Funtimz supply a range of exciting condoms designed to enhance your sexual pleasure and that of your partner and protect you and your partner from sexually transmitted infections (STIs) or unwanted pregnancy.
All Funtimz condoms are manufactured to the highest European standards, so you can be confident that they offer the highest levels of protection at all times.
As you will see from the range of condoms we offer at Funtimz, there are plenty of different types to choose from.
Here’s a quick guide.
Our Nature Feeling Condoms (product number 830041)are transparent and ultra-thin to enhance the natural intimacy of sex whilst maintaining the highest levels of protection.
Our Dark Desire condoms (product number 830037)are designed to heighten your partner’s pleasure. The soft nodules incorporated into this condom are designed to tickle her fancy as she builds up to her earth-shattering crescendo!
It’s vital that you choose the right condom size for you. Contrary to popular belief, most guys are not massively endowed, so for most men, the average size
condoms will fit. However, if you are lucky enough to be a really big boy, you’ll need our XXX Condoms(product number 830021)which are extra length and extra width condoms.
Enjoy more fun and better erections with our
Multi-orgasm condoms (product number 830013).
These quality latex condoms have an added erection ring designed to help you to sustain your erection. The ring is enhanced with small beads, which gently
rub the clitoris during intercourse, providing extra stimulation for your partner! The ring can be washed after use, stored in a dry place away from the light and re-used again and again, with either Secura, or any other brand of condoms.
Our Japan Condoms (product number 830015)will make your partner scream with pleasure! These soft-ribbed lubricated condoms are designed for increased sexual pleasure and the soft stretchy latex will fit on any size penis. The surface is ribbed with ripples that tickle the entrance to the vagina and
deliver orgasmic sensations!
Sex should be fun, so our Sex 4 Fun condoms(Product number 830022) provide different sensations for every night of orgasmic safe sex. Four different types of condoms for four different types of fun!
Our Secura Colour Condoms (Product number 830017)come in three exciting colours and three excitingflavours: strawberry, peppermint and chocolate! The flavoured lubricant makes these quality flavoured condoms taste like a lollipop!
Similarly, our Blue Fantasy Condoms (Product number 830019)have an exciting fruity flavour which is also pefect for oral sex.
Does the risk of Mr Floppy worry you?
Then our Goliath condoms with a penis ring (Product Number 830026)are the answer.
Lubricated latex condom with integrated penis ring for harder and longer lasting erections! Not only do you eliminate the risk of wilting which could seriously embarrass you at the most inconvenient moment, but you also give yourself a better boost of sensitivity. The erection ring, integrated in the condom, restricts the bloodflow and makes your penis so sensitive, you can feel it throb!
Variety is the spice of life so the Multi Sex Condom Set (Product Number 830042)is a winner every time! Each 24 pack containd 6 x 4 different condoms.
And for when you are feeling really fruity, our Fruit Mix Condom Set (Product Number 830044) will provide you with a colourful, fruity condom assortment! Coloured condoms with stimulating fruit flavours: Blue (tutti-frutti), Red (Strawberry)and Yellow (Banana) are sure to please!
Did you know that condoms are 98% effective when
used correctly.
The average failure rate for condoms is 12% but this is due to people who do not use them properly or do not use them every time they have intercourse.
Laboratory tests show that neither sperm, which has a diameter of 3 microns, nor STI-causing organisms, which are a quarter to a ninth the size of sperm, can penetrate an intact latex condom, so it is important to ensure that condoms are used properly.
During manufacturing, if there is a leak in more than 4 per 1,000 condoms, the entire lot(approximately 5,000) is discarded.
So, here’s how to use condoms correctly:-
Carefully open the package without using your teeth, fingernails, knife, scissors or any other sharp object. Also check the expiry date on the packet.
Pinch the tip of the condom to remove air and roll condom all the way to the base of the penis. When unrolling, the ring should be on the outside.
Condom use can be traced back several thousand
years.
It is known that around 1,000 BC, the ancient Egyptians used a linen sheath for protection against disease.
The earliest evidence of condom use in Europe comes from scenes in cave paintings at Combarelles in France dating to around 100-200 AD. There is also some evidence that some form of condom was used in imperial Rome.
By the 1500's, the syphilis epidemic that spread across Europe gave rise to the first published account of the condom. Gabrielle Fallopius described a sheath of linen he claimed to have invented to protect men against syphilis. Having been found useful for prevention of infection, it was only later that the usefulness of the condom for the prevention of pregnancy was also recognised.
Later in the 1500s, one of the first improvements to the condom was made, when the linen cloth sheaths were sometimes soaked in a chemical solution and then allowed to dry prior to use. These were the first spermicides used on condoms.
The first published use of the word 'condum' was in a 1706 poem. It has also been suggested that Condom was a doctor in the time of Charles II.It is believed
that he invented the device to help the king to prevent the birth of more illegitimate children.
Even the most famous lover of all, Casanova, was using the condom as a birth control as well as against infection.
Condoms made out of animal intestines began to be available. However, they were quite expensive and the unfortunate result was that they were often re-used. This type of condom was described at the time as "an armour against pleasure, and a cobweb against infection".
In the second half of the 1700's, a trade in handmade condoms thrived in London and some shops where producing handbills and advertisements of condoms.
The use of condoms was affected by technological, economic and social development in Europe and the US in 1800s.
Condom manufacturing was revolutionised by the discovery of rubber vulcanisation by Goodyear (founder of the tyre company) and Hancock. This meant that is was possible to mass produce rubber goods including condoms quickly and cheaply. Vulcanisation is a process, which turns the rubber into a strong elastic material.
In 1861, the first advertisement for condoms was published in The New York Times under the title 'Dr. Power's French Preventatives.'
In 1873, the Comstock Law was passed in the United States. Named after Anthony Comstock, the Comstock Law made illegal the advertising of any sort of birth control, and it also allowed the postal service to confiscate condoms sold through the mail.
Until the 1920's, most condoms were manufactured by hand-dipping from rubber cement. These kinds of condoms aged quickly and the quality was doubtful.
In 1919, Frederick Killian initiated hand-dipping from natural rubber latex. The latex condoms had the advantage of ageing less quickly and being thinner and odourless. These new type of condoms enjoyed a great expansion of sales. By the mid-1930s, the fifteen largest makers in the U.S.were producing 1.5 million condoms a day.
In 1957, the very first lubricated condom was launched in the UK.
From the early 1960s, use of condoms as a contraceptive device declined as the pill, the coil and sterilisation became more popular. The use of the condom increased strikingly in many countries following the recognition of HIV/AIDS in the 1980's. Condoms also became available in pubs, bars, grocery stores and supermarkets. Today they are also sold online at Funtimz at low prices so, not only will you have more choice than a vending machine, but they'll cost you a whole lot less too! The 1990s saw the introduction of coloured and flavoured condoms.
In more recent years, improved technology has enabled the thickness of the condom to decrease. Also,condom manufacturers have recognised that one size of
condom does not always fit all. Condoms that are different shapes, widths and lengths are also available.
Sunday, 14 January 2007
About Condoms
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