All posts in “Gear”

Save Big During Levi’s End of Season Sale

Looking for even more great savings? Head over to Today’s Best Deals page to see all our top deals from today.


Now that we’re finally out of our sweatpants and getting back into the world, our long-forgotten jeans are practically shouting our names from their spot buried in the closet. If you’ve been waiting to pull out your hard pants and are dreaming of adding some new denim to your wardrobe, you’re in luck. Levi’s is offering up huge savings on some of its best pieces during its End of Season sale.

If you want to get a classic western shirt, a denim trucker jacket or even just a great pair of jeans, you won’t have to break the bank to do it.

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This Is Sonos’s Next Speaker (And Yes, It Hangs on Your Wall)

Sonos and Ikea are adding a new speaker to their existing Symfonisk (which means “symphony” in Swedish) line. It’s called the Symfonisk Picture Frame WiFi Speaker and yes, it hangs on your wall and looks like a piece of art. The speaker will cost $199 and it will be available from Ikea’s stores and website on July 15.

The idea of the Symfonisk Picture Frame WiFi Speaker is that it hangs on your wall and takes up zero floorspace, which Sonos claims makes it ideal for “small-space living.” When on the wall, the speaker can be positioned in landscape or portrait mode. And if you don’t want to place it on the wall, you don’t have to it. Each speaker has rubber feet, too, so you lean it up against a wall.

The “art” of the speaker is actually its grille, which you can pop off and replace with different art; Ikea will sell different grilles with different art, so you customize how you want it to look on your wall. At launch, there will be a dark and a white grille by artist Jennifer Idrizi, with more styled grilles available later on.

sonos

Ikea

As for sound, the Symfonisk Picture Frame WiFi Speaker has a tweeter-and-woofer combo, and will likely have a similar “room-filling sound” as Sonos’ existing One (or One SL) speaker. It can be stereo paired with another Symfonisk Picture Frame Speaker, or grouped with any other Sonos or Symfonisk multi-room group. Sonos has not mentioned whether or not two of the new speakers can be integrated into a Sonos home theater system (used as rear-channel speakers).

The Symfonisk Picture Frame WiFi Speaker will also work like Sonos’s existing One SL. It’s a wi-fi-only speaker that supports AirPlay 2. There’s no built-in microphones for a smart voice assistant. There’s no built-in Bluetooth, either.

It was rumored that Sonos and Ikea would be updated the existing Symfonisk lamp speaker and Symfonisk bookshelf speaker, which were released in 2019, but that doesn’t appear to be the case. Both speakers are still available from Ikea.

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These Awesome Filson Bags Are All on Sale

Looking for even more great savings? Head over to Today’s Best Deals page to see all our top deals from today.


We’ve been touting Mr Porter a lot lately — the retailer just keeps dropping prices on some of our favorite types of gear. Today we unearthed an epic sale on some Filson goods, including some of the best-looking limited-edition bags we’ve seen in a while. Now is your chance to pick up a briefcase for the return to the office or a dry duffle bag or rolling carry-on bag perfect for your upcoming adventures.

Some of the prices are knocked down by 50 percent, so you’ll probably want to shop fast, knowing what we know about these deals at Mr Porter — wait too long and they’ll be gone.

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Leather-Trimmed Cotton-Twill Briefcase

Filson mrporter.com

$325 $163 (50%)

Dry Shell Duffle Bag

Filson mrporter.com

$200 $140 (30% off)

Pullman Webbing-Trimmed CORDURA Ripstop Briefcase

Filson mrporter.com

$250 $125 (50% off)

Dryden CORDURA Carry-On Suitcase

Filson mrporter.com

$295 $148 (50% off)

Original Leather-Trimmed Cotton-Twill Briefcase

Filson mrporter.com

$395 $198 (50% off)

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New Releases on Netflix in June: Best Movies and Shows

We’re going to help you plan your Netflix sessions with a list of everything that’s coming to Netflix in June, 2021.

We have the list of New Netflix Releases for June, 2021. Very exciting month for movie lovers especially in the third week of the month, where there are a lot of classics and all-timers.

