Flair Bottles: Great Accessories For A Great Show

You are at a fancy new cocktail bar and you order your usual drink. The attractive bartender gives you a little wink and begins to throw the bottles and shakers through the air. His motions are relaxed, but his eyes speak of intense concentration. He grins as he flips your glass up in the air and catches it in his palm on the top of his forehead. He tosses ice in the air and dives to catch it in the glass. He juggles the liquor bottles and pours your drink behind his back. You are stunned. Welcome to flair bartending.

Flair bartending is also known as flairtending and flairing. To flairtend, bartenders manipulate bar tools, like cocktail shakers and liquor bottles in tricky and amazing ways. This kind of bartending is often done in cocktail bars. It’s a combination of juggling and mixing drinks. Bartenders usually do this to market a brand of liquor or to dazzle their customers so they will give bigger tips. There are competitions for flair bartending and some hospitality schools hold classes on flairing techniques.

Flairing is juggling, flipping bottles and shakers, or even performing magic tricks. Great flairing should be light-hearted and entertaining during the preparation of cocktails. Flair bartending gives the guests a good experience that will give them great memories and make them come back to the bar.

Since flairing takes a lot of practice, flair bottles have been made to make the training in this bar art easier. These bottles come in different colors and designs, but they all hold the same purpose, which is to be difficult to break and hassle free.

They can be used for practicing or for real flair tending in a bar. These bottles are made out of plastic, and they more or less weigh the same as glass bottles. Flair bottles have the same appearance and width, height, and length of glass bottles. They can have lettering, designs and colors. Some flair bottles even glow in the dark to increase the effect that the flair tending gives