.
鈥淲e鈥檙e looking at lemon and lime flavors because we have had people ask us about it because bartenders get tired of cutting fruit and it can be a health hazard to have cut fruit sitting out for hours,鈥 she said.
And hopefully sometime in the near future, Mitchell said, the product will be available on the Coast.
鈥淲e would love to get in the bars on the Coast,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e had hoped to get Glo into Hangout Fest (at Gulf Shores, Ala.) this year, but we missed the deadline by a few days.鈥
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