What better way to spend your free time, for the lazy ones, than to watch your favorite shows and movies on Netflix. Plan your weekends with a loved one or friends by going through the list below, there’s something new almost every day in June. Plenty of Kevin Hart stand-up comedy will also be available to stream. Check out the full list below;

Abduction
American Outlaws
Bad Teacher
Black Holes | The Edge of All We Know
CoComelon: A Sunny Day for Play
Cradle 2 the Grave
Flipped
Fools Rush In
Happy Endings: Seasons 1-3
I Am Sam
Love Jones
Million Dollar Baby
Ninja Assassin
Seven Souls in the Skull Castle: Season Moon Jogen
Seven Souls in the Skull Castle: Season Moon Kagen
Stand By Me
Starsky & Hutch
Streets of Fire
Super Monsters: Once Upon a Rhyme – Netflix Family
Swordfish
The Adventures of Sonic the Hedgehog: Season 1
The Best Man
The Big Lebowski
The Wedding Guest
The Wind
What Women Want

Available June 2

2 Hearts
Alone: Season 7
Carnaval – Netflix Film
Kim’s Convenience: Season 5

Alan Saldaña: Locked Up – Netflix Comedy Special
Creator’s File: GOLD – Netflix Series
Dancing Queens – Netflix Film
Pretty Guardian Sailor Moon Eternal The Movie: Part 1 / Part 2 – Netflix Film
Summertime: Season 2 – Netflix Series

Breaking Boundaries: The Science of Our Planet – Netflix Documentary
Feel Good: Season 2 – Netflix Series
Sweet Tooth – Netflix Series
Trippin’ with the Kandasamys – Netflix Film
Xtreme – Netflix Film

Kitty Love: An Homage to Cats – Netflix Documentary

Vampire Academy

Awake – Netflix Film
Fresh, Fried & Crispy – Netflix Series
L.A.’s Finest: LA’s Finest: Season 2
Tragic Jungle – Netflix Film

A Haunted House 2
Camellia Sisters
Locombianos – Netflix Series

Love (ft. Marriage and Divorce): Season 2 – Netflix Series
Lupin: Part 2 – Netflix Series
Skater Girl – Netflix Film
Trese – Netflix Anime
Wish Dragon – Netflix Family

The Devil Below
Picture a Scientist

Elite Short Stories – Netflix Series

Sir! No Sir!
Unwind Your Mind – Netflix Interactive Experience
Workin’ Moms: Season 5 – Netflix SeriesFTA
Let’s Eat
Life of Crime
Power Rangers Dino Fury: Season 1
Rhyme Time Town: Season 2 – Netflix Family

Lowriders
Penguin Town – Netflix Documentary
Silver Skates – Netflix Film

Black Summer: Season 2 – Netflix Series
The Gift: Season 3 – Netflix Series
Hospital Playlist: Season 2 – Netflix Series
Katla – Netflix Series
Silver Linings Playbook

A Family – Netflix Film
Elite: Season 4 – Netflix Series
Fatherhood – Netflix Film
Jagame Thandhiram – Netflix Film
The Rational Life – Netflix Series
The World’s Most Amazing Vacation Rentals – Netflix Series

Nevertheless – Netflix Series

This Is Pop – Netflix Documentary

Good on Paper – Netflix Film
The House of Flowers: The Movie – Netflix Film
Murder by the Coast – Netflix Documentary
Too Hot to Handle: Season 2 – Netflix Series

Godzilla Singular Point – Netflix Anime
The Naked Director: Season 2 – Netflix Series
The Seventh Day
Sisters on Track – Netflix Documentary

The A List: Season 2 – Netflix Series
The Ice Road – Netflix Film
Sex/Life – Netflix Series

Wonder Boy – Netflix Documentary

Killing Them Softly
The Seven Deadly Sins: Dragon’s Judgement – Netflix Anime

StarBeam: Season 4 – Netflix Family

America: The Motion Picture – Netflix Film
Lying and Stealing
Sophie: A Murder in West Cork – Netflix Documentary

We Picked Six Sandals and the Socks We’d Wear With Each

Socks and sandals. Two things that should never go together. Or should they? What was once a punishable offense, at least in the realm of social status, is now a bonafide way of flexing an eye for good-looking footwear. There are millions of socks and millions of sandals, but the two you choose signal a ton about your style. And although going commando — aka sock-free — proves best in the most stifling of weather, warmer days almost always give way to cooler evenings, and, plus, who doesn’t want to wear socks and sandals well into fall, too?

As far as styles go, sure, you could go off the deep end and match extravagant slides (maybe Rick Owens x Birkenstock) with equally flashy socks (perhaps hopefully not Off-White), but the more nuanced your pairings the more polished you’ll appear. Simply put, you’ll look less like you wandered away from the weight room and more like you know something others don’t.

