Life Jackets and Dry Bags

An unexpected twist on our recent kayaking trip gives a chance to really test some gear

Being prepared for any situation is a key element to ensure safety in the outdoors. In the case of our recent sea kayaking trip in Hawaii we had the unexpected chance to put our life jackets and dry bags through some thorough testing. While kayaking Kauai’s Napali Coast we were toppled by some big waves. Though we were able to upright the kayak, enough water had gotten in to the hull that we became swamped and had to float alongside the craft for an hour or so before being picked up by a passing tour boat.

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Both the Kokatat Ronin Pro and OutFIT Tour Lifejackets had a comfortable, secure fit enabled by a variety of adjustment straps. The OutFIT Tour had ample pocket space for snacks, a knife and waterproof camera whereas the Ronin Pro was more streamlined to keep a lower profile. Needless to say, while floating out to sea we were really happy that these PFDs did their job keeping us above water.

Wetness is inevitable while sea kayaking so we carefully packed our food, shelter, clothes and supplies in dry bags specially made for keeping water out in even the most extreme situations. Here are four we used and were pretty impressed with.

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Outdoor Research Double Dry Window Dry Sack

A standard dry bag is a top-loading duffle with a roll top that ensures a water-tight seal. OR improved on this design firstly by adding a partial window to help locate items without having to open the bag up—helpful when you have several of the same style. By adding a second, internal roll top, the Double Dry lives up to its name—in our case keeping all of our food dry even though the bag was strapped down inside the hull of our kayak.

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Aquapac Wet + Dry Backpack

Adding shoulder straps to a dry bag makes it useful for day hikes at your destination or as a rainy day backpack. Aquapac also added an internal compartment to keep wet things separated from dry things as well as a small, clear stash pocket with its own roll top for extra precaution—helpful for stashing a camera or phone.

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Seal Line eCase

While it’s nice to unplug when on an outdoor vacation, having a phone on hand is useful in case of emergency. Throughout our adventure my iPhone was in this case and it stayed perfectly dry all the way through.

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Innate Mentor Organizer Sacs

Organizing supplies in to smaller bags is good for keeping things handy so why not use dry bags for that as well. These Innate bags feature a one-way valve that lets you easily squeeze out extra air to make the bag occupy the least space possible.

While our kayaking adventure ended several days early, we quickly recovered with the counter-balance of luxury at the St. Regis Princeville.


Forum Frenzy: Ekranoplans and Other Military Monsters

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An interesting thread for military buffs and transport geeks is lighting up the discussion boards. Check out halocooter’s link to a livejournal post with incredible images of the MD-160 ekranoplan, one of the largest sea planes ever constructed weighing in at over 400 tons. Share about the history of ground effect aircraft or other monster-sized military vehicles over on the discussion forum and check the pics and a short video courtesy of sanjy009 from James May’s Big Ideas after the jump.

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Hoping Apple Keeps Design a Top Priority

Apple

Of the torrent of articles and blog posts following Steve Jobs’ resignation announcement, I’ve found few worth reading, filled as they are with rampant speculation; but this Bloomberg article by Peter Burrows caught my eye. Although the somewhat sensationalist title “Jobs Departure Puts Product Pressure on Ive” is never really backed up with demonstrable facts, Burrows’ analysis of the situation does scratch my ID itch by pointing out that Apple’s uniquely high support for design is crucial to the company’s success.

Burrows sketches out the presumed work relationship had by Jobs and Ive, gets opinions from former Apple design head Robert Brunner, and points out that “While industrial design is seen as cost to be minimized at many companies, Ive has latitude to specify features that require his team and Apple’s hardware engineers to create new production techniques…Ive is known to travel to Asia for weeks, studying intricacies of metal-bending equipment.”

I won’t cite some of the more spectacular claims made in the article for fear of flame-fanning, but overall the article’s certainly worth a read.

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Variety Seeks Entertainment-Loving Graphic Designer

If you love entertainment, Variety has just the job for you. The magazine is on the hunt for a new full-time graphic designer to join its busy art department.

Here, you’ll design and build creative display sections, and be responsible for creating accurate, clean and formatted news pages. You’ll conceive and provide illustrative graphics, charts, logos and more, while using your skills to process, retouch and cut digital art for print.

The mag is looking for someone with experience working for a daily newspaper, and who can work quickly under deadlines. You should thrive in a fast-paced environment, and be an expert with Photoshop, Illustrator and InDesign. Interested? Apply here.

For more job listings, go to the Mediabistro job board, and to post a job, visit our employer page. For real-time openings and employment news, follow @MBJobPost.

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Flotspotting: "Shrine Shoe Rack" Brings Hip Sneaker Boutique Chic to Your Humble Abode

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San Francisco-based product designer Fernando A. Robert launched his first shoe accessory / storage solution, the “Shrine Sneaker Rack,” two years ago. From its concept to its name and marketing, the “Shrine Sneaker Rack” is a rather shameless fixture for shameless sneakerheads:

Each stainless steel rack displays your obsessions like no other. The intention of the Shrine Sneaker Rack is to highlight the very best details of your perfectly preserved footwear… All Shrine Racks are made in the US and include the mounting hardware for proudly creating your place of worship.

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Shrine

Robert is back with another, more versatile footwear storage design, the second product he’s designed for his independent venture studioFAR. Like the sneaker rack, the “Shrine Shoe Rack” is also designed to display of one’s most coveted footwear—up to three pairs—on a wall. “It was designed to support all types of footwear like sneakers (both hi-tops and low tops), along with women’s high heels and flats. This shoe rack is ideal for small city apartments, it gets your shoes off the floor and neatly on the wall.”

