Skittles Giants are the Giant Skittles We Didn’t Know We Needed

If you ask me and my sweet tooth, the only thing better than candy is bigger candy. Thankfully, the sugar gods are shining down upon us with a new blessing today, in the form of Skittles Giants.

The new candy is the same as regular Skittles, only three times larger! So no longer do you need to stick three Skittles in your mouth to get that effect, you just need one. Skittles Giants recently started turning up on shelves in the UK, and are making us here in the States and other countries very jealous today. Just look at these things. The packaging alone makes them look three times as appealing as regular Skittles.

The Mars Wrigley company hasn’t announced any plans to bring Skittles Giants stateside yet, but I plan on bringing a case of them home the next time I travel to England. In the mean time, keep your eye out on eBay for enterprising importers willing to ship them overseas.

[via Packaging of the World]

The Skittle Pixel8r: Print the Rainbow

The dot-matrix printer may seem like a relic from the past, but just about every TV set, mobile device or laser printer still relies on creating images from a matrix of dots. They’re just smaller, and perhaps more colorful than the old Okidata Microline 320 from your youth. And speaking about colorful printers, how about one that prints with Skittles?

What you’re looking at is the Skittle Pixel8r, a contraption that works much like a printer, depositing row by row of dots. But in the case of JohnO3’s entertaining build, it uses Skittles candies to create its images. The system can output any image up to 31″ wide x 24″ high using Skittles as pixels.

John built the system using an Arduino controller and a motorized dispensing rig, which is attached to eight bins of Skittles, each in a different color of the rainbow. The Python application he wrote takes a PNG file that’s already been converted to the Skittles color palette, then commands the moving print head to move back and forth over a grid where the candies will be dropped. As it moves, a series of eight containers use servos to release individual Skittles through a funnel and down to the print head.

It’s a pretty awesome build, though when you’re all done, you have to eat your creation before you can start another one. Also, you have to painstakingly sort all of the Skittles into their individual colors, which I’m sure takes quite some time. If you’d like to create your own Skittle Pixel8r, you can check out the full build details, including schematics, template files, and code over on Instructables.

I imagine you could also use M&Ms or Reese’s Pieces, though your designs would be a bit more limited in color palette.

Sweet Heat Skittles Are Hot Stuff

I can get behind sweet things that are kind of spicy. I am a big fan of Hot Tamale candies and have been known to mow through a pack or two of Red Hots a year. I was in the gas station over the weekend and noticed they have a hot Pepsi flavor now so sweet hot things are in. If you need any more proof just look at these new Sweet Heat Skittles, which turned up at the Sweets & Snacks Expo in Chicago last week.

They have several flavors inside each bag, but we don’t know what they will be yet. All we know for now is that they will have “fruity flavors with a spicy kick.”

I’d be all in on a bag of cinnamon Skittles, but I am not sure about this. I’m not a big fan of spicy fruit or things that are hot just to be hot. I’d totally try these though to see if they are decent. We’ll have to wait a while to find out though. They’re not supposed to be available until December.

[via Mashable]

M&Ms and Skittles Flavor Sorting Machine: Split the Rainbow

Are you the kind of candy diva who buys a bag of Skittles, only to eat certain colors? Maybe you work for one who makes you pluck them out for them. Either way, this machine will sort M&M’s and Skittles by color easily, because you don’t need to taste the rainbow.

19-year-old Willem Pennings built this Arduino-powered machine that makes quick work of the task. It uses a color sensor, stepper motor, and 3D-printed parts to direct the flow of candy into six bowls. Now you can just eat what you want, without having to wade through all of them by hand. Seems weird to me, but I don’t judge.

[reddit via Laughing Squid]