Beyond careful consideration as to whether the ones you wear are washed and match, there are a few more rules for really pulling off this look: skip low-pile, dress, silk, ankle and no-show socks. Ultra-thin ones just don’t look right slipped into a sandal. Ones with overt branding across the toe or up the Achilles don’t either. Also, skip the gimmicky socks you got for Christmas — and especially the ones you were gifted for playing your part as a groomsman.

Here, we’re mixing made-in-Japan socks with lesser-seen Birkenstocks; stylish Suicoke sandals with tie-dyed types; Marni sandals with muted green knits — you get the gist.

Sandals: Birkenstock

Socks: Beams Plus, Wythe New York, Kapital

Sandals: Suicoke

Socks: Anonymous Ism, Flagstuff, Stussy

Sandals: Yuketen

Socks: The Elder Statesman, Harvest & Mill, Mr P.

Sandals: Birkenstock

Socks: Human Made, Rototo, Howlin’

Sandals: Marni

Socks: Gap, Arvin Goods, WTAPS

Sandals: Frescobol Carioca

Socks: John Elliott, Wacko Maria, American Trench

Today’s Best Deals: 15% off a Coway Air Purifier, Savings on Adidas Sambas & More

Welcome to Deals of Note, where Gear Patrol captures all the best deals of the day. You can also visit GearPatrol.com/Deals for constant updates on the latest deals discovered by our team.

EDITOR’S PICKS

The most rare or exceptional deals picked by Gear Patrol’s product experts.

OUTDOOR DEALS

FITNESS DEALS

STYLE DEALS

TECH DEALS

HOME & KITCHEN DEALS

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Neckwear No More: Should Today’s Workplaces Really Require Ties?

Ties, which have been slowly fading from wardrobes for years now, might have finally met their match in 2020, when workers — at least those capable — stepped away from formal office spaces and began working from home. (Who the hell would wear a tie within the walls of their own abode?)

But with at least some of these same spaces set to reopen soon if not already, and wedding season seemingly in full swing, the question of whether or not there’s room or reason for the neck accessory begs to be answered. The traditionally hard-to-keep-in-stock styles are stuck on the shelves, many menswear-focused retailers reveal.

Trend forecasters see seasons of self-expression and comfortable luxury ahead. Yes, the necktie can act as a statement accessory, but it isn’t comfortable and shifting standards for what we considered “dressed up” have eliminated some of the uncertainty that comes with coming off too casual. Plus, it seems squeezing into made-to-measure tailoring might be a thing of the past, too — and that’s when most people break out the big guns (aka ties).

“More than 25 percent of consumers have a new size today. And then they’re taking a look at what are the trends, and this new looser fit that we led early on in the pandemic is definitely taking hold,” Levi’s CEO Chip Bergh told AP. Fittingly, jeans are booming, too, in favor of dressier bottoms.

“For example, in men’s, tuxedos have traded to suits, suits have traded to khakis and dress shirts, khakis have traded to denim and polos,” Kohl’s Chief Merchandising Officer, Doug Howe, told NBC News.

That being said, perhaps dressing up again can assist with adjusting to a reopened world. (Look better, feel better, you know?) But, just as much else has changed in the last calendar year, “dressing up” seems different for everyone — and, we can say this for sure, fewer deem it suit and tie exclusively. Still, though there are the staunch few that never missed a beat.

If you’re feeling uncertain about curtailing tailored clothing altogether, ditch the tie but keep the blazer. Underneath, wear a collared shirt buttoned all the way to the top, a crisp, clean T-shirt (no graphics, please) or, depending on the occasion, nothing at all. Turn to these stylish folks for inspiration.

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style

@universodavidlynch

style

@toddsnyderny

style

@bafta

style

@nuggets / @protrending

style

@gq

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Now’s Your Chance to Buy a Little-Known Dive Watch Once Used by the French Navy

Though most of the world’s significant military watches are by now well documented by the collector community, there remain several lurking in the wings that rarely get the attention they deserve. One could argue that the Jacques Bianchi JB 200 is one such timepiece.

Developed in the south of France by craftsman Jacques Bianchi in the mid-1980s under his own name, the original JB 200 features a 42mm steel case in “destro” configuration (left-hand crown), 200m of water resistance and a French quartz movement. Uniquely, a silhouette of a diver graced the black dial. Limited at first to 100 pieces, the watch was eventually purchased by the French National Marine Department for use by clearance divers and personnel from the local naval air base.

watch

Courtesy

Rather than rest upon his laurels, Jacques Bianchi (at over 80 years old) has decided to resurrect his one-time naval dive watch for a civilian audience. The new diver, while largely a recreation of the original JB200, features several upgrades: it’s now powered by a Seiko NH35 automatic movement in place of the original’s quartz movement; the old tritium lume has been replaced by Super-LumiNova; and the watch’s indices have been upsized slightly for better legibility. It will still ship on a Tropic-style rubber strap, much as the original did.

