All posts in “Home”

The Best Thing About That Shitshow of a Debate Was Chris Wallace’s Chair

The first presidential debate was, as CNN correspondent Dana Bash called it, a “shitshow.” Candidates threw insults, someone was called a “clown,” moderator Chris Wallace got thrown into mix and now the Commission on Presidential Debates is changing its structure to combat future chaos. Yet there was one unsung hero of the debate: Wallace’s Aeron office chair.

For over an hour and a half, the Aeron gave Wallace the support he needed to deal with bickering back-and-forths between the presidential nominees. The chair uses a patented hardware, PostureFit SL, which engages the body to mimic “its strongest posture: standing, chest open, and pelvis tilted slightly forward,” regardless of sitting position, according to its manufacturer, Herman Miller. The task chair offers some deep reclining action, but there was no relaxing during the debate. Dubbed “The Dot-Com Throne” for its immense popularity with the tech industry of the late ’90s, the Aeron was one of the first task chairs to successfully implement a mesh seat, and lord knows Wallace needed it to keep his cool. It remains one of the best desk, task and office chairs you can buy.

Courtesy

Aeron Chair

Herman Miller dwr.com

$1,395.00

We’re not sure how Herman Miller, or the Aeron’s late designer Bill Stumpf, feels about the seat making an appearance at the worst presidential debate in history. But we’re pretty sure it was the best seat in the house.

Buy Now: $1,395+

Tyler Chin is Gear Patrol’s Associate Staff Writer.

This content is created and maintained by a third party, and imported onto this page to help users provide their email addresses. You may be able to find more information about this and similar content at piano.io

The 12 Best Cigars to Smoke in 2020

To novices, smoking a cigar can be more intimidating than fun. This definitive guide to the best cigars of 2020 covers everything you need to know before you buy your next cigar, including basic etiquette, know-how and a breakdown of best cigars across different price points and flavor profiles.


The Short List

    Best Mild-Bodied Cigars

      Best Medium-Bodied Cigars

        Best Full-Bodied Cigars

          The Short List

          Best Overall Cigar: Davidoff White Label Short Perfecto


          The quality of the tobacco here is extremely high, and it’s a benchmark of construction. It’s smaller than other Davidoff cigars, meaning it won’t won’t break the bank, and it is an excellent example of a mild-bodied cigar that’s still rich and complex.
          Tasting Notes: Starts with hay and buttery smoke, transitioning into earthiness and even a touch of pepper spice in its final third.
          Filler: Dominican Republic
          Binder: Dominican Republic
          Wrapper: Ecuadorian-grown Connecticut

          Buy: $70 (Box of 4)

          Best Cigar for Beginners: Nat Sherman Sterling Series


          An approachable, balanced, and affordable cigar with fantastic construction. A prime example of the pleasant nuance of a Connecticut wrapper.
          Tasting Notes: Connecticut wrappers impart a creamy, buttery flavor, with notes of cocoa, wood, and toasted bread. This cigar in particular is the perfect pairing with a cup of coffee.
          Filler: Dominican
          Binder: Dominican
          Wrapper: Ecuadorian-grown Connecticut

          Buy: $158 (Box of 10)

          Best Cigar for Special Occasions: Illusione Epernay


          This box-pressed cigar was designed to cater to the European profile — it’s milder than many Americans prefer — and it was named for the famous Champagne region. Just like a bottle of bubbly, it might be best saved for special celebratory moments.
          Tasting Notes: Distinct floral notes give way to honey, coffee and cedar.
          Binder: Nicaragua
          Filler: Nicaragua
          Wrapper: Corojo, Nicaragua

          Buy: $300 (Box of 25)

          Introduction

          To novices, smoking a cigar — hell, just venturing into a local cigar store to buy one — can feel more daunting than fun. The mechanics of properly smoking one (how to draw without inhaling?) don’t come naturally. Faux pas (when to ash the thing?) abound. And then there’s the basic question of which cigar, in a room stuffed with boxes of the things, to buy.

          You’re not imagining it: cigar smoking is full of tradition, ritual and enigma. The good news, says Pierre Rogers, is that cigar smokers form a natural, welcoming community — acolytes not just to the rolled leaf, but to lighting them up together.

          Community is Rogers’s purview. He’s the founder of PuroTrader, the world’s largest peer-to-peer cigar trading platform, hosted in an online service that also includes community-created cigar ratings, forums and blog posts. Rogers created the service as a searchable e-humidor for collectors after discovering that someone had stolen a single cigar out of a prized box he’d been saving for over a decade. “Initially, we set out to create a way for every collector for free to build an online humidor — a way to catalog their own collection, take notes on each cigar, and then make it searchable. You could log on and look at anybody’s humidor, anywhere in the world. The inevitable conclusion to that was, ‘You got something I want — how do we make that happen?’” he says.

          A baseline of knowledge will help you focus on those pleasures and making new friends, rather than discerning the difference between a V cut and a straight cut. So I asked Rogers to give me a rundown of cigar etiquette and basic knowledge, along with the cigars he loves most, across a range of prices and through the common categories of mild-, medium-, and full-bodied. Consider them a good starting place to figure out what you like and don’t like.

          Cigar Terms to Know

          Wrapper: The single leaf that literally wraps the outside of the cigar. It imparts around 60 percent of the cigar’s final flavors. Its flavors have to do with its country of origin, the way it’s grown (in the sun or shaded) and the type of tobacco plant. Different examples include Connecticut, maduro, claro and oscuro.

          Filler: The innermost leaves rolled within a cigar, almost always a blend of different types of leaves.

          Binder: The tobacco that helps hold a cigar together. It must be the strongest leaf in a cigar, but also imparts flavor.

          Ring Gauge: The diameter of a cigar, measured by sixty-fourths of an inch. The bigger the ring gauge, the bigger the diameter.

          Head/Cap: The end of a cigar that is cut and put in your mouth. Make sure not to cut off the entire cap, which will unravel the wrapper.

          Foot: The end of a cigar that is lit. Smell this end before lighting to get a whiff of all the tobacco inside.

          Strength and Body: Are not the same. The strength of a cigar has to do with how powerfully its nicotine affects the smoker; the body has to do with the impact of the cigar’s flavors in the mouth, its mouthfeel, and its overall richness.

          Best-Cigars-Gear-Patrol-Ambiance

          A cigar’s wrapper imparts around 60 percent of the cigar’s final flavors. Its flavors have to do with its country of origin, the way it’s grown (in the sun or shaded), and the type of tobacco plant.

          How to Smoke a Cigar

          Step 1: Cut the cigar.

          “Before you light it, you’ve got to cut it. The trick with a cut is when you look at any cigar, any shape, you can see where the roller has rolled an extra cap line between the wrapper of the cigar and head of the cigar. When you cut, you want to cut just above that line. You’re only removing the cap. You’re not cutting into the wrapper. If you cut into the wrapper, i.e. you cut a little too much off of the top, it will start to unravel and fall apart in your mouth. There are several different kinds of cuts: A straight cut is the classic way to do it.” — Pierre Rogers

          Step 2. Toast the foot.

          “[Use] a match or a butane lighter. You want to use the heat, not the flame. You want the cigar to be a quarter inch to an inch above the flame, and you want to toast the foot of that cigar. Rotate the cigar and toast. You should be literally toasting it. Browning just the edges, just barely. Don’t get any char or flame on the wrapper. — Pierre Rogers

          Step 3: Draw and rotate.

          “Once it’s evenly toasted, still using just the heat, draw and rotate. That should only take a moment to light it if you’ve properly toasted it, since the cigar is primed to make that happen. The different types of tobacco in there are meant to be smoked in a linear fashion; you don’t want a third of the bottom to be lit, because then you’re only tasting that one piece, and destroying the profile. Another obvious but overlooked tip: when using a match to light, let the head burn off, and only use the stick of wood to light the cigar. Allow the sulfur head to dissipate, because you don’t want to pull any of that into the cigar.” — Pierre Rogers

          Step 4: Keep the cherry cool.

          “One of my tips about maximizing the enjoyment of any cigar, cheap or expensive, new or old, is to keep the cherry cooler. You do that by taking long, slow, easy draws on the cigar. Don’t take short pulls where you heat up that cherry. That’s a way to create acidity, acridness, and a burnt carbon taste. — Pierre Rogers

          Step 5: Taste the cigar.

          “Allow the smoke to come into your palate from the tip of your tongue, front to back and side to side. You don’t want to push all that smoke out too rapidly. Just gently exhale the smoke. Obviously, with cigars, you’re not inhaling. It’s just for the flavor. So think about how that flavor hits your tongue. Start with the basic ones. Is it salty? Sweet? Bitter? Sour? Those are basics. We tend to all agree on those things. — Pierre Rogers

          Step 6: Ash the Cigar

          “The best way to do it is a light touch on the bottashtray ash tray, and roll the cigar to let the ash fall off. The real reason you do it is to control the temperature of the cherry, the lit part. You want to keep it well lit but cool. There’s a perfect ratio. If you don’t smoke your cigar fast enough, because there are no additives in a cigar, it’ll go out. The cherry gets too cool. However if you start puffing away on it, and the cherry becomes really bright, it becomes bitter and acrid, and you don’t want that. So there’s this balance that you’re always trying to strike between keeping your cherry fully lit but as cool as possible.” — Pierre Rogers

          Best Mild Cigars

          Best-Cigars-Gear-Patrol-Header-Light

          “A mild cigar is similar to a great cup of coffee with a touch of half and half in it,” Rogers says. “It’s warm and rich, but it’s also soft and very approachable.” According to him, the best examples come from the Dominican Republic; they also tend to have a Connecticut wrapper, which is golden and light in color. “The flavor tends to be very subtle and soft,” Rogers says. “No sharp edges, no bitterness. Something that on a fresh palate with nothing in your stomach you can really enjoy, and it won’t disrupt your day. That’s what a great mild cigar is to me.”

