Some of the earliest research into the form of deep-touch pressure that weighted blankets use began in 1965, when an American scientist with autism,
Temple Grandin, invented the
hug machine. She later used it to study the calming effects of deep-touch pressure in other autistic people. Keith and Lynda Zivalich produced the first version of a weighted blanket in 1997, when they created a bean-filled comforter now called the "Magic Weighted Blanket." They made their first sale in December 1998. The first official study of weighted blankets as an avenue for deep-touch pressure occurred shortly after, in 1999. Tina Champagne, an
occupational therapist, began researching them as a coping device for individuals in the broader special-needs community. Weighted blankets continued to increase in popularity in the
special needs community, and several companies began creating product lines throughout the early- and mid-2000s. However, it wasn't until 2017 that weighted blankets secured mainstream popularity, when the science news site
Futurism launched a
Kickstarter campaign for a product called the Gravity Blanket and raised almost $5 million. The company sold more than 128,000 units by putting a new spin on the product and marketing it to the public as a sleep aid and stress reducer. In 2018,
Time magazine named "blankets that ease anxiety" one of the best inventions of 2018 and cited the Gravity Blanket specifically. They noted that although
Futurism didn't invent the weighted blanket, the company perfected the art of
marketing it to the masses. Along these same lines,
The Atlantic linked the Gravity Blanket's success, and the subsequent rise in weighted blankets, to a new way of describing and marketing their uses, describing the Gravity Blanket as a story about "the promise of life-changing comfort to the meditation-app-using, Instagram-shopping masses." Retail stores around the world began selling variations of the blankets throughout 2018 and, by the end of the year, weighted blankets were on practically every gift guide on the internet. Since securing popularity, medical doctors have noted that, while some findings have been intriguing, more research is needed to verify the efficacy of the products as sleep aids and stress reducers. == Composition ==