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Advance Promo Sleeves of the Month

We feel very lucky here at CR towers that various record labels and their hard working PR peeps regularly send us news of imminent releases. Of course, not all of the promos we see float our boat, but here are a few recent arrivals (for Damian Lazarus, Crazy P, and St. Vincent) with rather nice artwork…

Sebastian Dittman designed the sleeve for the latest episode of Damian Lazarus’ series of Get Lost mixes, Get Lost 4 (promo cover shown above), due for release on Lazarus’ own label, Crosstown Rebels next month. “I decided to make ten blurry images that are going a little bit in the direction of a Rorschach test type image, where everyone can see something for themselves,” explains Berlin-based Dittman of his approach to the cover artwork. “No clear image, a little bit trippy, I think the images are also going to be shown on LED screens at a Get Lost party in LA happening on August 27 (tomorrow) too.” Get Lost 4 is out on September 12.

Another promo to catch our eye was Crazy P‘s When We On album, slated for a September 19 release. Shown above is the CD promo we were sent which sports an illustration by Victoria Topping. Flip the cover over (see below) and the name of the artist and album title is rendered using 14 different typefaces, one for each letter. We do love a type challenge so we’re trying to work out all 14 fonts used. Feel free to help us out in the comment box! Design: Richard Robinson. Label: 2020 Vision.

 

Also due to be released onSeptember 19 is St. Vincent‘s Strange Mercy album, which features an image of what looks to be a sheet of plastic stretched tight over a screamingly open mouth. The photos here don’t quite do the gold foilblocked type justice. I’m awaiting a photo credit for the cover and will add it as soon as I get it. Art direction: Annie Erin Clark. Photography: Tina Tyrell. Label: 4AD.

 

Dezeen Screen: Eco-pods by Squared Design Lab

Dezeen Screen: Eco-pods by Squared Design Lab

Dezeen Screen: this animation by Los Angeles digital designers Squared Design Lab shows their conceptual project where an unfinished building would be covered in modular pods growing algae for biofuel. Robotic arms would constantly rearrange the pods to maintain optimum growing conditions. Watch the movie »

Kick(Pump?)Start "PumpTire": Self-Inflating Bicycle Tire

I’d considered reporting on Goodyear’s self-inflating tire for automobiles when the Times mentioned it a couple weeks ago, but I ultimately decided not to, given the lack of images and (confidential) information. Still, the tidbits that Goodyear did divulge piqued my interest:

“While the technology is complex, the idea behind the A.M.T. system is relatively simple and powered by the tire itself as it rolls down the road,” said Jean-Claude Kihn, a Goodyear executive, in a prepared statement. The manufacturer did not disclose any further details about the concept’s operating principle.

Self-regulating tire-pressure systems are not new. Such systems are common sights on the undersides of tractor-trailers, but they depend on the harmonious operation of various peripheral devices, including air pumps, filters and pressure valves. The Goodyear concept houses the tire-pressure regulation equipment, including a small pump mechanism, inside the tire itself.

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This is precisely what a San Francisco-based startup called PumpTire has just created for the increasingly popular urban conveyance known as the bicycle. Founder Benjamin Krempel and his international team of cycling enthusiasts invite you to “imagine taking your bicycle out of the garage and never having to fill up the tires or even check the pressure. Or imagine yourself being able to change your tire pressure on-the-fly with a simple adjustment from the handlebars. PumpTire is developing both of these systems.”

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pumptire

The PumpTire operates on what sounds like a similar principle to Goodyear’s otherwise top-secret auto tire, drawing air into a “lumen” (see video below) through a one-way valve while the wheel is rolling. The rim-mounted valve—which comes in the standard presta and schrader variations—detects the pressure and stops when the built-in inner tube is at a certain psi. “The self-inflating, self-adjusting technology is incorporated directly into the tire and is compatible with current rims, making it a simple addition to any bicycle.”

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Around the Design World in 180 Words: Fashionable Edition

  • Missoni continues in its mission to cover the world in garish stripes. The Italian knitwear house’s megacollaboration with Target hits stores on September 13 with more than 400 boldly patterned items that will range in price from $2.99 to $599.99. Meanwhile, Missoni recently announced that it will partner with Century Properties, the largest privately-owned real estate firm in the Philippines, on a residential development project in Manila that will feature interiors by Missoni Home.

  • On the other end of the Italian aesthetic spectrum, Brioni is calling it quits on womenswear and cutting ties with designer Alessandro Dell’Acqua, who was hired to helm the line in May 2010. According to WWD, the decision is part of ongoing acquisition talks between PPR and Brioni.

  • First comes web, then comes…print? That’s the plan for Style.com, which will launch a print magazine in October. Touted as “the first magazine to combine the immediacy of the digital experience with the richness of print,” Style.com Magazine will offer coverage of the spring 2012 collections just days after the last model has left the runway. Pre-order your copy here.

    New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

  • Up House Goes Up

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    This is pretty amazing: Utah-based building company Bangerter Homes has faithfully duplicated the Victorian two-story from Pixar’s Up, using frames from the movie to create a 2,800-square-foot house that matches both inside and out.

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    Disney/Pixar was contacted and gave Bangerter Homes unprecedented permission to construct the replica….

    Staying true to the timeline in the movie, this turn of the century period home will be decorated to reflect the 1950’s era…. From the interior finishes, kitchen design to the furniture and accessories, great care has been exercised to achieve a fun and fresh nostalgic atmosphere. “If you have seen it in the movie, You”ll see it in real life in the home,” said Adam Bangerter.

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