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'Fifty Shades Freed'-Inspired Sex Toys You Might Actually Want to Try


As if the trailer for ​Fifty Shades Freed wasn’t enough excitement to kickstart your week, sex toy company Lovehoney just announced its line of sex toys in collaboration with author E.L. James to accompany the film. Since many people were first introduced to pleasure products and kink through reading Fifty Shades of Grey, this product collaboration has consistently been a great way for women to feel comfortable experimenting with sex toys. (Not to mention a great chance to try out that Ana/Christian roleplay they’ve been thinking about.)

Even James herself is excited for fans to experiment with the latest toy line. “I am so happy that fans of Fifty Shades Freed will be able to enjoy the pleasure products designed by Lovehoney,” she says. “This collection embodies what Ana and Christian are all about in the third book—romance and intimacy. The products are breathtaking. All the items are inspired by and named after sensual moments that Ana and Christian share. They’re not just exciting, but they’re also elegant and sensuous.”

Ranging in price from $20 to $150, the line features 17 toys and accessories, from silk rope to vibrators and wands—all in understated burgundy and rose-gold tones. Below, we’ve picked out some of the most intriguing new toys from the collection:

Fifty Shades Freed I’ve Got You Rechargeable Remote Control Love Egg, $99.99

This remote-controlled vibrating egg would be amazing for some clandestine couples’ play—just give your partner the remote and let them surprise you.

Fifty Shades Freed Awash with Sensation Mains Wand Vibrator LHUS, $149.99

This wand’s color is gorgeous (though would probably not be mistaken for a back massager).

Fifty Shades Freed All Sensation Nipple and Clitoral Chain, $29.99

Nipples are an underrated erogenous zone, and what better way to get into the nipple play action than with some pretty clamps? (P.S. We have a guide for how best to add clamps to your life here.)

Fifty Shades Freed Come to Bed Rechargeable Slimline Rabbit Vibrator, $109.99

This rabbit looks turbo-charged, and the combination of g-spot and clitoral stimulation is great for people who need both).

PHOTO: Lovehoney

Fifty Shades Freed I Want You. Now. Steel Love Ring, $49.99

This ring, which fits over a penis, is not only extremely pretty but apparently can “super-size stimulation, with a firm grip that may aid strength and duration,” according to Lovehoney. But it’s OK if you want it just because it’s pretty, too.

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PHOTO: Lovehoney

Fifty Shades Freed Pleasure Overload 10 Days of Play Gift Set, $99.99

Or you could splurge on this pack that has bondage gear like a feather tickler and leather whip, plus toys like an anal plug and a vibrating penis ring, and a lot of other goodies. Why decide on just one when you can be greedy about it?

You can check out the full collection here to help you get ready for Fifty Shades Freed, which hits theaters on February 9.

Watch the trailer below (but be warned, it’s most definitely NSF):

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More:

The Full ‘Fifty Shades’ Freed Trailer Is the Climax You’ve Been Waiting For

The Surprisingly Feminist “Fifty Shades Darker’ Scene We Should All Be Discussing

I Masturbated With a Crystal Dildo and Turned Into a Believer



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These 'Pod' Sex Toys Are Beautiful But Confusing


When I received an email from the sex toy brand Jimmyjane about a new set of vibrators called “love pods,” my first thought was that they looked like beautiful little lily pads. My second thought was, “WTF do you do with these?”

There are three versions of the toy: the $109 OM, a pointed purple ball with crevices meant to emulate fingers for “a naturally pleasing intimate experience;” the $129 pink Coral, a ball with deeper crevices and two motors that alternate for what are somewhat vexingly called “magical, immortal orgasms;” and the $149 fuchsia Halo, which has three heads that fit around the clitoris or nipple to encircle it with vibrations.

But outside of their appearance, those descriptions didn’t provide much information about what these sex toys actually feel like. What was the point of mimicking flat fingers that can’t even reach out to touch you? And what the heck is an immortal orgasm?! (Sounds exhausting.)

“‘Immortal orgasms’ is not a technical term,” a Jimmyjane rep explained. “The Love Pods are each based on Greek goddesses and symbols of feminine desire: Aphrodite, the Lotus Flower, and the Shell of Venus, as expressed on the packaging.” Well, OK then!