          Nat Sherman Sterling Series


          Most Approachable Mild Cigar: An approachable, balanced, and affordable cigar with fantastic construction. “They do a great job with all the finesse that goes into it — the branding, packaging, and the nuance of the cigar itself — and at a very reasonable price point,” Rogers says. It’s a prime example of the pleasant nuance of a Connecticut wrapper.
          Tasting Notes: Connecticut wrappers impart a creamy, buttery flavor, with notes of cocoa, wood, and toasted bread. This cigar in particular is the perfect pairing with a cup of coffee.
          Filler: Dominican
          Binder: Dominican
          Wrapper: Ecuadorian-grown Connecticut

          Buy: $158 (Box of 10)

          Davidoff White Label Short Perfecto


          Best Short Smoke: “Davidoff is the Mercedes-Benz of cigars,” Rogers says. That means high quality — at a high price. The quality of the tobacco inside is extremely high, and it’s a benchmark of construction. But this smaller cigar won’t break the bank, and it is an excellent example of a mild-bodied cigar that’s still rich and complex.
          Tasting Notes: It starts with hay and buttery smoke, transitioning into earthiness and even a touch of pepper spice in its final third.
          Filler: Dominican Republic
          Binder: Dominican Republic
          Wrapper: Ecuadorian-grown Connecticut

          Buy: $73 (Box of 4)

          Foundation Highclere Castle


          Best Mild Yet Complex Blend: Nicholas Melillo, the founder of Foundation Cigar Company, hails from “the great state of Connecticut.” That means he has a great appreciation for the light-colored wrapper that bears the Connecticut name, and the creamy smoke it produces. The Highclere Castle uses Nicaraguan filler and Brazilian binder to add complexity to the mild flavors.
          Tasting Notes: Creamy, with pepper, citrus, and leather.
          Filler: Nicaragua
          Binder: Brazil
          Wrapper: Ecuadorian-grown Connecticut

          Buy: $216+ (Box of 20)

          Best Medium Cigars

          Best-Cigars-Gear-Patrol-Header-Mid

          An increase in the body of the cigar has a lot to do with with how its smoke feels in your mouth. “Is there an oiliness there? A richness?” Rogers asks. “Wine people call it mouthfeel, and it’s no different with cigars.” Medium cigars are what most people end up smoking — they’re a great middle ground. “It provides enough strength that can be paired nicely with everything from a coffee to a bourbon. Flavors tend to be richer, the mouthfeel warmer and oilier. The smoke tends to be denser and richer,” Rogers says.

          Illusione Epernay


          Best Box-Pressed Cigar: “This is a fantastic box pressed cigar,” Rogers says, indicating its squared-off shape from quite literally being pressed into a box. It was designed to cater to the favored European profile — milder than Americans prefer — and named for the famous Champagne region. And just like a bottle of bubbly, it might be best saved for special celebratory moments.
          Tasting Notes: Distinct floral notes give way to honey, coffee and cedar.
          Binder: Nicaragua
          Filler: Nicaragua
          Wrapper: Corojo, Nicaragua

          Buy: $300 (Box of 25)

          Tatuaje Tattoo Series


          Best Spicy Cigar: Founder Pete Johnson and master blender Don ‘Pepin’ Garcia are well respected for making cigars that consistently receive high scores from reviewers. The secret may be “Cuban-esque” flavors, stemming from Cuban-seed Nicaraguan-grown tobacco.
          Tasting Notes: More spice and pepper than other medium-bodied cigars, though it also features cocoa, sweet cream and cedar notes.
          Binder: Nicaragua
          Filler: Nicaragua
          Wrapper: Habano, Ecuador

          Buy: $146 (Box of 50)

          Camacho BG Meyer Gigantes


          Best Big Stick: Part of a bolder series of cigars made by Camacho, the Gigantes is a play on the 6-inch by 54-inch cigar format, with a large ring gauge. But bigger cigars aren’t necessarily more intense: a larger size means more airflow and less density of the tobacco.
          Tasting Notes: Grassy and earthy, with subtle spice, mocha, woodiness, and a berry sweetness.
          Binder: Brazil
          Filler: Nicaragua, Dominican Republic
          Wrapper: Habano

          Buy: $180 (Box of 20)

          Padron 1926 Series


          Best Mellow Smoke: Padron is a beloved cigar-making institution, founded by Jose Orlando Padron, a Cuban refugee living in Miami, in 1964. The 1926 series is their most limited, and the natural wrapper version (as opposed to the darker, pungent maduro) is a mellow, smooth smoke.
          Tasting Notes: Caramel sweetness, a cedar-y tang, and notes of black and cayenne pepper.
          Binder: Nicaragua
          Filler: Nicaragua
          Wrapper: Natural, Nicaragua
          Price: $56+, pack of four

          Learn More: Here

          Ashton ESG


          Most Balanced Smoke: While Ashton is generally thought of as an entry-level cigar, the ESG (Estate Sun Grown) jacks up the price tag. “Because of that high cost, it doesn’t get fair press,” Rogers says. Its sun-grown wrapper (as opposed to the more common shade-grown) creates a more oily, pungent leaf.
          Tasting Notes: Oily nuts, leather, earth and cedar, with a light, creamy smoke.
          Binder: Dominican Republic
          Filler: Dominican Republic
          Wrapper: Sun-grown, Dominican Republic

          Buy: $22+ (Singles)

          Best Full-Bodied Cigars

          Best-Cigars-Gear-Patrol-Header-Heavy

          Full-bodied cigars can go in a few different directions, particularly, becoming spicy. “You can have a few different kinds of spice,” Rogers says. “A white pepper, black pepper, or even a cayenne pepper.” Those larger flavors can hold their own against a steak dinner or a peaty Scotch. “But the key here remains balance. Strength is not flavor. When you smoke that cigar, you want the palate to be full of flavor. Rich, complex. That’s what makes a great full cigar — not the strength,” Rogers says.

          Arturo Fuente Anejo


          Best Cognac Barrel-Aged Cigar: In 1998, the OpusX’s downfall was to cigar smokers’ benefit: After Hurricane Georges created a shortage of wrapper tobacco, the brand switched to Connecticut broadleaf maduro wrapper aged in Cognac barrels, and the Anejo was born. The OpusX returned, of course, but the Anejo stuck around, treasured for the sweetness that wrapper layered atop the spicy, robust binder and filler.
          Tasting Notes: Cognac, oily sweetness, butter and nuts.
          Binder: Dominican Republic
          Filler: Dominican Republic
          Wrapper: Connecticut Broadleaf aged in Cognac barrels, America

          Buy: $48+ (Box of 5)

          Padron Series 3000 Maduro


          Best Maduro Cigar: Padron grows its own maduro wrappers rather than sourcing them, then wraps them around long-aged Nicaraguan binder and filler. The result is one of the most balanced full-bodied cigars around.
          Tasting Notes: A “barnyard” earthiness that gives way to cocoa sweetness and oily nuttiness.
          Binder: Nicaragua
          Filler: Nicaragua
          Wrapper: Nicaragua

          Buy: $7 (Single Stick)

          Ashton VSG


          Best Affordable Full-Bodied Cigar: This is Rogers’s pick for an affordable, full-bodied cigar, with plenty of flavor and solid construction despite Ashton’s entry-level price. Its bold flavors are thanks in part to a sun-grown Ecuadorian wrapper that’s oily and rich.
          Tasting Notes: Cedar, espresso, and dark chocolate.
          Binder: Dominican Republic
          Filler: Dominican Republic
          Wrapper: Sun-grown, Ecuador

          Buy: $12 (Single Stick)

          Fuente Fuente OpusX


          Best Collector’s Cigar: When it was released in 1995, the OpusX proved that Dominican-grown, Cuban-seed tobacco could be the best in the industry. Ever since its release, it’s been considered one of the best full-bodied cigars on the market, and is a collector’s favorite.
          Tasting Notes: Cayenne pepper and leather.
          Binder: Dominican Republic
          Filler: Dominican Republic
          Wrapper: Dominican Republic

          Learn More: Here

Did a 19th Century German Appliance Maker Make a Dyson Vacuum Competitor?

In the land of cordless stick vacuums, Dyson is king. There are other brands — Shark, Bissell, Hooker and so on — but, through performance, reliability or new technology, the British home appliance giant holds dominion over all of them. One of the few appliance makers that can compete with Dyson on each point is Miele, but the old German company hadn’t thrown its hat in the ring until this summer, when it released the Triflex Cordless Stick vacuums.

Buy Now: $499+

What’s Good

The Triflex makes its best case through a flurry of quality of life improvements. Lights on the vacuum’s head illuminate bits of dirt and debris. The battery life — a max of 60 minutes per charge, or roughly 45 minutes set on auto — is plenty. It can “park” itself and stand up without being braced by a wall or piece of furniture, which saves walls from scuffs. The dust ejection system is less messy than others I’ve tested.

Then we arrive at the product’s namesake feature — a triple threat of vacuuming formats. What seemed like a tedious gimmick proved rather clever. The vacuum’s power hub — where the battery, motor and dust bin are — can be moved to base of the vacuum (where the suction is happening) when cleaning floors, to the hilt of the vacuum to reach elevated surfaces and directly to the head of the vacuum, sans-stick, to clean smaller spaces like a car.

Its cleaning performance is consistently good — it makes quick work of dog hair (mine is medium length, coarse and prone to massive shedding), dirt and the other unnamed bits of stuff that wind up in its path.

miele triflex hx1

Miele

What’s Not So Good

Like Dyson’s latest cordless stick vacuums, Miele’s Triflex line is expensive. A strong argument could be made that the technology, quality of life improvements, reliability, warranty and service offered by Miele makes the (starting at) $500 pill easier to swallow, but it remains a $500+ vacuum nonetheless.

The three configurations is clever, but also confusing at first. Figuring out what plugs in where takes some getting used to.

Alternatives

The one-to-one comparison would likely be Dyson’s V10 model (its second-newest). The two products share a starting price of around $500, can be broken down for smaller jobs and employ washable HEPA filters. For me, the Triflex’s ease of use and Miele’s notable customer service record break the tie, but Dyson loyalists may be attracted to the brand’s more modern design and huge suction power.

Verdict

It is easy to dismiss Miele’s Triflex as a high-priced luxury product, but its performance and thoughtful design features make an argument for splurge. If you live in a small- or medium-sized home (large homes typically have too much ground to cover for wireless vacuums) and want a product that will be supported (and last) for years, take the dive. Or wait for a sale. I wouldn’t blame you.

Buy Now: $499+

Assistant Editor, Home and Design Will Price is Gear Patrol’s home and drinks editor.

This content is created and maintained by a third party, and imported onto this page to help users provide their email addresses. You may be able to find more information about this and similar content at piano.io

This Funky Lounge Chair Is the Chair of My Dreams

Wild Barn wildbarncoffee.com

$15.50

Because of, well, everything, I haven’t been able to travel this year. Which means I haven’t been able to try out some amazing coffee shops around the world. Luckily, Wild Barn, a coffee company based in Denver, recently made its canned coffees available nationwide through its e-commerce store. Wild Barn’s Nitro Cold Brew is a black canned coffee with added goji berries and cacao nibs. The additions, types of superfoods for their antioxidants, don’t add much to the flavor as much as they are there to increase your energy boost. And yes, it says “sun’s out buns out” on the can.

