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Xyla Foxlin
Xyla Foxlin (2024).png
Foxlin in 2024
Personal information
Born Cleveland, Ohio, U.S
Education Lexington High School (MA)
Case Western Reserve University (B.S.E.)
Occupation Engineer, entrepreneur, YouTube personality
Website https://www.xylafoxlin.com/
YouTube information
Years active 2020–present
Genre Engineering
Subscribers 509 thousand
Total views 33 million
Associated acts
Subscriber and view counts updated as of 26 June 2025.

Xyla Foxlin is an American engineer, a business owner, and a popular YouTuber. She creates videos that teach people how to build cool things. Xyla graduated from Case Western Reserve University in 2019. She studied engineering, focusing on how robots and technology work together.

Xyla also helped lead a non-profit group called Beauty and the Bolt. This group helps girls and minorities get involved in science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM).

About Xyla Foxlin

Xyla grew up near Boston, Massachusetts. She went to Lexington High School. When she was in high school, she found part-time jobs using a local website. She was also the captain of her school's robotics team for two years.

She then went to Case Western Reserve University. There, she studied mechanical and aerospace engineering. People at her college called her a "robotics whiz kid." She was also the president of the college's robotics mining team.

While in Cleveland, Xyla entered a beauty contest. She won the title of Miss Greater Cleveland. For her talent, she played the violin using a special device she built called a Tesla coil.

In 2018, Xyla was recognized as one of the "Most Notable Women in Technology" by Crain's Cleveland Business.

Xyla's Cool Projects

Parihug: A Huggable Robot

Xyla invented a special teddy bear called Parihug. It's a pair of matching bears. Each bear has wireless and Bluetooth technology inside. When you hug one bear, it sends a signal over the internet to its twin. The person holding the other bear will then feel it vibrate softly. It's like sending a hug across long distances!

This toy became a startup company. Xyla and her co-founder, Harshita Gupta, won an award for the bears. They also won a competition at their university for developing this idea.

Beauty and the Bolt: Helping Others Learn

Xyla started a non-profit organization called Beauty and the Bolt with a classmate. This group helps women and minorities get into engineering. Their website is like an "online village" for people who like to build things.

The website offers video lessons on many topics. These include 3-D printing, using laser cutters, and soldering. A writer for Forbes magazine said Xyla is a great role model. She helps close the "STEM gender gap" by using modern media.

Xyla believes that being feminine and being an engineer can go together. She once said, "My big thing is that femininity and engineering are not mutually exclusive. I’m still the only one in a dress at design reviews or the only one wearing all pink in the shop. We should be teaching our girls that it’s OK to like princesses and power tools."

YouTube Adventures

Xyla designs and builds many projects using woodworking and engineering skills. She then shares how she built them in her YouTube videos.

For example, in 2021, she built a model car for another YouTuber. This car could travel faster than the treadmill it was on! She learned that the key was how the car's wheels powered a propeller.

She also launched a tiara into space using a weather balloon. The balloon had cameras to record the flight and send data back. The camera was found later, but the tiara was not.

In May 2021, Xyla built a powerful wood rocket in just five days. She also built a kayak out of clear fiberglass. She put many colorful LED lights inside it. She called her glowing boat Rainbowt. It lights up the water at night!

In another video, Xyla went on a road trip across the southern and western United States. She collected a piece of wood from a tree in each state. Then, she machined these pieces into a wooden puzzle map of the country.

For Christmas in 2021, Xyla and another creator, Joe Barnard, launched a seven-foot-tall Christmas tree 300 feet into the air using a rocket.

Awards and Recognition

In 2021, a 3D printed statue of Xyla was shown at Dallas Love Field airport in Texas. This was part of an exhibition called #IfThenSheCan – The Exhibit. The exhibit featured statues of women leaders in aviation and aerospace.

Xyla's 3D printed statue was also displayed at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C.. This happened in March 2022 as part of the full #IfThenSheCan – The Exhibit. This exhibit showed 120 3D printed statues to celebrate Women's History Month.

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