Should this military diver pique your interest, head on over to the Jaques Bianchi website for more information. A Kickstarter campaign will launch June 15th, when you’ll be able to put a deposit down for the JB 200 and grab a piece of (reimagined) French diving history. (For international buyers, Kickstarter pricing will be 495 EUR — or ~$600 — without taxes or shipping. The post-Kickstarter retail price will be 825 EUR, or ~$1,000.)

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The Nother EShiner EcoTable 30 Solar Charging Table Is Great For Off-Grid Adventures

Power banks are great for charging portable devices. But when it comes to refueling numerous devices simultaneously, then you want something that offers this versatility. Take for instance the Nother EShiner EcoTable 30 Solar Charging Table.

Whether you’re off camping, fishing, backpacking, or venturing off-grid for a few days, then you can always rely on the power of the sun to fuel your electrical devices. Laptops, mobile phones, tablets, Bluetooth headsets, power banks, cameras, and portable gaming devices. You name it, all these are compatible with the charging table. This is made possible thanks to numerous built-in charging ports. These include two 5V2.1A USB ports and one 18V/1.6aMAX DC port.

The solar panels are built-in and found on the other side of the tabletop. You can switch or flip the table over to recharge the panels. Plus, the Nother EShiner EcoTable 30 Solar Charging Table employs a battery management system that ensures the safety of your devices from overcharge, overheating, and short circuits.

Designed for outdoor enthusiasts, this one comes in a portable weight of 2.5kg and a size that can easily be carried on your backpack. It measures 65cm×20cm×12cm when folded and is easy to set up with a simple pop-open method. Its aluminum base makes it easy to attach the tabletop to the legs.

The Nother EShiner EcoTable 30 Solar Charging Table is a great addition to your outdoor or survival gear. It is waterproof, scratch-resistant, rust-free, and easy to clean with a simple wipe with a damp cloth, or you can also rinse it with soap and water.

Get It Here

Images courtesy of Nother

How to Clean and Care For Your Glasses

Chances are you’re reading this with glasses on right now if you’re the type that needs them to see. Meanwhile, some readers out there are fortunate enough to wear them purely for sun protection or aesthetic purposes. (No, I’m not envious, I swear.)

Either way, you’ve probably encountered all of the downfalls to being some who dons them, whether they’re prescription or sun. Sometimes they get really, really dirty. I mean smudged to the point where you can’t see out of ’em. In more serious instances, lenses get scratched or shattered, nose pieces go missing or everything becomes, because they slipped under your butt or fell to the bottom of a bag, bent. Plus, dirty or damaged glasses can cause eye strain!

But how can mistakes like this be intercepted before they happen? And how can scratches, smudges and other cosmetic issues be prevented? To be honest, it takes discipline and a bit of routine setting. Sure, sliding your glasses up onto your head or into your pocket (whether shirt or pants) when you don’t need them can be convenient but both cause problems — and those are just two possibilities.

Here’s our guide to caring for and cleaning your glasses.

man wearing glasses

Garrett Leight

How to Clean Your Glasses

So, they’re a bit smudged, huh? Your keys left a scratch? Let’s talk about it.

1. First, if you’re able to, rinse off the lenses with a bit of water. Doing so sweeps off even invisible debris, ensuring you won’t scratch your lenses when you wipe them.

2. If you’re not in a place where you can wet them, opt for a portable spray instead. There are dozens of iterations in varying solutions. You’ve gotten used to carrying hand sanitizer, think of this as a fair trade off.

3. If you’re at home and have dedicated a window to washing your glasses, grab dish soap — be sure to check the ingredients for any harsh detergents; acetone, for example, which is most frequently found in nail polish remover, can ruin lenses — or a glasses specific cleaner. Both work well.

4. Place a pea-sized portion of soap on both lenses. (Don’t use a sensitive skin or ultra-soft soap. Optometrists recommend Dawn.) Using clean hands — any particulate trapped in your palms or on your fingers can inflict damage — work the soap in in a circular motion. Don’t be afraid to clean the temple arms, too, unless they’re made of a delicate material you’d otherwise avoid. Do this until the soap has dissolved and there’s no remaining residue. You’ve washed dishes before, I hope, so you get the gist.