The Best Workbenches and Supports for Your DIY Projects

best work benches

Staff

When it comes to work benches and work supports, less is more. We’ve seen countless variations in our time, and the vast majority have fallen by the wayside because they failed to acknowledge the axiom that the more gizmos you add, the more stuff there is to break. And we’ve built various kinds, with our experience bearing out that simplicity and robustness take you further than some slick piece of hardware. So we selected the models here based on that. We looked for simplicity, durability, and repairability. We admit, the selection below won’t win any awards at the next industrial design competition. On the other hand, they’ll more likely help you get the job done and still be reporting for duty long after some shiny award winner called it quits.

Advertisement – Continue Reading Below

Simplest Bench

Woodstock Shop Fox D3640

Maybe all you want is a straightforward little table to build that bird house, paint a shutter, or pot a plant. The Shop Fox is a good choice. Its laminated softwood top measures 1.25-inches thick by 14-inches wide by 40-inches long. The top’s gently curved edge on its front and back make it more resistant to splintering compared to a top with a sharp edge. While the base is light-gauge steel channel, the connections at the legs and crossrails are double bolted. The result is that the bench is rated to support 700 pounds—likely far more than you’ll need.

Sjobergs 23.625-in W x 35.4375-in H Wood Work Bench

Sjobergs lowes.com

$2,486.93

This expensive and stout workbench is built in Sweden by Sjoberg, a company with 90 years of experience making benches and tool cabinets. The SJO-33458 is a centuries-old design favored by European woodworkers. It has two vises—one oriented along the bench’s long axis and the other across it. These can be used as they are to clamp a workpiece, and they work with bench dogs, the four steel pins provided with the bench. Holes for the dogs are located symmetrically across the bench, down its length, and in the body of the vise jaw. Placing bench dogs in the vise jaw and the bench gives you the freedom to clamp down what you’re working on anywhere on the bench’s large platform. This allows you to hold a wide variety of pieces, regardless of their thickness or shape.

Starter Bench

Craftsman CMST27200R

The Craftsman CMST27200R is a great first bench. It consists of a 1-inch-thick hardwood top measuring 41.25-inches wide by 6-feet long supported on a steel substructure. This structure has cross rails bolted to two vertical sheet steel panels, with strength-inducing channels formed into their length. Four leveling feet help the bench stand without rocking on uneven floors. It’s rated to support 1,450 pounds, so don’t be shy about bolting a hearty machinist vise or even a drill press to the top. The bench’s proportions are such that a Craftsman rolling or stationary tool box will fit neatly below. A last detail worth calling out is the 2-inch-tall backsplash that helps keep tools from rolling off. Bonus: It also prevents the edge of the bench from forming a channel that can trap dust and debris when the bench is bolted to a wall.

Industrial Duty

Knaack 44 Jobmaster

Okay, we admit that we might be getting carried away here, but we couldn’t resist including this massive Knaack workbench; the 44 Jobmaster is the real industrial deal. What do you get for this money? Sixteen-gauge, powder-coated steel construction, including the top—that’s about the same metal thickness in the tray of a heavy-duty wheel barrow. You also get ball bearing drawer slides that allow each drawer to support 80 pounds worth of tools or hardware, industrial-duty caster wheels, and an 800-pound rating. The box measures 25-inches wide by 40.5-inches long, with the top about 37.5 inches off the floor. If all that won’t handle your tool needs, we’d have to ask, what will?

Welding Sawhorse

DeWalt DXMF4618WT

DeWalt has quietly entered the welding tool business, and among its handful of offerings is this cool bench, with legs that fold out and lock. Note that the top is perforated with ¾-inch holes and slots­ to permit you to clamp just about any oddball shape that you happen to be fabricating. The top is 18-inches wide and 45-inches long, and the four adjustable legs can place it anywhere from a few inches off the floor to about three feet up. The entire thing folds into a tight 40-pound bundle consisting of the top and four legs folded into it. Carry it like a suitcase thanks to that whopper of the handle on its side.

Clamping Sawhorse

Rockwell JawHorse RK9003

Rockwell’s JawHorse is popular with contractors and homeowners alike—a rare thing. It works on its own as a three-legged workbench or stand, but can also be paired with another JawHorse spanned by lumber and plywood to form a work surface. To use its clamp, press down on the foot pedal to produce up to a ton of stay-put force—plenty to hold a piece of lumber or a large object like a kitchen cabinet. Or the clamp can exert pressure to bring two pieces together, enabling you to glue them or drill a hole through both.

Folding Sawhorse

Bora Portamate Speedhorse PM-4500

Bora Speedhorses are sold in pairs; they’re designed to secure 2 x 4 lumber to form a two-horse sawing support 33 inches off the ground, or the 2 x 4s that it secures can be bridged by plywood forming a large work surface. Bora claims a Speedhorse will support up to 1,500 pounds. When it’s done with a day’s work, fold the legs into the 36-inch-long body, and call it a day.

Bora Centipede 15-Strut Work Stand and Portable Table

The Centipede workstand is one of the more unusual we’ve seen. All you do is take it out of its pouch and expand the 15 steel tube struts as shown. Flop a sheet of plywood down on top of it (4 feet by 8 feet), and you’ve got yourself a surprisingly large and simple work surface 30 inches off the ground.

DIY Sawhorse

Lee Valley Sawhorse Brackets

If you’ve given up on sawhorse brackets, it’s time to reconsider. We’ll give you this: Most are chintzy beyond belief­. But these brackets from Lee Valley are molded out of high-impact polystyrene, and the bracket that supports the top will accommodate anything from a 2 x 4 all the way up to a 2 x 12. Each set makes one sawhorse; when finished, the horse has a 300-pound load rating.

This content is created and maintained by a third party, and imported onto this page to help users provide their email addresses. You may be able to find more information about this and similar content at piano.io

Advertisement – Continue Reading Below

It’s Time You Start an Indoor Edible Garden. Start Here

Since COVID-19 forced people to stay at home more, 54 percent of survey takers say they’re cooking more, too. The natural progression to this is growing your own produce apparently. Bloomscape just launched its Edible Garden collection, a selection of herbs, fruits and vegetables.

Why shop from Bloomscape? You get perks like careful shipping, pre-potted plants and access to the brand’s in-house plant mom Joyce Mast and her cohort of plant experts for plant care. Shop the Edible Garden now, and orders over $75 ship for free.

Buy Now: $35-$65

Advertisement – Continue Reading Below

1 Hot Pepper Adobo

Bloomscape bloomscape.com

$35.00

2 Micro Tomato

Bloomscape bloomscape.com

$35.00

3 Aromatic Herbs Collection

Bloomscape bloomscape.com

$65.00

4 Chamomile

Bloomscape bloomscape.com

$35.00

5 Mint

Bloomscape bloomscape.com

$35.00

Tyler Chin is Gear Patrol’s Associate Staff Writer.

This content is created and maintained by a third party, and imported onto this page to help users provide their email addresses. You may be able to find more information about this and similar content at piano.io

Advertisement – Continue Reading Below

The 6 Leaf Blowers We’d Buy to Take on Fall’s Biggest Jobs

best leaf blowers

Toro

As much as people love jumping in the leaves, chances are, you probably hate raking them. Sure, a cool breeze on a fall day while you’re outside raking leaves feels great, but actually raking the leaves blows. If you’re looking to get your lawn clean quickly and efficiently, you should consider shopping for a leaf blower.

The Best Leaf Blowers

The question of whether you should buy a gas or electric blower depends on the size of your yard. Gas-powered models offer greater mobility and a longer run time, but they’re louder, smellier, heavier, and require more maintenance. On the plus side, they’re better at moving wet leaves and work well on difficult terrain like stairs and hills.

You can also choose from different styles of blowers. The most popular leaf blowers are handheld, then there are some that you wear like a backpack, and there even are blowers that you push and walk behind.

As you’d expect, different types of blowers don’t perform the same way. Gas blowers typically are the most powerful and have the highest blow speeds (which is measured in MPH) and discharge more air (measured in cubic feet per minute or CFM). Our colleagues at Good Housekeeping say that for leaf-clearing jobs in areas that are larger than an acre, you’ll need a minimum of 400 CFM.

Similarly to vacuums, blowers come in both cordless and corded variants. Corded ones are best suited for small suburban landscapes or to clean out your garage. Cordless models are a good pick for the eco-conscious, and those who don’t need super-fast blowing speeds.

If you need to cover even more ground and blow away leaves in as little time as possible, a four-cycle, walk-behind gas engine is the way to go — but they’re the most expensive option. They’re an absolute beast at clearing large parking lots and warehouses, or sweeping away sawdust and wood chips. Just make sure you wear hearing protection, because these babies get loud.

Whether you’re looking for a quiet and reliable electric model, a convenient cordless one, a powerful yet still affordable gas blower, or a more sophisticated walk-behind, we have you covered after researching and comparing 30 different leaf blowers. So, stop spending all weekend running around with a rake and invest in one of these efficient leaf blowers which’ll make cleanup a breeze.

Advertisement – Continue Reading Below

1

Best Overall

Toro PowerJet F700 Leaf Blower

Toro

$57.00

This leaf blower from Toro delivers top-notch performance and is more powerful than the competition. That’s because it offers an air volume rated at an impressive 725 CFM. For comparison, most other blowers top out at just 500 CFM.

Given the blower’s power, it has max air speeds of up to 140 miles per hour, providing enough oomph to lift wet leaves and to break apart large piles of debris. The corded blower weighs under 7 pounds, it’s easy to operate, and it’s backed by a 2-year warranty. Unfortunately, it does not come with an extension cord. We recommend a 14-gauge one, like this cord from Husky. 

2

Best Cordless Blower

Ego LB5804 Power+ 580 CFM Leaf Blower

EGO

$329.00

Since the Ego blower is powered by a battery, you can move freely without being restricted by a cord. Plus, it’s four times quieter than gas blowers. Features of the Power+ include a weather-resistant design and variable speed control, so you can increase the airflow for those times when you need an extra boost in power.

The Power+ includes a rechargeable battery that delivers users approximately 45 minutes of runtime. Competing cordless blowers, like the Worx WG591, only offer 25 minutes of battery life.

The Ego weighs in at over 10 pounds, which makes it more cumbersome than other electric blowers, and it’s much pricier. However, given its 5-year warranty, long battery life, and impressive power, we think it’s worthy of your hard-earned dollars.

3 Worx WG512 Trivac 2.0 3-in-1 Vacuum Blower, Mulcher and Vac

WORX amazon.com

$99.00

This tool from Worx is the ultimate triple threat. It functions as a blower, mulcher, and yard vacuum with just a flip of a switch. It’s powered by a 12-amp motor that won’t pump out smelly fumes like a gas-powered blower would, and it’s equipped with a metal propeller that absolutely annihilates autumn leaves.