PHOTO: Jimmyjane

Coral

I started off with the Coral. The vibration traveling from one side to the other was an interesting sensation in my hands, but when I put it between my legs, I kept losing stimulation on each side every few seconds. I turned it to the steady vibration setting and was able to orgasm within a few minutes, but not without enlisting the help of my other hand—something that, IMHO, shouldn’t be necessary if you’re using a good vibrator. The crevices made the sensation more concentrated on specific parts of my vulva, rather than consistent throughout. And since the toy is hard and unbendable, I couldn’t do much to change that. As result, my experience was fairly lackluster.

A few days later, I moved on to the OM. I had even less luck with that one: The vibrations felt good, but they weren’t powerful enough for my liking. While the crevices provided something a little new, they didn’t add much to the pleasure.

Orgasm-less, I moved on to the Halo—the most hyped-up of the three. I first tried it on my nipple, and it did create a nice subtle, tingly sensation there. But what I was really after was clitoral stimulation. I placed the three motors around my clit, and again, it was something different: I felt vibrations around the sides instead of just the top. Still, it wasn’t making enough direct contact with the clit to get me off, it was just grazing the sides.

om_embed_jimmyjane.jpg

PHOTO: Jimmyjane

Om

Feeling like I had to find some obvious use for this toy, I asked my boyfriend if he wanted to try putting it over his penis. Same thing for him: The sensation was nice but not particularly intense. “I guess I could put it on my balls,” he said.

“Yeah, I guess you could put these in a lot of places,” I replied. You could just roll them over your body if you wanted to. But why would you when you could use a toy that’ll move air around your clitoris or oscillate over it instead of just lightly rumbling around it?

It’s entirely possible that my body just isn’t built for this kind of toy. I don’t generally get turned on by touch outside my genital area, and when it comes to that region, I prefer stimulation firmly and directly on the clitoris. But some people may be different: The Jimmyjane rep told me the company designed the Coral because some women like stimulation around the clit rather than on it. I just don’t happen to be one of them.

halo_embed_jimmyjane.jpg

PHOTO: Jimmyjane

Halo

So my first reaction still stands. These are beautiful toys—like lovely lily pads—and they could even go on top of your bedside table instead of inside the drawer. They could also glide over any part of your body as part of a foreplay massage, especially if you’re looking for an interesting tingling sensation.

But if what I’m looking for is an orgasm, I’m more likely to turn to the plenty of other effective options that don’t cost over $100. To each their own.

More:

This Extra Powerful Suction Vibrator Is Scary Good

I Masturbated With a Crystal Dildo and Turned Into a Believer

I Tried the Teddy Bear Vibrator and Let’s Just Say It’s Not for Everyone



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Watch Mila Kunis, Kristen Bell, and Kathryn Hahn Hilariously Review Kids Toys


When you throw Mila Kunis, Kristen Bell, and Kathryn Hahn in a room together and ask them to discuss what it’s like to be a kid, you’re going to get an ab workout just from laughing so hard. These are, after all, the same women who made grocery shopping funny in Bad Moms.

So in order to get into the holiday spirit early, we gathered a selection of the finest children’s toys for these A Bad Moms Christmas stars to review.Right off the bat, the women were not fans of Sweet Tears Baby (as you can tell by their faces in the photo above). Bell even went so far as to call the doll a murderer. Note to self: Avoid that doll at all costs. Holiday Barbie, meanwhile, went over a little better with the crew. Still, they thought she would look better with a hamburger. But, then again, so would everyone. The Furreal Roarin’ Tiger was the clear winner among the group. The women all thought their kids would love it, and Kunis, a grown woman, couldn’t stop petting it.

Watch, below:

A Bad Moms Christmas, the sequel to last summer’s hit Bad Moms, comes out November 1 and pays tribute to all of the hard-working moms who try to make the holidays magical for their families. “Christmas is a magical time, full of wonderful and exciting joy. A time for making lasting memories with family and friends,” Kunis narrates in the movie’s trailer. “But do you know the secret behind what makes Christmas so special? Moms. Moms working their asses off cooking, wrapping, decorating, and shopping.” We co-sign that.

