These are light sabers but my flow community may agree that this is flow toy prop. Now, when will @astralhoops or @familyflowarts come out with LED hula hoops that make light saber noises like this. Imagine @ninja_hoops rockin em and @annoflineandcircle breaking her ass off. Oh man oh man oh man!!!! Hooper can dream, right? #Repost @instagram with @repostapp. #hulahoop #hooperdreams #hoopersofinstagram #hooperproblems #showmeyourtrails #lightsaberledhoopspleasenow #flowartistsofinstagram When he started building lightsabers two years ago, Jon Rossi (@sabers_forever_) knew one thing for sure: as his saber sliced through the air, it had to hum. “It’s the best part,” says the 28-year-old guitarist and sound engineering junkie. “On specific soundboards, there is both a gyroscope and an accelerometer. One reads twisting motions and the other reads sudden motion in any direction. In pairing those two, every time you swing, it makes that famous lightsaber sound.” Crafting a lightsaber requires three sets of hands across the country. A Starfall Saber starts construction in California with a hilt (made by @starfall_sabers), then it’s shipped to North Carolina to be fitted with its polycarbonate blade (by @vader.head) and finally it arrives in Philadelphia, where Jon installs LEDs, sound and other “greebles” to transform it into a weapon Luke Skywalker would be proud to wield. “We joke that we want to see somebody try and break one, because we haven’t yet,” Jon says. “And we’ve played real hard.”