The Worx WG512 forces 600 CFM from its nozzle at a maximum speed of 75 mph, meaning that it expels air at a greater rate than most. Weighing in at 8.8 pounds, this pick is on the heavier side. Fortunately, its included collection bag has a strap, which helps make it easier to carry.

4

Best Backpack Blower

Husqvarna 350BT 2-Cycle Gas Backpack Leaf Blower

Husqvarna

$326.00

This backpack blower is about as serious as it gets. With its 2.1-horsepower engine and maximum power speed of 7,500 RPM, this blower generates wind speeds up to 180 miles per hour.

It’s the kind of blower that you’ll see on construction sites and in the hands of landscapers and yard workers. Whether you work in a commercial setting or you just want the best of the best, this backpack blower is a fantastic model that’s worth the splurge.

5

Most Lightweight

Black+Decker LSW36 Leaf Blower

Black+Decker

$140.00

Black+Decker comes to the table with an affordable, easy-to-use option that comes with a handy vacuum attachment. It’s a cordless blower that’s perfect for light-duty sweeping in the garage or for blowing around those tight spots, like between fence posts. It offers an air speed up to 120 miles per hour and weighs just 5 pounds.

6 Troy-Bilt TB672 208cc Jet Sweep Wheeled Leaf Blower

Troy-Bilt amazon.com

$542.00

This commercial-grade, walk-behind blower is an absolute powerhouse at pushing aside large heaps of leaves. It offers an impressive airflow volume capacity, blow speed, and its wheels and handlebar grip make it easy to maneuver.

This option is a gas-powered model that features a 4-cycle 208 cc engine. It’s quick to start and the blower is backed by a 2-year warranty.

Technology Editor Brandon Carte has been the technology editor at BestProducts.com since 2017, where he’s been covering the latest gadgets and scouring the internet for the greatest deals; His tech reporting has been featured on TopTenReviews.com and USA Today.

This content is created and maintained by a third party, and imported onto this page to help users provide their email addresses. You may be able to find more information about this and similar content at piano.io

Advertisement – Continue Reading Below

This Japanese Company Turned My Favorite Underwear Into Your Favorite Bedsheets

Welcome to Window Shopping, a weekly exercise in lusting over home products we want in our homes right the hell now. This week: a handheld cleaner for gross messes, an Ina Garten-endorsed side table and more.

1 Airism Full-Size Fitted Bed Sheet

Uniqlo uniqlo.com

$49.90

Uniqlo’s Airism underwear — for tops and bottoms — are some of the most comfortable and moisture-wicking apparel around. It brought the fabric to face masks, and now we can sleep on Airism, too. The bed sheets and pillowcases are a made of a majority of polyester, but if it’s anything like the underwear, it should be cool to the touch and dry quickly. Weirdly, the bed sheets only come in twin and full sizes, so interpret that as you will.

2 The Sidekick

Russet russet.com

$75.00

Every new flatpack furniture brand that comes not is immediately compared to Ikea. Russet is one of them. The brand’s inaugural product already wins for being easy to assemble, aka zero tools required. (But it does come with this dope mallet.) The $75 side table/display stand/multi-use piece of furniture is a great buy for those looking to answer the question “Where’d you get that?” with anything besides “Ikea.” And this Ina Garten endorsement really sold it for me because who wouldn’t trust the Barefoot Contessa?

3 1188 Eco-Friendly Outdoor Rug

Outer liveouter.com

$475.00

Outer already makes one of the best outdoor sofas on the web. Now the brand is debuting its second product, a range of rugs to complement its flagship product. Available in three colors in three sizes, the rugs are wholly made of recycled water bottles. Up close, each rug is made up of a multitude of colors, which helps to disguise dirt and grime buildup (these sit outside all day after all). If you’re wondering what the “1188” means in its name, it refers to the 1,188 recycled bottles it takes to make the 9-feet-by-12-feet rug.

4 Spillbuster Cordless Spill + Spot Cleaner

Black and Decker amazon.com

$99.00

This picks up “wet and chunky messes.” I’ll buy this just to get rid of that disgusting phrase. It uses a vacuum to suction large pieces, with a spray nozzle for breaking down deeply rooted stains and a power brush to remove it for good. Hopefully I won’t have any wet and chunky messes, but I could see this being good for cleaning all the rugs in my apartment.

5 Heatbag

Ostrichpillow kckb.st

$60.00

The Heatbag is like an IcyHot patch except it’s a cuddly pillow and you can use it over and over again. The washable outer layer is made of recycled foam and houses a clay core, which retains heat better than a hot water bottle. The side of the Heatbag that touches your body is tiny layered so you don’t burn yourself, and the outer-facing side is insulated to prevent heat or cold loss. I’ve been having some neck pain from terrible posture, and I think this may give me some relief.

Tyler Chin is Gear Patrol’s Associate Staff Writer.

This content is created and maintained by a third party, and imported onto this page to help users provide their email addresses. You may be able to find more information about this and similar content at piano.io

The Most Important Pieces of Mid-Century Modern Furniture to Know

Mid-century modern is revered because its feels timeless. The aesthetic is marked by clean and simple lines with few extraneous details. Kicking off (roughly) in the 1930s, mid-century modern marked a period when people wanted good-looking furniture at moderate price points. Nowadays, the original designs from this era are hardly affordable, but their swagger lives on. In order of inception, these are 15 of the most iconic mid-century modern pieces of furniture.

Wassily Chair

wassily chair

Courtesy

Designed by: Marcel Breuer
Year: 1925

Wassily Kandinsky, this chair’s namesake, was the first person to be blessed with seeing Marcel Breuer’s tubular steel chair, the first of its kind. Breuer, a product of the Bauhaus movement, took the standard club chair and pared it down to simple, straight lines. The Wassily chair doesn’t fall squarely into Bauhaus or mid-century modern, and that’s because the chair’s inception came at a time when designers were beginning to transition from the former to the latter.

Buy Now: $2,893

LC3 Grand Modele Armchair

lc3 chair

Courtesy

Designed by: Charlotte Perriand
Year: 1928

For such a dense and commanding chair, the LC3 is minimal in its design. A tubular steel frame supports a square build, which is thick, plush and inviting. The Le Corbusier group, of which Perriand got her start at, nicknamed the LC3 as a “cushion basket,” an apt name for a chair that is all cushion and little else.

Buy Now: $6,105

Cesca Chair

cesca chair

Courtesy

Designed by: Marcel Breuer
Year: 1928

Sequels usually suck unless it’s Marcel Breuer following up his Wassily Chair with the Cesca, named after his daughter Francesca. Like the Wassily, the Cesca is made of bent tubular steel and either comes upholstered or finished with wood or cane. The contrast of hard steel and natural materials creates a chair that is both pleasing to look at and nice to sit in.

Buy Now: $931

Barcelona Chair

barcelona chair

Courtesy

Designed by: Ludwig Mies van der Rohe
Year: 1929

Designed to sit in a Spanish throneroom, the Barcelona chair is a seat fit for royalty. As it was nearly a century ago, the chair is still made with Spinneyback cowhide leather, an African sapele frame and loving hands.

Buy Now: $6,479

Aalto Stool 60

stack of stools

Courtesy

Designed by: Alvar Aalto
Year: 1933

Today, the Aalto Stool 60 looks like nothing more than a simple stool. But at its debut in 1933, the Aalto Stool was a breakthrough in the design world. Its three-legged design is fashioned by bending straight, solid birch into an L-shape to give the stool its stability. Available in an array of colors, the Aalto Stool may not elicit the same oohs and aahs as it once did, but if you know, you know.

Buy Now: $238

George Nelson Platform Bench

bench surrounded by plants

Courtesy

Designed by: George Nelson
Year: 1946

Don’t relegate the Nelson Bench to the seating category. Nelson’s multi-use bench is a seat, table or art piece. The slatted wood top sits on hefty wood legs, making this a presence in any home. The horizontal lines are a reflection of Nelson’s history as an architect, who designed the bench to make a statement without being a statement piece.

Buy Now: $1,195

Noguchi Table

noguchi table in living room setup

Courtesy

Designed by: Isamu Noguchi
Year: 1948

The Noguchi Table is art you can eat on. Its interlocked legs are formed by two pieces of solid wood topped by a thick plate of glass. As simple as it sounds, the Noguchi table is a beautiful piece of furniture, which leaves everything on the table since there’s no hiding from the transparent tabletop.

Buy Now: $2,295

PP501 The Chair

wegner the chair

Courtesy

Designed by: Hans Wegner
Year: 1948

Hans Wegner dubbed his PP501 chair “The Round One.” It gained notoriety for being used during the first televised presidential debate between John F. Kennedy and Richard Nixon. The made-in-Denmark chairs have some Scandinavian design callbacks like its naturalistic frame and streamlined structure, but Americans adopted a new distinguishing name for the Danish design: The Chair.

Learn More: Here

Eames Shell Chair

array of colorful shell chairs

Courtesy

Designed by: Charles and Ray Eames
Year: 1950s

There are Shell Chairs, and then there are Eames Shell Chairs. Charles Eames and Eero Saarinen sought to create a lightweight single-piece chair shell. After 11 years of experimenting with materials, Charles and Ray Eames made their now-iconic Shell Chairs from fiberglass. The chairs are currently available in recyclable plastic, eco-fiberglass or molded wood. Tread carefully with knock-offs – there are many.

    Buy Now: $695

    Knoll Sofa

    living room scene seen through window

    Courtesy

    Designed by: Florence Knoll
    Year: 1954

    The Knoll Sofa is clearly the inspiration for the new wave of mid-century modern sofas littering the internet. The Knoll’s streamlined design suits every living room aesthetic, and its no-sag seat suspension gives each sofa the same longevity as its design.

    Buy Now: $9,349

    Eames Lounge Chair and Ottoman

    eames lounge chair

    Courtesy

    Designed by: Charles and Ray Eames
    Year: 1956

    Charles and Ray Eames’ eponymous lounge set is arguably the most significant piece of furniture to come out of the mid-century modern era. An updated take on the club chair, the Eames Lounge Chair features a baseball mitt-like shape to fully envelop the body. For over 60 years, this iconic lounger has been the calling card for furniture enthusiasts and those with a little too much cash to spare.

    Buy Now: $7,995

    Marshmallow Sofa

    marshmallow chair

    Courtesy

    Designed by: George Nelson
    Year: 1956

    While it doesn’t resemble your standard Jet-Puffed marshmallow, the Marshmallow sofa does feature similarly soft and squishy round cushions. Each of the 18 cushions is removable for cleaning and interchangeable for ensuring even wear across all cushions. It’s a bit bolder than most mid-century modern furniture, as it acts as a turning point in the design era towards 1960s pop art.