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It's Surprisingly Hard to Ban Toxic Sex Toys, But Here's How to Protect Yourself


These days, most of us will carefully check ingredients lists for gluten and trans fats, demand that our water bottles be made without BPA, and seek out paraben-free, body-safe cosmetics. But the average person can’t tell you what a toxic sex toy is—or even that they exist. Unfortunately, in the unregulated sex toy industry, plenty of sex toys are potentially rife with products that can hurt you (and not even in the fun, kinky way).

Perhaps the most well-known offender vis à vis toy toxicity is a group of chemicals known as phthalates, a plasticizer that can be blended with other substances to make them softer and more flexible. A spotlight’s been shone on phthalates in recent years, as publications like Bustle and Bitch, and via feminist-oriented sex shops like Good Vibes and Babeland have spoken out against them.

So why all the hullabaloo? It turns out that phthalates may have side-effects when they come into contact with your body that not only aren’t disclosed by most sex toy manufacturers, but could potentially be terrible for you. According to Dr. Amanda Morgan, a faculty member at the School of Community Health Sciences at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, who wrote her Master’s thesis on harmful sex toy materials, phthalates are known endocrine disruptors that can cause health problems. “[Phthalates] mess with your hormones; they can cause birth defects, or other things related to liver or kidney functioning,” Morgan told me, referencing a studies which have linked phthalates to irregular fetal development, early-onset puberty, and lower sperm counts, among other issues. “They can really mess you up, because they pretend to be your hormones, and so your body’s hormonal cycle gets knocked out of whack from exposure to these things.”

With the short-term effects of chlorine and the long-term effects of phthalates, PVC is, Morgan says, “definitely one of the worst sex toy materials we’ve seen.”

When you hear horror stories about sex toys, though, it’s not necessarily phthalates that are to blame. One of the most common anecdotal complaints about toxic toys is that they cause skin irritation: “I first thought [it] was a yeast infection or BV, because of extreme itching and burning on my inner labia,” reports one reader who wrote in to sex toy review blog Dangerous Lilly. “My ass suddenly felt like it was on fire. A burning sensation spread throughout my butt,” recalls sex educator Tristan Taormino about a questionable dildo she used. One Playboy story describes a dildo that caused a woman “such severe pain that she could barely speak.”

I asked Dr. Emily S. Barrett, a professor at the Rutgers University School of Public Health who has done extensive research on the prenatal effects of endocrine disruptors like phthalates, whether these reported burning sensations fit with her understanding of the chemicals. She told me she hasn’t seen evidence that phthalates irritate the skin in this way, and that they tend to “act on a much more subtle level most of the time.”

So what is causing these health problems? According to Amanda Morgan, phthalates aren’t the only sketchy ingredient still getting into our sex toys. As part of her thesis research, Morgan tested 32 sex toys to determine their chemical makeup. What she found was pretty scary: The toys she tested typically contained 30-35 percent chlorine. She said PVC, a material commonly used to make inexpensive sex toys, always contains chlorine (hence the chemical name “polyvinyl chloride.”) Even scarier, in 2006 BadVibes.org—an organization which, full disclosure, is linked to pro-toy-safety sex shop The Smitten Kitten—ran lab tests on four popular sex toys. They found that two of them were made of PVC and contained “very high levels of phthalate plasticizer.”
 
“We use chlorine to kill bacteria in things,” she said. “If you are being exposed to this high level of chlorine, especially in a sensitive membrane area [like the vagina or rectum], we could definitely chalk that up to causing irritation, burning, or messing up the environment by exposing it to something that is, as we know, a sterilization product.” So with the short-term burning effects of chlorine and the long-term endocrine effects of phthalates, PVC is, Morgan says, “definitely one of the worst sex toy materials we’ve seen.”
 