5. Next, dry the lenses off with a microfiber cloth — preferably the one you don’t use to address small smudges. Avoid t-shirts, towel or other textiles nearby as unless they’re 100-percent cotton — and even 100-percent can do this — they’ll scratch or fog (think residue on old headlights) the lenses over time. Hold the glasses at their center, most preferably at the nose bridge. Gripping firmly to one temple arm can misshape the glasses’ dimensions.

6. Wipe the lenses as close to dry as possible. Let them air dry the rest of the way, if you can. If not, put ’em back on your face. You’re done.

eyeglass sleeve felt
Graf Lantz uses premium luxury-grade Merino Wool to create a scratch-free eyeglass sleeve. It is also water, stain and heat resistant.

Graf Lantz

How to Care For Your Glasses

The days of dumping them in the bottom of your bag are over.

1. Use both hands to take them off.

2. If they’re slipping, as some do, don’t forcefully push them up — especially not by the nose piece (if you have those).

3. Never wear them like a headband. Hair products can smudge the lenses, nose pieces can get caught in your locks and forcing the frames to expand around the noggin widens them.

4. Put them in a hard case when you take them off. Get a soft one if you must put them in your pocket.

5. Don’t store your glasses with the lenses facing down. Store them upside down with the arms open.

6. Establish a storage routine: a spot you put them when you’re not wearing them or are headed to bed.

7. Purchase the necessary cleaning and maintenance tools: sprayable cleaner, microfiber cloths and a glasses tool kit.

8. Don’t leave them in a hot car. Temperatures within, which can reach 200 degrees Fahrenheit, can melt plastic or warp acetates.

Everything You Need

Ettinger Spectrum Glasses Case

Todd Snyder

Spectrum Glasses Case

Ettinger toddsnyder.com

$180.00

Garrett Leight Rose Gold Metal Case

Garrett Leight

Rose Gold Metal Case

Garrett Leight garrettleight.com

Smythson Panama Concertina Sunglasses Case

Smythson

Panama Concertina Sunglasses Case

Smythson smythson.com

$195.00

Graf Lantz Felt Eyeglass Sleeve

Graf Lantz

Felt Eyeglass Sleeve

Graf Lantz graf-lantz.com

$28.00

Garrett Leight Oversized Cleaning Cloth

Garrett Leight

Wavy Oversized Cleaning Cloth

Garrett Leight garrettleight.com

$10.00

Gabriel + Simone Reusable Anti-Fog Lens Cleaning Cloth

Gabriel + Simone

Reusable Anti-Fog Lens Cleaning Cloth

Gabriel + Simone gabrielsimone.com

$14.99

Warby Parker Clean My Lenses Kit

Warby Parker

Clean My Lenses Kit With Anti-Fog Spray

Warby Parker warbyparker.com

$15.00

Optix 55 Pre-Moistened Individually Wrapped Cleaning Wipes

Optix 55

Eyeglass Cleaner Lens Wipes

Optix 55 amazon.com

$11.55

Cosyzone Eyeglass Repair Tool Kit

Cosyzone

Eyeglass Repair Tool Kit

Cosyzone amazon.com

$8.98

Dawn Ultra Original Dish Detergent

Dawn

Ultra Original Dish Detergent

Dawn amazon.com

$8.01

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Why You Should Never Bring a Spork Camping

I was seven years old when I first encountered a spork. My mom, brother and I piled into a car and drove a few towns over to reach the closest multi-screen movie theater to watch The Parent Trap (the Lindsay Lohan version, not the original with Hayley Mills). We caught an earlier showing and then headed down the street to the Kentucky Fried Chicken-Taco Bell combo restaurant, where I chose The Colonel over the chihuahua and, to accompany a side of mashed potatoes and gravy, I received a spork.

The novelty came encased in plastic, and its form was neither adequate for harvesting the final remains of potato substance from the corners of its styrofoam container nor for piercing and gripping greasy chicken. Still, I don’t recall feeling disappointed. (Hours later though, I awoke in the middle of the night and vomited.)

My next spork memory is shallower in the archives; Age: 19; Location: student center, The University of Vermont. Walking through the complex, I passed a table where environmentally minded students sold sporks as an alternative to disposable cutlery. These weren’t anything like the flimsy impotence I first used at KFC; they were colorful, curvy and made of a harder, dishwasher-safe plastic. They also weren’t really sporks, at least not according to Merriam or Webster — instead of a single tine-equipped spoon-shaped end, this “spork” had implements on both ends: one was a spoon, the other was a fork with small, insubstantial serrations on one edge — a feeble attempt at adding a knife to the equation.

