โ— In development

Your hands, finally heard.

For Deaf and hard-of-hearing people, the world does not always understand sign. MySigner is building lightweight smart rings, one on every finger, plus an Apple-Watch-style watch that reads what your hands say and speaks it aloud, instantly, anywhere, no phone required.

A spoken voice for signing. Built with the Deaf community, with honesty about what works today.

MySigner wearable: minimal smart rings on every finger and an Apple-Watch-style watch with a built-in speaker
See it in action

A conversation, both ways

Rings on every finger and thumb plus an Apple-Watch-style watch that speaks. Signing becomes a spoken voice.

Concept demo, generated to illustrate the experience. ยท ๐Ÿ“ฑ vertical version

Out in the world

No interpreter, no typing, just talk

The watch speaker voices the signs out loud, so a hearing stranger understands and replies, at the deli, the gas station, the bank.

๐Ÿฅช Ordering at the deli

Signs the order; the worker hears it and makes the sandwich.

โ›ฝ Directions at the gas station

Asks the way; the attendant hears the question and points.

๐Ÿฆ Talking to a bank teller

Makes a request; the teller hears it spoken and helps.

Concept demos. The wearable is in development. See the wrist-first sensing approach on the how it works page.

The vision: rings and a watch that speak

A wrist-first design. The band senses how your hands and fingers move, so there is one comfortable device to wear and charge, not ten gadgets.

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Rings plus a smart watch

Slim rings on every finger and thumb sense handshape and motion; a sleek Apple-Watch-style watch ties it together and reads what your hands say. No gloves.

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Optional fine-detail rings

Featherweight, near-passive rings add precise handshape only where it helps, nothing heavy or battery-hungry on each finger.

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On-device translation

A model turns the signal into words and phrases privately, in real time, with optional phone-camera fusion for placement and facial grammar.

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It speaks aloud

The watch voices it for anyone nearby, no phone-watching, in a natural voice you choose.

Honest about what works

Three steps, shipped in order

Reading sign language is hard. We are building it in tiers and we will tell you plainly what each device can do.

Available first

1. Fingerspelling

Letter by letter handshapes become words. The most reliable starting point, and genuinely useful for names, places, and quick replies.

Next

2. Isolated signs

Single signs and common handshapes are recognized and spoken. A growing core vocabulary for everyday needs.

The goal

3. Continuous signing

Full, fluid sentences in real time. This is the research frontier; we are honest that it is in development, not a promise for day one.

For the Deaf community

MySigner exists to give signing a spoken voice on your terms. The hand you see in our mark is the ASL sign for "I love you", a symbol we carry with respect.

๐ŸคŸ Your voice, spoken aloud

Sign the way you already do. The watch speaks it so hearing people understand, with no interpreter and no phone in the way.

๐Ÿ‘‚ Understand others too

Live captions that turn what hearing people say into clear words and pictures are on the roadmap, so conversations go both ways.

Are you a nonverbal communicator instead of a signer? Our sibling app MyTalker is a predictive AAC app made for you.

Questions, answered

Is it available now?

The hardware is in development. Join the waitlist and you will be among the first invited to early access.

Do I have to type?

No. The whole point is that you sign, and the watch speaks. Typing is never required.

Does it need a phone?

The watch speaks on its own. A phone is optional, used only for extra accuracy through camera fusion if you choose.

Is my signing private?

Translation runs on the device. We design for privacy first and will publish exactly what is and is not stored.

Which sign languages?

We are starting with American Sign Language fingerspelling and core signs, and listening to the community about what comes next.

Who is it for?

Deaf and hard-of-hearing people who sign and want to be understood by anyone, anywhere.

Be first to try it

The wearable is in development. Add your email to follow along and get early access when it opens.