Now, you might be thinking, “OK, great to know! I’ll just only buy safe toys from now on!” Well, it’s not so simple. Since the sex toy industry is unregulated, it doesn’t fall under the current purview of the Food and Drug Administration. According to FDA press officer Angela Stark, that’s because the agency “does not regulate devices meant purely for sexual pleasure. It does, however, regulate genital devices that have a medical purpose such as vibrators intended for therapeutic use to treat sexual dysfunction or to supplement Kegel exercises.” Of course, the vast majority of sex toys don’t fall under this “health aid” umbrella.+++large

The current Congress likely wouldn’t rush to make a bold, sex-positive statement like mandating sex toy safety.

The responsibility of regulating sex toys could potentially fall to the Consumer Product Safety Commission, but Morgan told me the understaffed CPSC is already in charge of regulating over 15,000 types of products—not to mention the products themselves. The complex issue of sex toy regulation would be a big ask on top of all that.

Add to all of this the fact that the current Congress likely wouldn’t rush to make a bold, sex-positive statement by mandating sex toy safety, and there are plenty of reasons your sex toy might not meet body-safe standards. “Our government doesn’t generally like to talk about people pleasuring themselves,” Morgan pointed out.

Beyond that, though, Morgan adds that regulating the sex toy industry might not even be the best solution to getting rid of toxic toys anyway. “If something is federally regulated, that means that the federal government—depending on where they are in their political leanings at that time—could potentially make it illegal to have these products, by saying they are ‘dangerous’ and then regulating them out of existence,” she reasoned. “You get certain types of people in power and they may not believe in sexual health, wellness, [or] self-pleasuring. It might go against their core values and therefore they [might] use their political agenda and the federal regulation system to regulate these products out of people’s hands.”

It’s a conclusion that Zach Biesanz, a legal assistant in the office of New York’s Attorney General, came to in his 2007 paper in the journal Law & Inequality: “Special regulation of the sex toy industry would be unreasonably burdensome from a regulatory standpoint,” he wrote. “Only banning these toxins outright will suffice to protect consumers from phthalates’ harmful and even lethal effects.”

“Sniff your sex toy. That’s the easiest thing you can do [to protect yourself].”

In the meantime, how do you tell if a toy is safe? Sex toy experts like Morgan, the Smitten Kitten’s founder Jennifer Pritchett, and seasoned sex toy reviewer Epiphora all recommend buying toys made of phthalate-free, body-safe materials like pure silicone, stainless steel, glass, and hard plastic. Still, it’s difficult to know what’s what in an industry that mislabels its products so frequently. “Sniff your sex toy,” said Morgan. “That’s the easiest thing you can do. If you smell these products and they don’t smell like anything, then it most likely is a stable chemical compound like silicone.” Phthalates and PVC, however, smell “like chemicals,” according to Morgan, “like a new shower curtain,” according to Epiphora, and “like a headache,” according to Pritchett. The sex toy smell test might sound a little weird, but it’s a pretty good first line of defense.

Morgan also recommends buying toys made by “companies that take a lot of pride in making good-quality, body-safe toys,” citing Tantus and Jimmyjane as examples. Other companies that proudly declare their products body-safe include We-Vibe, Fun Factory, Vixen Creations, and Funkit Toys.

And when in doubt, find a reviewer you can trust. Sex toy review blogs abound on the internet —Epiphora, Dangerous Lilly, and Formidable Femme, to name just a few—and while you’d be wise to take claims about sex toys with a grain of salt in this unregulated industry, sometimes the preponderance of good or bad reviews about a particular company or toy can suggest conclusions about its safety (or lack thereof).

Most importantly though, demand body-safe sex toys buy only buying from companies you can trust. “Consumers vote with their pocketbook,” said Tantus founder Metis Black. “Support the businesses that make safe toys a priority, that use their resources to educate, that take a stand and advocate for consumers.” She added that while pure silicone toys are expensive now—especially in comparison to PVC toys, which can often be under $30 a pop, versus $100+ for silicone—more consumer demand for body-safe toys will create more supply at lower prices, as bigger companies with more resources start making non-toxic toys in larger quantities. That’s just sex toy economics.

Bloggers, consumers, and ethical toymakers alike all dream of a future in which no sex toys will burn your junk, give you infections, or cause long-term bodily harm. It seems reasonable enough. And if we keep fighting for it, maybe one day it’ll be reality.



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