Foam party

Mobile foam parties are also a popular form of enrichment and physical activity for children at schools, daycare centers, and summer camps.

Foam parties can be dated back to A Rhapsody in Black and Blue, a 1932 short film directed by Aubrey Scotto,[2] wherein Louis Armstrong dances, sings, and plays his trumpet in a large area of soap suds.

[citation needed], resulting in a demand upon Weird Dream Productions to modify their foam to be of low water content.

UK style leaders Big Fun and Roy Barlow Leisure purchased machines from Weird Dream Productions and later began manufacturing their own versions, creating a global market for the product, and these three companies remained global market leaders throughout the craze.

Common hazards include slipping on floors made slick by the foam, with risks being intensified when combined with alcohol.

Dancing at a foam party; the blue object on the ceiling is a foam generator.