    Buy Now: $5,285

    Pedestal Table

    saarinen dining table

    Courtesy

    Designed by: Eero Saarinen
    Year: 1957

    A farewell to legs. Saarinen’s approach to his pedestal collection was to eliminate the need for furniture legs. The Pedestal Table emits strong sculptural vibes — the stand strongly resembles the shape of molded clay — a result of the designer’s history as a sculptor.

    Buy Now: $4,417

    Egg Chair

    egg chair

    Courtesy

    Designed by: Arne Jacobsen
    Year: 1958

    Arne Jacobsen built the egg so Lady Gaga could one day hatch from her literal egg. Jacobsen, one of few women designers to break through in the mid-century modern era, created the Egg Chair that leaned more toward modern. The chair’s smooth, sculpted shape sits in contrast to the hard geometric shapes of more typical mid-century modern pieces.

    Buy Now: $8,251

    Shell Chair

    20 armchairs

    Design Within Reach

    Designed by: Hans Wegner
    Year: 1963

    From the front, Wegner’s Shell Chair has an upward curved seat, which is why some dub it “the smiling chair.” The low-profile, three-legged chair is as comfortable as it is beautiful, and it’s found new life as a staple furniture piece in Instagram backgrounds.

    Buy Now: $3,980

    Tyler Chin is Gear Patrol’s Associate Staff Writer.

2021 Living Vehicle Core Trailer

There’s traveling, and then there’s traveling in style. California-based Living Vehicle does the latter in spades with its new Core Trailer, whose name give the connotation that it qualifies as rudimentary digs. Nothing could be…

The 20 Best Office Chairs of 2020

This definitive guide to the best office chairs of 2020 explores everything you need to know to find an office chair best suited to your needs, including ergonomics, price, aesthetics and features.

The Short List

    Best Budget Office Chairs

      Best Ergonomic Office Chairs

        Long has the doom of sitting been forecasted. Published papers aplenty have argued that a stationary life is shorter and trouble-ridden, and the primary workarounds are many — standing desks, frequent breaks, stretching, taking walks and so on. But none address the simple fact that, sometimes, to get shit done, we simply need to plant ourselves in a chair and get after it.

        Luckily, a number of companies are working to beat each other at building the best office chairs, even though they all know it’s not possible. No one chair is the best for everyone, so take our guide with lots of salt. If you can, go to stores and showrooms in your area and sit down, lean back, lean forward, pull levers and ask questions about everything. Your back, muscles, various joints and brain will thank you.

        The Short List

        Best Overall Office Chair: Steelcase Series 1

        Steelcase

        Steelcase’s entry-level office chair, the Series 1, combines looks, comfort and ergo-friendly features not usually found in a chair under $500 into one very strong value proposition.

        The chair is simple and compact, which is incredible considering how many built-in intuitive adjustment controls there are in the chair. The Series 1 employs a breathable mesh backing, dubbed 3D Micro Knit, which is flexible and supportive. Then comes the laundry list of adjustments: arm height, lumbar height, seat depth, tilt control and – obviously —seat height. The Series 1’s main highlight is its 4D adjustable arms. Like most office chairs, users can adjust the arm height. Steelcase goes many steps further by making the arm cap – the soft, supportive arm rest — mobile, too. It can slide forward and backward, side-to-side and pivot about 40 degrees. At $415, you really should just get this chair.

        Wayfair: $415

        Best Budget Office Chair: Alera Elusion



        Being on a budget does not mean settling for design of a lower quality; it means identifying smart engineering at price points don’t trigger panic attacks. The Alera Elusion, which is also our best option under $200, is just that. It’s mesh-backed and features loads of recline and tension adjustment options for just $190.

        If your definition of budget is a bit more expansive, we recommend Herman Miller’s Sayl chair, which is made with better materials and has a better warranty behind it — not to mention a company with a legendary reputation. That said, the extra $200 to $250 you’ll need to shell out for a Sayl makes an impact large enough to favor the more affordable, smartly designed Elusion chair.

        Walmart: $145 | Amazon: $170


        Best Budget Office Chairs

        14-Best-Office-Chairs-of-2018-Gear-Patrol-herman-miller-gp

        As with most products of the budget variety, temper your expectations. There is no sub-$100, $200 or even $500 office chair that does all things for all people, or performs equally to premium chairs. Expect materials that don’t necessarily ensure a long life and may not look stellar. That said, these chairs are ergonomic. Our budget picks are simply the most affordable you can go without sacrificing your health and wellbeing at work.

        Best Office Chair Under $150: Flash Furniture High Back Mesh Chair



        This mesh-bodied, high-back chair from Flash Furniture is the best and most versatile chair we’ve found under $100. It has an adjustable headrest (ideal for those who like to lean back), holds more weight than most dirt cheap options, has a tilt tension adjustment knob, offers firm lumbar support and isn’t absolutely atrocious to look at. If it’s missing anything (other than quality materials that would drive the price up), it’s adjustable armrests, but that’s the lowest number of serious compromises you’ll find out of seating in this price category.

        Walmart: $130 | Amazon: $130

        Best Office Chair Under $200: Alera Elusion Chair



        It looks as simple as any other chair you’d run into at Staples, but it isn’t. Alera’s Elusion chair borrows features like a full mesh back for breathability, a waterfall-edge seat cushion to maintain regular levels of leg circulation and more comfort customization than chairs fives times its price.

        Its only limiting factors are aesthetics (it is rather boring to look at) and the use of cheap materials, which means it’s likely not a great long-term seating option.

        Walmart: $145 | Amazon: $170

        Best Office Chair Under $400: Autonomous ErgoChair 2

        Autonomous

        Autonomous isn’t a new company, but it’s found its niche in the affordable-but-clever office chair space. The ErgoChair 2 features the mass-adjustability that’s needed in a chair you’ll sit in eight hours a day – the armrests move, the seat pan moves, the seat cushion moves and, perhaps most helpfully, the lumbar support slides up and down the spine of the chair. All this, in tandem with a mesh back and a wicked sub-$400 price point, make Autonomous’ chair one of the best value buys there is.

        Autonomous: $369

        Best Office Chair Under $500: Steelcase Series 1

        Steelcase

        There are chairs around the $500 mark that offer some of what the Series 1 offers, but none match it feature-for-feature without jumping into the $600 and $700 range. Our selection for the Best Overall Office Chair checks every box: strong warranty, huge well of personal adjustment options, solid build quality and a strong brand to back it all up.

        Wayfair: $415

        Branch Ergonomic Chair


        Branch is a new company that makes affordable home office gear. Its plainly named Ergonomic chair ticks the ergonomic boxes you’re looking for — adjustable height armrests, tilt, tilt tension, lumbar support, up-down functions, adjustable depth seat and an airy mesh back. Instead of the cheap plastics deployed by other ultra-cheap options, its base is made of a sturdier anodized aluminum. The brand offers white glove delivery in NYC, but self-assembly otherwise, which takes about 10 minutes.

        Branchs: $279

        Ikea Markus Chair


        Most of Ikea’s desk chairs are built with aesthetics top of mind, rather than performance. Avoid those. The Markus chair is the Swedish company’s most body-minded offering. Its high mesh back is good for taller folks and those of us who run hot, and despite Ikea’s reputation for cheapness, it’s better built than most frugal options. Plus, because it’s from Ikea and not a nobody Amazon company run by bots, you’re more likely to get customer service if anything goes wrong.

        Buy Now: $229

        Sihoo Ergonomics Office Chair


        What you get from this chair, for less than $300: a breezy mesh back, adjustable headrest, lower back support, variable armrests and easily one of the best spring-lock tilt mechanism of any cheap chair. That’s everything you can ask for out of a budget chair.

        Buy Now: $279

        The Short List

          Best Budget Office Chairs

            Best Ergonomic Office Chairs

              Best Office Chair Brands

              14-Best-Office-Chairs-of-2018-Gear-Patrol-leather-chair-2

              Humanscale

              An extreme and praise-worthy focus on sustainable, eco-friendly design and gorgeous aesthetics come together with research-backed ergonomics at Humanscale. A through-line can be seen in all Humanscale’s more recent products — simplicity. Simplicity urged forward by the late American industrial designer Niels Diffrient in his partnership with Humanscale, which yielded two of the most notable and respected chairs ever — the Freedom and Diffrient World.

              Learn More: Here

              Herman Miller

              Herman Miller is the company behind many of the most iconic pieces in the era of mid-century modern but its catalog has far more to offer than famous lounge chairs. When Herman Miller released the Aeron office chair, it instantly became the, or at least one of the, best makers of office seating the world over. The American brand’s most notable office chairs are likely the Aeron, Embody and the newly released Cosm, a fully passive ergonomic chair with a few unique-unto-itself features.

              Learn More: Here

              Steelcase

              Where Herman Miller and others work in a variety of furniture areas, Steelcase narrows its gaze to furniture with a performance and sustainability bend. The 105-year-old company is unrelenting in its focus on research-guided design, and it is most known for the Gesture, Leap and its auto-adjusting (and fairly new) SILQ.

              Learn More: Here

              Allsteel

              Allsteel is function and performance driven above all else. It bullied its way into office gear in the early 20th century making steel electrical boxes and lockers (it would take until the middle of the century to add its first chairs) Not all of its seating is beautiful looking (except for the Acuity, which is), but it is all based on the science of ergonomics.

              Learn More: Here

              Knoll

              Like Herman Miller, Knoll was (and has become again) mid-century royalty. Also like Herman Miller, it didn’t fall off the face of the earth. Knoll still peddles high-end, luxurious home furniture aplenty, but its office seating, the Generation line in particular, is a revelation. Ergonomic, good looking and sold at price points low and high, Knoll covers the spectrum of what you need now and in the future.

              Learn More: Here

              Best Ergonomic Office Chairs

              14-Best-Office-Chairs-of-2018-Gear-Patrol-herman-miller-blue

              Ergonomic design, to some extent, is present in all seating, but not all chairs can be called ergonomical. By way of built-in automatic adjustments or manually turning knobs and pulling levers, great ergonomical chairs are the ones that conform to the human body, and the best do that to specific human bodies, no matter their weight, height or posture. These are those chairs, in every specific taste and style we could think of.

              Best Office Chair for a Standing Desk: HAG Capisco Puls


              As illogical as it sounds, standing and raising desks do need seats of their own. Portland-based Fully specializes in supplying only the best ergonomic seating for the modern workspace (it’s most known for the Jarvis adjustable height desk), and the Capisco was the very first product it stocked.

              It allows for seating in any way that’s comfortable to you — stool seating, cross-legged, side sitting, sitting backwards and so on. Essentially, it encourages non-static working and provides the means to act on that comfortably.

              The Capisco Puls is the slimmer, newer and more affordable version ($300 cheaper) of the chair. Looking at the greater standing desk chair market, you could settle for less, but you’d be doing yourself a disservice.