I paid five dollars for this spork, and I kept it in a small pocket of my backpack. I used this spork all the time; to eat yogurt, to eat soup, to eat mac and cheese. What do these foods have in common? You eat them with a spoon, and that’s what I did, because the fork end of this utensil was nearly as useless as the disposable version of my first encounter. (Plus, twirling the thing around 180 degrees to eat with the end I had been using as a handle always seemed unhygienic.) One day, as I attempted to stir a jar of organic peanut butter, this spork snapped in half.

After that utensil fail, I swore off sporks for good. I bought an ultralight spoon for backpacking, but would often end up swiping a piece of standard flatware from the kitchen drawer before taking off on a trip. That all changed when Gerber released the Compleat, a multi-tool take on campsite cutlery.

Instead of combining fork and spoon into one ineffective jack-of-two-trades, Gerber kept them separate to perform at their individual best. The spoon is slightly angular, and perfect for probing the corners of pots and bowls; the fork is spork-reminiscent, but its longer tines keep it just forky enough for stabbing hunks of food.

Gerber Compleat

avantlink.com

$29.00

Gerber didn’t stop there, though. The Compleat also comes with a small tool that works as a bottle opener, a can opener and a vegetable peeler. And then there’s the multi-use spatula that has a rubberized edge perfect for scraping clean pots, skillets and bowls (to get that last bit of pancake batter, for instance) and a serrated side that’s surprisingly sharp (but still not as good as a knife, oh well). At the other end of this spatula is where the Compleat all comes together, literally: all three of the other utensils nest neatly together to form one compact tool.

But invert either the fork or spoon to face the spatula, and you have one final item — a pair of tongs. Now, I’m likely more enthusiastic about cutlery innovations than most, but I genuinely believe that this small additional feature makes the Compleat a real winner. Tongs are precisely the type of thing that you never want to pack; they rarely come in small sizes, and their application is specific to cooking particular foods, so you can usually get away with leaving them behind. But when you do need them — for grabbing sausages off a grill, for serving sauteed vegetables — dammit do they come in handy.

On a recent weekend, I drove to New York’s Catskill Mountains to go camping. Knowing the hike from the parking lot to the campsite was a short one, I packed with comfort in mind (tents, two hammocks and a camp chair for everyone!). But when it came time to cook dinner (burritos), I realized that I hadn’t brought a single spoon, fork or cooking utensil of any kind. But I had the Compleat stashed in a backpack, and I used nearly every one of its functions to prepare the meal. It opened a can of refried beans, it stirred pork and veggies, it retrieved a roasted pepper from the coals of our campfire, and it doled out salsa. Our small group agreed, perhaps slightly under the influence of a bottle of whiskey, that they were among the best homemade burritos we’d ever had.

Price: $29

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This Indie Brand’s Colorful New Watches Are Like Nothing We’ve Ever Seen

Don’t expect anything from Israeli independent watchmaker Itay Noy that either looks or functions like a traditional timepiece. Employing his own artistic twist on horology, Noy’s latest creations are colorful takes on existing watches that are striking both for their looks and creativity.

Both new Color Wheel watches sport a stark white face and rainbow theme expressed as the date and as the hours, respectively. It might not be obvious exactly how the Color Wheel Hour — which is based upon the Itay Noy’s Time Tone collection — works, or how the time is read simply by looking at a still image.

Once you get the hang of it, however, the watch is easy to use: the 12 large, vibrant dots are not simply markers but themselves move around the dial to indicate the current hour. (The concept is that the owner chooses the color he or she wants to represent the current hour.) Look closely, and you’ll notice there are white-on-white indices and hands to more traditionally mark the minutes (with a red dot at the tip) and seconds.

watch
Itay Noy Color Wheel Month

Courtesy

watch
Vaucher VMF 5400 Automatic Movement

Courtesy

The Color Wheel Month (Full Month collection), on the other hand, is slightly more traditional in some senses. Whereas you’ll most commonly find a date window at 3 or 6 o’clock (sometimes the dreaded 4:30) displaying the number on a disc beneath the dial, Itay Noy’s uses 15 windows.

The date itself can be read most easily at around 3:30 due to spacing that separates it from the next number, but the other even or odd days of the month can all be seen simultaneously in progressive tones of the rainbow. There are no hour markers, and a tiny seconds hand is visible around 7 o’clock.

Itay Noy not only invents these unusual concepts, but largely executes them himself at his workshop in Jaffa, Israel — from the cases and dials to in-house modules and movement modifications. The Color Wheel watches both use sourced automatic movements, with the Hour model measuring 44mm and the Month model at 40mm wide.

