Who invented synthetic wishbones




















Clearly, it was. It took four years, as well as a lot of time and money. Of course, the wishbone is iconic, but synthetic wishbones are copyrighted. But these days, Ahroni says this quirky American dream is alive and well. And just like gathering around the Thanksgiving table with family each year, Ahroni says he wants to carry on that tradition.

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Delays or errors in the process can have colossal ripple Related Items: Thanksgiving , weird commerce , wishbones. Recommended for you. Muted Moves, Muted News for Stocks. The Big Story Email us your wishbone stories both old and new. And remember — It's time you got a Lucky Break!

Here's a picture of the wishbone from that Thanksgiving turkey. Lucky Break Wishbone Corporation. All rights reserved. Carded Products. Bulk Products. Custom Options. Store Displays. As seen on TV. Casino Promotions. Industry Coverage. Internet Coverage.

Magazine Coverage. Newspaper Coverage. Ken Ahroni is a lucky man, and it could be because during the development of his product, Lucky Break Wishbone, he had to keep breaking them. If you've ever made a wish using a turkey wishbone you probably regretted that there's only one per bird.

Ken Ahroni decided there had to be a way to make more wishes possible, so he invented the Lucky Break Wishbone. Ahroni is a born and raised West Seattlelite who spent the better part of his career as a product development consultant helping companies develop decorative lighting products. Today, he lives in a beautiful home south of the Fauntleroy Ferry dock and works on marketing his invention. In , Thanksgiving just happened to coincide with his birthday. When he began to develop the idea Ahroni realized there were a lot of questions to be answered and issues resolved.

It had to be safe no shards of plastic that could injure someone. It had to look like a real wishbone or close enough. It had to break unpredictably and remarkably enough they do , and it even had to sound right when it snapped.



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