              Fully: $525

              Best Office Chair for Gaming: Vertagear Triigger 275


              The proliferation of the racing-style chair as the defacto “gaming” chair is sad and dumb. The best gaming chair is not about immersing the sitter in the game or looking cool — it’s about support, customization and the ability to remain cool for hours.

              Vertagear’s Triigger series of chairs is just this, and the 275 model is the best balance of price and useful features. Though we’ve praised chairs that automatically adjust to all users in this guide, gaming requires a chair fine-tuned to the player. The Trigger 275 allows you to adjust armrest height, seat height, backrest height and lumbar support. And because it’s a mesh chair, you remain cooler for longer, and it doesn’t look juvenile (though you can get it with white, red and blue accents).

              The brand offers a premium option, too — the Vertagears 350 comes with an aluminum frame and calfskin leather accents for a couple hundred dollars more.

              Amazon: $600

              Best Office Chair for Home Use: Blu Dot Daily Task Chair


              Blu Dot’s mantra: bring good design to as many people as possible. As such, the Midwestern company’s designs ride the “I could afford that if I wanted to” line more than any modern furniture brand, and it’s all original, sturdy and hardwearing. The Daily Task Chair isn’t a loud or boastful piece to bring into your own home, but it’s interesting, a bit retro and comes with a few foundational ergonomic perks.

              2Modern: $599

              Best Mid-Century Modern Office Chair: Eames Aluminum Group Management Chair


              The Eames Management chair is from a time gone by, when office hierarchy was defined by corner offices, over-sized desks and, in this case, a luxe mid-back desk chair. What does that mean? It’s behind some others on this list in the ergonomics department, but it’s miles ahead in style. An aluminum frame, MCL leather and a distinctly mid-century look define the Eameses instantly recognizable seat. (Note: if you regularly spend working hours in your home office chair, we recommend leaning toward the more ergonomic-focused options in this guide.)

              Herman Miller: $1,335+

              Best Office Chair for Conference Rooms: Steelcase Silq


              A lack of fiddling with knobs and levers is what separates a good conference room chair from the chair at your desk. When people are coming in and out, there’s no time to pull out a manual to adjust the secondary recline tension. Steelcase’s conference room-minded Silq chair is one of the few examples of affordable passive ergonomics. Other than height, everything about the chair adjusts to the sitter automatically.

              Amazon: $645

              Best Office Chair with a Headrest: XG-Wing Management Chair

              X-Chair

              No chair ticks every box. X-Chairs Wing Management chair comes as close as any. The all-mesh design is plush and allows your body to regulate temperature without getting sweaty with non-breathable materials. The two-part back is a delightful combination of a King Cobra hood and the USS Enterprise “Command Chair,” which, other than looking very futuristic, is a pleasantly intense sight to behold once assembled. The chair’s look, weight and features say it’s time to work. The headrest is mesh, too, and it’s adjustable for sitters with different heights. In short, it twists and turns in every way a body might during an eight-hour workday and it’s made of ultra-light mesh and sturdy metal component parts.

              X-Chair: $975+

              Best Passive Ergonomic Office Chair: Herman Miller Cosm


              The success of Herman Miller’s office seating line is unquestioned (just look at our list), but this might be the largest departure from that line since it began. Where our “Best Value” choice was of the old school of passive ergonomics, Cosm is of the new.

              Apart from aesthetics and sizing options (the high-backed Cosm is stunning online and in person), the primary functional difference between the two is a single, completely unique innovation — the ability to use your weight to adjust tension to you without the need to slide your body forward or lift you up at all. This sliding and lifting lifts your legs ever so slightly up, resulting in added tension to the body.

              It’s a subtle difference, but one no other company had managed until Cosm. In fact, the only reason Herman Miller didn’t release an auto-adjusting chair prior was its inability to solve the riddle of the lifting legs.

              Lumens: $895+ | Herman Miller: $895+

              Best Leather Office Chair: Humanscale Freedom


              American industrial design legend Niels Diffrient authored many products of great importance, but this was his magnum opus. The Freedom chair marks the beginning of the shift away from manually-adjustable office seating (primarily because most people don’t actually know how to adjust the chairs properly) and to self-adjusting chairs.

              Specifically, the Freedom chair handles all recline tension and tilt functionality itself, while still allowing you to slide the seat backward or forward and the armrest up and down. Since its release, a hundred or more self-adjusting chairs have cropped up, but few have done so as elegantly as the Freedom chair.

              Its base model ships in a PU leather upholstery (as almost all “leather” office chairs do) with a die-cast aluminum frame, but you can special order real leather upon request.

              Humanscale: $1,899+ | Amazon: $1,995+

              Best Office Chair for Small Work Spaces: Humanscale Diffrient World Chair

              Humanscale

              Few manufacturers set out to make office chairs specifically for small spaces. This chair, also designed by Diffrient, has armrests that can be lifted or lowered to slide under a desk when not in use, a back high enough to allow for comfortable reclining and a width on the slimmer end.

              Instead of chairs requiring manual adjustment via knobs and levers like most task chairs before it, the Diffrient World adapts to the sitter automatically (it was one of the earlier task chairs to do this). It uses your body weight as a counterbalance to allow for seamless and steady reclining and the whole thing is a springy mesh that’s just tight enough to sink into, but not so much to the point of sagging and stretching. It’s also guaranteed to last for 10 years.

              Wayfair: $695

              Best Luxury Office Chair: Herman Miller Embody


              This is not luxury in the plush leather, animal skin, bedazzled sense; it’s luxury in just how effective it is at what it does. Herman Miller puts it this way: “so intelligent, it makes you think.” It prioritizes and glorifies movement above all else — movement lessens muscle tension and increases blood flow, thereby increasing the amount of time your brain operates at a high level, which in turn makes for better work.

              Thought up by the late and great Bill Stumpf (father of the Aeron chair) and designed by Jeff Weber with the guidance of a team of 20 physicians and doctors in physical therapy, ergonomics and biomechanics, it uses the human body as its blueprint — a spine with a flexible rib cage bends and turns are you do, and redistributes pressure to lessen tension.

              All told, it’s an expensive, luxury office chair, but not because of whims of fanciness and wealth, but because it is a throne built on the idea that a chair doesn’t have to be a health-negative.

              Amazon: $1,300+ | Design Within Reach: $1,595 | Herman Miller: $1,595

              Honorable Mention: Herman Miller Aeron


              The Aeron is the chair against which all other chairs are measured. Not even the worthy competition on this list challenge its status as the most influential office chair of the modern era.

              Released in 1994, Aeron is the chair that bookended a shift in task seating design, from a form-first to function-first industry. Its critical, commercial and cultural successes are many. It ushered out clean lines in favor of shapes contouring to the human body, and was the first hugely successful mesh chair. It is among the most customizable designs ever conceived. It’s earned a permanent place in the Museum of Modern Art. It’s even 94 percent recyclable, a feature years ahead of its time.

              Though the Aeron chair is no longer seating du jour, in style and function, its importance and power is unrivaled.

              Lumens: $995+ | Herman Miller: $820+

              Assistant Editor, Home and Design Will Price is Gear Patrol’s home and drinks editor.

At Home: Turn Your Gas Grill into a Pizza Oven with This Kit

Since many of us are still home, we decided to do some digging to find useful products to help stay productive, occupied, entertained and fit while you’re At Home. We’ve been spending a lot more…

The 15 Best Desks for Small Spaces

As the world gets more crowded and our living spaces become more cramped, setting up an at-home work setup is a luxury. The coronavirus pandemic has left many office workers fashioning their sofas and dining tables into temporary home offices. Luckily many furniture brands are making smaller desks to accommodate smaller living environments. We don’t know when we can head back to the office again, but until then, these 15 tiny desks (no, not that Tiny Desk) will help us make the best of WFH life.

Atlantic Adjustable Laptop Tray Table


Those super tight on space might fare well with a tray table so you can get work done on the sofa (or bed). This one from Walmart is adjustable so you can put your screen at the optimal eye level, and there’s a little desk space plus a cup holder.

Buy Now: $32

Ikea Micke Desk


If you’re looking for the bare minimum desk, head to Ikea. The $49 Micke, the smallest of the Micke family, is 29 inches across and has a single drawer with ample space.

Buy Now: $49

Small Folding Desk


We don’t know what brand this is either. But it’s a $50 desk that folds up so it’s virtually non-existent when you aren’t working on it. Just get this if you can’t be bothered with any other option.

Buy Now: $69

Mind Reader Adjustable Standing Desk


Sit, stand and roll with this Mind Reader desk. It’s crazy cheap at $80, and you can really do work just about anywhere.

Buy Now: $80

Foundstone Hayward Solid Wood Floating Desk


The Hayward desk is a wall-mounted desk for those who are really tight on space. The minimally obtrusive desk features a couple drawers for added utility to an already pragmatic work-from-home solution.

Buy Now: $90

Williston Forge Bowie Corner Desk


Maximize your home’s space by using a corner desk. The Bowie has a wood tabletop finished with a metal mesh back. And if you’re someone who still uses pens and pencils, there’s an additional storage cup for your stationery.

Buy Now: $142

Andover Mills Sanner Fold-Away Floating Desk


The Sanner desk is a wall-mounted fold-out desk for those who are really tight on space. The desk features an interior storage nook. When folded, the desk juts out just four inches from the wall as if it’s not even there.

Buy Now: $179

Pottery Barn Allen Wood Extending C-Table


Listen, if you’re really just going to work on your sofa all day, try this c-table from Pottery Barn. It’s not the best work-from-home solution, but it does give you a space to do work, and it doubles as a table for eating and watching TV.

Buy Now: $229

CB2 Helix Walnut Desk


Ladders are a great way to save square footage and add storage space. The Helix has three shelves, one for a work space and two for storage, and the walnut veneer and black powder-coated steel pair well together for a sleek setup. Safety tip: CB2 recommends securing the ladder to the wall to avoid accidents.

Buy Now: $249

Urban Outfitters Kirby Hutch Desk


If you can’t spare too much square footage, build upwards. This Hutch desk from Urban Outfitters is as affordable as it is space-saving. With two small storage shelves for your office gear and an overhead shelf for other miscellaneous items, the Kirby is the desk for those with a lot of stuff and nowhere to put it.

Buy Now: $249

Made by Choice Fem Work Desk


The designers at interior architect agency Fyra know what it’s like to use a stack of books as a desk. They designed the Fyra to work as a desk or a shelf. The desk is screw-free and can be easily assembled and disassembled. The back panel can be repurposed into a top shelf for miscellaneous items or as an elevated tabletop for working while standing up.

Buy Now: $335+

Pottery Barn Morgan Simple Kids Desk


Yes, it’s from Pottery Barn Kids, but a small desk is a small desk.