As every watch is individually produced, the Color Wheel collections will be limited to only 24 examples each (with its number indicated at the bottom of the dial) and must be ordered directly from Itay Noy. Prices are disclosed on request only, but expect to pay around $6,000 if you want to take one home.

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20 of the Best Picks from J.Crew’s Massive Sale-on-Sale

Looking for even more great savings? Head over to Today’s Best Deals page to see all our top deals from today.


The J.Crew sale section. Otherwise known as: the gift that keeps on giving. Last month, that came in the form of an extra 40 percent off, which remains an extremely generous offer. But this month, the folks at the mall mainstay — which just announced it’s brought on Noah co-founder and former Supreme design director Brendon Babenzien to head up menswear — are going even bigger, taking an extra 50% off a vast selection of summer style essentials with the code SHOPSALE.

In need of a new pair of sweatshorts? How about some perfectly faded denim, or lightweight chambray chinos? Short-sleeve, printed shirts you can wear on their own or layer over a white tee all summer long? Check, double-check, and damn do they have a lot of shirts that fit the bill. In fact, there’s so much good stuff to sort through that I decided to do the legwork for you, combing through the entire selection to pick the 20 best pieces to buy now. Happy shopping.

SHOP NOW

Stretch Secret Wash Cotton Poplin Shirt in Print

J.Crew

$69.50 $18.00 (74% off)

Slim Seersucker Shirt in Stripe

J.Crew

$79.50 $19.75 (75% off)

Stretch Secret Wash Cotton Poplin Shirt in Dots

J.Crew

$69.50 $22.00 (68% off)

Plaited Linen-Cotton Sweater

J.Crew

$89.50 $24.50 (73% off)

Short-Sleeve Linen Shirt in Print

J.Crew jcrew.com

$79.50 $25.50 (68% off)

Slim Cotton-Linen Twill Shirt

J.Crew

$79.50 $27.50 (65% off)

Short-Sleeve Camp-Collar Harbor Shirt in Tie-Dye

J.Crew

$69.50 $27.50 (60% off)

Short-Sleeve Slub Cotton Shirt in Print

J.Crew

$64.50 $27.50 (57% off)

484 Slim-Fit Chino Pant in Stretch Chambray

J.Crew

$79.50 $28.00 (65% off)

Wallace & Barnes Heritage Fleece Painter’s Short

J.Crew

$88.00 $29.00 (67% off)

484 Slim-Fit Stretch Jean in Seven-Year Wash

J.Crew

$118.00 $29.50 (75% off)

770 Straight-Fit Garment-Dyed Five-Pocket Pant

J.Crew

$98.00 $32.50 (67% off)

484 Slim-Fit Garment-Dyed Five-Pocket Pant

J.Crew

$98.00 $32.50 (67% off)

Wallace & Barnes Heritage Fleece Painter’s Crewneck Sweatshirt

J.Crew jcrew.com

$98.00 $34.00 (65% off)

Short-Sleeve Linen Shirt in Print

J.Crew

$79.50 $36.00 (55% off)

Short-Sleeve Cotton Cardigan Polo Sweater in Stripe

J.Crew

$79.50 $37.00 (53% off)

Court Sneakers in Leather

J.Crew jcrew.com

$148.00 $50.00 (66% off)

Wallace & Barnes Fatigue Camp Pant

J.Crew

$128.00 $54.00 (58% off)

Ludlow Slim-Fit Tuxedo Pant in Italian Wool-Cotton Seersucker

J.Crew

$295.00 $100.00 (66% off)

Ludlow Slim-Fit Tuxedo Jacket in Italian Wool-Cotton Seersucker

J.Crew

$595.00 $200.00 (66% off)

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What’s Actually the Difference Between Cheap and Expensive Bookshelf Speakers?

People like good sound, obviously, but to different ends and different extremes. There’s upgrading to a soundbar or a two-channel home theater system so you can better hear dialog on TV. Then, there’s building a bonafide home hi-fi system and spending thousands on various speakers, connections, sources and other electronics.

Odds are, if you clicked on this post, you might have a set of bookshelf speakers. Maybe a $150-$300 setup, connected either an A/V receiver or a home turntable setup. Maybe you’ve also considered an upgrade. But what, exactly will that expense get you? Especially if you creep up into the $1,000 range?

