Small clear plastic braille slate with hinged top plate and a short stylus with a wide cylindrical grip handle

Pocket Braille Slate (Pins Up), Clear Plastic with Large Handle Stylus

by American Printing House for the Blind

$12.60

Setup with instructions The physical mechanics of loading paper and embossing dots are simple, but braille slate writing requires learning the mirror-image right-to-left technique. A short tutorial or instructional guide is sufficient — no professional is required, but self_serve underrepresents the real learning curve for a new user.

Last verified July 3, 2026 · classified July 7, 2026

What it is

Summary

AI-generated from vendor-published content · July 7, 2026

A compact braille slate and stylus set for writing braille by hand — the slate holds paper while you press a pointed stylus through holes in the top plate to emboss dots, producing readable braille when you flip the page over (pins-up design). This is a practical, low-tech writing tool for someone who is blind or has significant vision loss and wants a portable way to take notes, label items, or practice braille without any powered device. The clear plastic construction lets you see the paper position, and the large-handle stylus gives a better grip than standard stylus pens — useful for someone with limited hand dexterity or anyone new to braille writing. The pocket size fits four lines of braille per pass, so it's genuinely pocketable but limited in output volume compared to a full-size slate or braille notetaker. Braille writing with a slate and stylus has a learning curve — you write right-to-left in mirror image, which takes real practice before becoming fluent.

Quick Facts Catalog facts · auto-generated
Age range
ComplexitySetup with instructions
Price$12.60
Funding
  • AT Act lending
  • Out of pocket
  • School district
  • Vocational rehab
VerifiedJuly 3, 2026
ClassifiedJuly 7, 2026 · confidence: high

What Setup Looks Like

  • Out of the box
    1. Insert paper into the slate between the two plates.
    2. Close the hinge and use the stylus to emboss dots through the cell openings.
    3. Remove paper and flip it to read the braille right-side up.

Getting it

Try Before You Buy

Devices like this are often available to borrow through your state's AT Act program — typically free or low-cost — so you can try it before buying or pursuing funding.

Where to Get It

aph Visit
$12.60

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How to Fund This

Equipment like this is often pursued through official state programs. These are common starting points — each program decides its own eligibility and what it covers, so the first step is always a phone call.

All funding programs, state by state →

Sources & fine print

Vendor facts (name, price, platforms, vendor link) sourced from American Printing House for the Blindview on vendor site; last verified July 3, 2026.

Classification & description AI-generated from vendor-published content on July 7, 2026 · confidence: high. Vendor specs may lag; verify before relying on details in a clinical or funding artifact.