Buy Now: $479

West Elm Industrial Storage Mini Desk


For those with lots of loose papers and knick knacks, the Industrial Storage Mini Desk keeps your messes out of sight. We rarely see enough mango wood in furniture, but West Elm pairs it perfectly with a black steel frame. The desk looks a bit like something you’d pick up at a flea market — and that just makes it cooler.

Buy Now: $499

Knoll Toboggan Chair Desk


Like the desk-chair hybrids of your childhood school days, the Knoll Toboggan Chair Desk lets you carve out a little home office wherever there’s space. The interesting shape lets users move 360 degrees without bumping into the frame or table, and the desk comes in fun, vibrant colors like dark red and slate blue.

Buy Now: $499

Mash Studios LAX Series Wall Mounted Desk


Mash Studios’ wall-mounted desk doubles as a shelving unit when it’s not your work space. The desk is made from oil-finished English walnut and is as space-saving as they come. Cord holes on either side of the desk keep wires tidy, and a sliding powder-coated aluminum sheath hides messes.

Buy Now: $792

Tyler Chin is Gear Patrol’s Associate Staff Writer.

This content is created and maintained by a third party, and imported onto this page to help users provide their email addresses. You may be able to find more information about this and similar content at piano.io

10 Great Notebooks for Note-Taking, Grocery Lists and Doodling

1 Five Star 3-Subject Notebook

Mead staples.com

$4.99

Five Star notebooks were probably your immediate upgrade from Mead’s Composition notebooks. You can break up ideas or topics among each section, and the pages are surprisingly good at preventing ink bleed, the thing that plagues most cheap notebooks. A water-resistant cover is good, in theory, but the pages are still susceptible to spilled liquids. Full-sized folder pockets are helpful additions for keeping stray papers organized.

2 Notepad

Rhodia amazon.com

$13.48

You might find “Rhodia”-emblazened notebooks and notepads all over the campus of an art school. They’re also great everyday stationery. Keep these notepads on your desk to quickly scribble down some notes, and each sheet is perforated for easy detaching. Some may find the cost-per-page to be pricey for what it is, but the paper quality may justify the expense.

3 Journal Notebook, Hard Cover

Paperage amazon.com

$9.95

Paperage makes the best-selling hardcover executive notebooks on Amazon. The company is made up notebook designing enthusiasts, and they made an affordable, first-rate notebook for those who also care about stationery. The 100gsm ivory-colored paper feels more luxurious than your standard notebook, and the pages are thread-bound so it can open flat. The cover is made of vegan leather and resists water to keep your precious notes safe. Available in a number of colors, Paperage’s notebooks make a great entry-way for those getting into “luxury” notebooks.

4 Expedition 3-Pack Waterproof Notebook

Field Notes amazon.com

Field Notes is one of the most popular notebook brands on the market for its utilitarian and retro-inspired look. The Expedition line of notebooks improve upon the classic’s size and shape by making it waterproof and tear-proof. This is my personal choice for a travel notebook because I can slip it into my back or chest pocket. As someone who fidgets with paper and other things in my pocket, the durable paper and cover don’t get all crumply like the original Field Notes books. One Amazon reviewer, who identified as a car maintenance technician, said these notebooks stand up to the muck of working at a car manufacturing plant. 

5 Classic Notebook, Hard Cover

Moleskine staples.com

$20.89

The best thing about Moleskine’s notebook is its heft. Moleskine is a classic brand in notebooks, and its hard-covered option add to its elegance and longevity. The elastic band, built-in bookmark and inner pocket are welcome additions to an already amazing notebook.

6 Simple Lined Notebook in Tangerine

Poketo poketo.com

$18.00

Poketo, a Los Angeles-based stationery and lifestyle store, sells a range of quirky notebooks like this one with a minimalist fruit design on the cover. The 128 pages are “tree-free,” which we’re assuming means is made of recycled material. Buy these as a nice housewarming gift or for personal use to add some style to a boring work station. 

7 Rollbahn Spiral Notebook

Delfonics commonplaceshop.com

$20.00

Japanese brand Delfonics’ line of Rollbahn notebooks were named to sound more European. The cream-colored, bordering on yellow, pages are a pleasure to write on, and the dotted paper is useful for any task.

8 Softcover B5 Dotted Notebook

Leuchtturm1917 amazon.com

$24.50

This Leuchtturm1917 notebook is a favorite of Gear Patrol staffers and astronauts alike. The soft-backed journal features 121 numbered lined (easy for referncing old entries) and comes in dotted, gridded or plain pages. The book opens flat so it’s easy to write on when getting close to the spine, and a rainbow of colored cover options help to differentiate between multiple notebooks. A few other add-ons — like an elastic closure, attached bookmark, folder and identifying stickers — add to the $25 price tag.

9 Lined Hardcover Notebook

Moo amazon.com

A former left-handed Gear Patrol staffer called the Moo notebook the perfect notebook for left-handed people. Moo’s notebooks feature a lay-flat design, which the brand attributes to “fancy Swiss binding,” that makes it easy for left-handed people to write in the book without worrying about pages bouncing up. The book features thick 100gsm paper, which take well to pens and pencils, and the weight will ensure there’s no ink bleeding. And for fun, there are 16 colored, unlined pages in the center of the book for worry-free doodling without tarnishing your precious notes.

10 Slim Notebook

Grovemade grovemade.com

$60.00

Grovemade recently released a line of leather-bound notebooks, proving that hand-written notes will never go out of fashion. The books come in two colors and a range of sizes, whether you’re looking for a desk staple or something travel-sized. At $50, they’re pricier than other notebooks on the list, but you’re mainly paying for the cover. Grovemade’s notebooks are refillable, so over time, the cover will gain a beautiful patina. And the company didn’t cheap out on the details: the leather is vegetable-tanned, and the binding is made of brass.

Tyler Chin is Gear Patrol’s Associate Staff Writer.

This content is created and maintained by a third party, and imported onto this page to help users provide their email addresses. You may be able to find more information about this and similar content at piano.io

Step Inside Snow Peak’s Gorgeous New Portland Flagship Store

For over 60 years, Snow Peak has been the go-to outdoor lifestyle brand in Japan. Snow Peak, know for its camping gear and clothing, has been building a new following in the US for the past two decades. Since 1999, the brand’s US operations have been based out of Portland, Oregon, and it’s where the brand will be debuting a new flagship location.

Dubbed HQ4, the flagship is a 15,000-square-foot, two-floor building comprising retail, office and restaurant spaces. During its grand opening celebrations, between September 11 and 13, those in the Portland area are invited to visit the new location and partake in Snow Peak’s “Dwell Outdoors Together” initiative.

“As COVID emerged as one of the defining crises of our generation, time outside with a small group of loved ones provides the moments of respite so many are longing for,” Matt Liddle, Snow Peak USA’s chief operating officer, said in a press release. “Snow Peak creates products and experiences that help people to spend more quality time outdoors-whether in the backyard or the backcountry-and that’s resonated with consumers through this crisis.”

For those who can’t make it to HQ4, here’s what Snow Peak’s new space looks like.

Learn More: Here

snow peak exterior
Snow Peak’s HQ4 is located in the Northwest District of Portland, Oregon. The two-level space will house the company’s office headquarters as well as a retail space and restaurant for customers.

Wyatt Coxen

snow peak flagship grills
The first floor of the space is dedicated to retail, and visitors are welcomed by a two-story mural of Snow Peak’s founder Yukio Yamai kneeling in front of Mount Tanigawa. An assortment of the brand’s popular Tabiki portable grills are laid out for display.

Wyatt Coxen

snow peak flagship coffee setup
Campers have praised Snow Peaks’ line of stainless steel coffee brewing gear for its portability, durability and aptitude at making delicious coffee on the road.

Wyatt Coxen

snow peak flagship register
Snow Peak employees will be able to work at their desks then immediately walk over to the sales floor to assist customers.

Wyatt Coxen

snow peak flagship tents
The second level of HQ4 is a hybrid retail-and-office space. The wider, open space will be used to host product demonstrations and events. Despite COVID-19, customers are encouraged to interact with products, and Snow Peak will ensure it is done safely.

Wyatt Coxen

snow peak flagship mannequins
Snow Peak’s clothing is rooted in an outdoor lifestyle. That hasn’t stopped people from wearing its clothes on city streets as the brand has expertly combined fashion with functionality.

Wyatt Coxen

snow peak camp setup
A planned restaurant was delayed until Spring 2021, and it will center around Snow Peak’s Tabiki grills. Until then, shoppers can get a sense of the dining atmosphere in one of Snow Peak’s many open displays.

Wyatt Coxen

snow peak inside camp setup
Camp set-ups are arranged throughout the store, highlighting Snow Peak’s commitment to making practical, and attractive, outdoor gear.

Wyatt Coxen

snow peak flagship lower level
Snow Peak worked with Skylab Architecture on HQ4. Combining the brand’s Japanese roots and its newer roots in Portland, the stacked timber walls are an homage to traditional Japanese wooden scaffolding made of repurposed Douglas Fir timber from a demolished Portland warehouse.

Wyatt Coxen

Tyler Chin is Gear Patrol’s Associate Staff Writer.

The 20 Best Reading Chairs of 2020

The reading chair is a funny classification because it’s not really official by any furniture standard. When we talk about reading chairs, we mean seats that promote relaxation, security and protection from the demands of the world outside your book (including the harsh demands of gravity).

You could say the reading chair is the evolutionary high point of sitting down. A good reading chair is one you can stay in for hours and hours, poring through detective novels, newspapers or websites like this one. You could even watch TV in a reading chair — we’re really not sticklers about the term. It’s possible you have one already — one that you’ve been carrying with you move after move after move. But if you don’t, here are some more than worthy options.

Ikea Poäng Armchair


The Poäng is four decades old, and it’s one of the few early Ikea designs to enjoy popularity throughout every stage of the Swedish dorm outfitter’s long history. How has it lasted so long? While it’s not the standard of design excellence, it’s cheap, lightweight, good-looking and easy to care for — a much sought-after and unfortunately rare set of attributes.

Buy Now: $99

Corrigan Studio Skiles Armchair


It’s plush, it’s inviting and it’s under $200. Find comfort in the Skiles chair, especially knowing you got a good deal on a great chair.

Buy Now: $140

Hilliard Armchair


The Hilliard has an extra-wide seat for those who want to spread out a little more. The mid-century modern aesthetic will never fade, and for just over $300, you can’t go wrong with this AllModern chair.

Buy Now: $254

West Elm Book Nook Armchair


When you think about a reading chair, you may conjure up a tall, wide chair that takes up an entire corner of a room. They don’t have to be that. West Elm’s Book Nook chair is built for those of us without the square-footage to accommodate other options on this list. A simple wheat-colored upholster job covers a compact, pleasantly priced wood-framed chair. Plus, the armrests dip just enough to keep your elbows rested and a book squarely in front of your face.