According to Scott Orth, the director of audio and acoustic systems at Sound United, and a professor of Electroacoustics at the Johns Hopkins Peabody Instutite, there are a few angles from which to answer the question. First, the ojective and scientific. “The sources that you’re listening to have a certain amount of information and the better your loudspeakers are the more they can extract that information, the less error there is and the clearer it comes through and the more you get from it.” As your speaker quality improves, the better justice they do to high quality recordings. Literally. Objectively. Full stop.

But there’s also what Orth calls “the emotional side.” Higher fidelity speakers are able to extract more information, so the sound is more realistic and the experience of listening is more engaging. Simply put: the more you hear, the more emotion you feel.

high end bookshelf speakers gear patrol inline 1
Polk Audio is a 50-year-old audio company based in Baltimore. They’re best known for making affordable hi-fi speakers. The Legend Series (picture) are the “best speakers Polk has ever made.”

Polk Audio

Of course this is just a detailed way to state the obvious: A pair of lesser bookshelf speakers are going to sound worse than higher-end bookshelf speakers. How do they sound better? What specifically are you getting for your money. The truth is: it’s everything, it’s a little bit of everything.

“When you move up in price in speakers, what happens is that you are paying for not just the level of detail that you can hear, but the level of engineering that goes into the speaker,” says Michael Greco, a senior director in Polk Audio’s loudspeaker division. Better cabinets are going to be more expensive by their physical nature. They need to be heavy, thick or have bracing — anything that makes it rigid so it’s not vibrating anywhere but the transducers. The trick is to find something that’s not too heavy but still has all the properties of high stiffness and high damping to keep the panels from vibrating. “You’re buying that level of thought and that level of detail from the engineering team to give you that immersive experience.”

Size is also a big factor. According to Greco, a 6-inch driver in a small box might play loud, but it’s not going to go very low in frequency. A 5.25-inch driver in the same size box might not play as loud, but it will go low in frequency. So there’s this kind of trade-off and that’s part of what you pay for in some speakers. You’re paying for a larger box so you can have more bass. This is one of the main reasons why high-end bookshelf speakers are also bigger.

But making a bigger speaker isn’t as simple as just scaling up a small one. The larger the speaker — specifically, the speaker cabinet — the more difficult it is to keep its panels from vibrating. “A small box has less trouble than a larger one, but it’s all about the internal bracing that we do to try to keep the larger cabinets from vibrating like that,” Orth said. “So larger [isn’t always better], but this thicker is always better if you can afford to do that.” Thicker material will always be stiffer than thinner material.

high end bookshelf speakers gear patrol inline 2
The Legend Series consists of two sets of bookshelf speakers, the L100 and the L200, the latter of which are slightly bigger and higher-end.

Polk Audio

So what does that look like practically? You can find an instructive example in Polk Audio’s lineup. Take Polk’s L100 ($1,199) a significant price bump from its $120 T15s. The extra order of magnitude in purchase price gains you improvement in materials, parts and other bits of engineering that add up to an objective improvement. “The T15 goes down to maybe 90Hz and the L100 goes down into the 50Hz ranges, so there’s a lot of difference there. On the high frequencies, I think we measured the pinnacle tweeter out to 50kHz, which is where dogs and bats hear.”

Of course, the speakers are just one link in the chain of an excellent audio system, and you have to have the right equipment to properly power them — you can’t just integrate hi-end speakers into your current system and expect them to sound their best. Yet, the speakers remain the foundation, if you find this audio quality worth the premium you’ll pay for it.

“The advice that I always give people is to buy your speakers first and spend as much as you can afford,” Greco said. “And then buy the electronics second.” Electronics will change over time, while speakers tend to last, which make them an excellent foundation that will only pay dividends as you upgrade the rest of your setup.

As for how much should you spend on speakers versus the other electronics in your system, Greco says it should be an even 50/50 split — maybe 60/40 in favor of the speakers. “I don’t think you’re going to be sorry if you spend a little bit more on the speakers because, after all, that’s what you hear. It’s the speakers.”

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Today’s Best Deals: A Deal on a Staub Cocotte, 20% off Adidas Ultraboost 21 & More

Welcome to Deals of Note, where Gear Patrol captures all the best deals of the day. You can also visit GearPatrol.com/Deals for constant updates on the latest deals discovered by our team.

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This Ultra-short Throw LED Projector Looks Sharp with Leica Optics

Co-engineered with the optics experts at Leica, the JMGO O1 Pro is an ultra-short throw smart LED projector. It projects an FHD 4K-quality image up to 110-inches. Leica auto image correction technology cleans up content quality while its 1250 ANSI lumens deliver 6000:1 dynamic contrast. Lightweight, portable, and has built-in Alexa. A funded Indiegogo.