Buy Now: $499

Rivet North End Accent Chair


Rivet is one of Amazon’s in-house furniture brands and it’s vaguely mid-century modern. Amazon says that the pieces are “sure to turn heads,” which isn’t really true. The North End accent chair does the opposite — it’s the ideal corner reading chair for those who would rather keep it low-key, and there’s not a damn thing wrong with that.

Buy Now: $527

The Inside Tuxedo Chair


The Inside makes well-designed furniture at lower-than-retail price points. The chair looks as if someone took a box and carved out a little nook to sit in. For picky people, there are over 100 design options for the chair so it can fit your home design aesthetic. We’re fans of the tall arm height so you can comfortably rest your arms or lay your head.

Buy Now: $569

Urban Outfitters Tia Velvet Chair


Urban Outfitters surprisingly carries a lot of velvet chairs. This retro, ’70s-inspired armchair features an interesting curved base, so this reading chair doubles as an accent piece.

Buy Now: $599

Article Matrix Chair


Article typically keeps things fairly simple from a design standpoint — affordable mid-century modern with contemporary twists. The Matrix chair isn’t this. Its curvy lines and velvet upholstery are more disco than Sinatra, and it’s better for it. As with all velvet, do you best to keep it out of the sun and fluff regularly.

Buy Now: $649

West Elm Carlo Chair


West Elm’s Carlo chair references the mid-century modern furniture zeitgeist, but isn’t the exact same chair that’s been reproduced by every manufacturer under the sun. Looking at the chair from the front, it’s much deeper and more narrow than it appears, imbuing it with a kind of sneaky coziness. West Elm also offers different fabric, color and leg options.

Buy Now: $649+

Hay About A Chair 123


Need a cozy chair to put in a corner but don’t have much space? This is it. Hay are the masters of original, reasonably priced Scandinavian design. This chair, whose shape alludes to the Eameses famous shell chairs, is a prime example. Plus, it goes on sale pretty frequently.

Buy Now: $695+

Industry West Penny Lounge Chair


A chair you can sink into. Industry West is a newer furniture maker putting out riffs on many design eras. This one is mid-century modern, and is made from a walnut frame and a pair of cushions.

Buy Now: $623

Inside Weather Soba Armchair


This boxy chair from Inside Weather offers an inviting place to spend your weekends. There’s a nice contrast between the wooden arms and the upholstered seating, and like all Inside Weather furniture, there are endless possibilities for customization.

Buy Now: $798+

CB2 Saic Quantum Rocking Chair


According to its designer, the Saic chair “traces the shape of the human body and allows you to become totally immersed in the chair.” The ergonomic design cradles your body, creating a safe space from the outside world. As great as the chair is for immersing yourself into a book, it works just as well to rock you to sleep.

Buy Now: $799

Burrow Nomad Leather Club Chair


Burrow’s club chair shares a lot of DNA with its sofa, which is one of our favorite ones you can buy on the internet. It’s easy to assemble, offers up an absurd level of customization, is priced well and, on occasion, goes on sale. Its style is plain, and that’s the point — the brand doesn’t make statement pieces, they make pieces that blend into what you already have.

Buy Now: $995

CB2 Avec Chair


CB2’s Avec chair’s high armrests aren’t so much armrests as they are extensions of the back cushion — essentially making the chair a reading nook unto itself. If you don’t get the velvet emerald fabric you’re a coward.

Buy Now: $1,049

Hem Hai Chair


Hem is the ideal marriage of high-end design and the online marketplace. Its furniture is beautiful, made with premium materials and designed by some of the brightest creative minds in Europe (it’s based in Stockholm); but it’s also much quicker about shipments, ease of assembly (and disassembly) and customer service than many brick-and-mortar design outlets. The Hai chair epitomizes this. A blend of mid-century shape and contemporary lines, it arrives in small pieces and can be assembled without tools. It also comes in six colors with the option to add an ottoman.

Buy Now: $1,399

Blu Dot New Standard Lounge Chair


In a memo sent to eventual co-founding partners Maurice Blanks and Charlie Lazor, John Christakos described an early vision of Blu Dot as follows: “I am still leaning towards smart design for middle-class America. The Shaker thing with the nineties twist, babe.” A couple decades later and the trio’s company has done just that — luxe design that doesn’t get stuck in the rhythms and pomp of luxe design. Available upholstered and in leather, the New Standard lounge sports wide arms, a loose cushion and wiry splayed legs. It’s essentially a throne for regular people.

Buy Now: $1,499+

Room & Board Bram Club Chair


The leather club chair is about as classic as it gets. Room & Board’s offering is more minimal than most — it can be dressed up or down and it looks good with furniture from almost any era. Room & Board also offers free design consultation, white glove delivery and makes the vast majority of its furniture in the US. Prepare for the sickest patina of your life.

Buy Now: $1,899

Vitsoe 620 Chair


Designed by the great Dieter Rams, Vitsoe’s 620 chair programme has remained the same since 1962. Replacement parts, leathers and materials from the earliest models are as they were then. Rams’s chair combines nearly unbreakable sheet moulding and untreated, full-grain leather to make a chair with a foot in tradition and science fiction.

Buy Now: $4,970

Eames Lounge Chair


“This is the ability to select among the unlimited possibilities and return considerable richness to the world.” That’s how Today Show co-host Lee Meriweather captured Charles and Ray Eames’s ability to make old things new at the release of the Eames Lounge Chair in 1956. If there were a Tolkien-esque “one chair to rule them all,” it would be the Eames’s transcendent lounger. The 20th century’s answer to the 19th century’s club chair was designed to neutralize pressure on the lower back and mimic the look of a baseball mitt (leather folds included). It is unquestionably the most recognizable piece of high design ever conceived on American soil. The chair is made today in much the same way it was in decades past, but nowadays you get to pick leather colors, upholstered cushions, wood veneer finishes and more.

Buy Now: $5,495

Assistant Editor, Home and Design Will Price is Gear Patrol’s home and drinks editor.
Tyler Chin is Gear Patrol’s Associate Staff Writer.

This content is created and maintained by a third party, and imported onto this page to help users provide their email addresses. You may be able to find more information about this and similar content at piano.io

The 15 Best Beach Chairs You Can Buy in 2020

A good beach chair is light, stable and worth sitting on. Does it help if it looks decent? Sure, but after a few hours in the sun and sand, most are typically less inclined to worry about aesthetics. In finding the best beach chairs of the summer, we focused on ones that were cheap, comfortable and easy to carry. These 15 examples are all those things.

Dick’s Sporting Goods Logo Chair


If you ignore the obnoxious “Dick’s” branding on the back, the brand’s eponymous beach chair is the most affordable option on this list. For those looking for nothing more than a decent chair to bring to tailgates (with a convenient beverage holder), few chairs tick all the boxes like Dick’s does.

Buy Now: $10

Crazy Creek Air Chair


You could argue this isn’t really a chair, seeing as you’re still sort of sitting on the ground. But thanks to aerogel insulation, it won’t feel like you’re sitting on the cold hard ground. Plus, the foam is cushiony enough to give your backside a comfy seat regardless of uneven ground.

Buy Now: $40

Coleman Portable Camping Quad Chair


Amazon’s number one-selling camp chair is as classic as one can get with a beach chair. While it has all the features of a quality beach chair — roomy seat, easy setup, portability — it’s the chair’s standout feature that makes this a top pick. The chair has a built-in cooler pouch, which is big enough to hold up to four cans, so there’s no constant need to run to the cooler.

Buy Now: $43

Chillbo Baggins 2.0


If you can get past the name and embrace its unconventional style, this is a great beach chair. It takes two to three minutes to blow up, allows you to either sit low like you would any beach chair, lay down or take it out into the water. Having used one for a recent beach trip I relate to you rolling your eyes at this, but you won’t get a lighter, more functional seat on the beach.

Buy Now: $45

Lawn Chair USA Sea Island Beach Chair


Lawn Chair USA’s many-colored folding seats harken back to decades past with their flexible, comfortable cross-webbing. They also feature plastic armrests, which absorb less heat than wood or metal, and a lightweight aluminum frame.

Buy Now: $55

Quik Chair Folding Camping Chair


There’s something novel about a chair that has a canopy to block out the sun’s harmful, and insanely hot, rays. Quik Chair’s version of a canopy beach chair is cheap for what it offers — comfort, protection and convenience — and its low price means you can get one for everyone in the family.

Buy Now: $57

Weddingstar Reclining/Folding Beach Chair


Less of a chair and more of a mat, Weddingstar’s beach chair is for those who are used to lying on towels at the beach. The added benefit is the backrest for sitting up and watching people go by.

Buy Now: $59

Guide Gear Oversized Director’s Camp Chair


This impressively strong chair has a powder-coated tubular steel frame that can support up to 500 pounds. The built-in cup holder also has a little table area to put your snacks so you don’t have to move an inch.

Buy Now: $60

REI Co-op Outward Low Lawn Chair


Like any good REI outdoor gear, this chair is heavy-duty, thanks to ripstop nylon seat, and convenient. When not in use, the chair folds up and users can carry it on their back like a backpack.

Buy Now: $60

Helinox Personal Shade


Doze off at the beach and don’t worry about getting sunburned. The Helinox Personal Shade chair features a nylon ripstop canopy with an SPF 50+ rating so the sun’s harmful rays don’t cook you in your seat. The canopy can be reoriented to shield you from the sun as it sets from east to west. Plus, the whole thing weighs just over a pound and folds into a 25-inch sack.

Buy Now: $70

L.L.Bean Packlite Chair


The mitt-like shape of the L.L.Bean Packlite Chair will keep you comfortable for hours whether you’re lounging on the beach, hitting up a tailgate or chilling in the backyard. The chair remains fairly light thanks to the aluminimum frame, which is still very durable.

Buy Now: $70

Oniva Picnic Time XL Chair


Where most beach chairs cap out at 250-pound weight capacities, Oniva’s wider, sturdier, altogether bigger chair carries up to 400. It comes with a lifetime warranty, a cup (beer) holder, sloped armrests and a powder-coated steel frame instead of the more liable to be aluminum.

Buy Now: $87

The Inside Cabana Chair


The Cabana Chair is a beach resort-style lounge chair, and it’s one of the most classic beach chairs out there. You can machine wash the sling, so don’t worry about rolling around in the sand and immediately hopping in the chair. There are three reclining options for your lounging preference, and it’s all made by hand in the US. Prices start at $119, with over 100 fabric options.

Buy Now: $119+

Sunflow Sunrise Beach Chair


Sunflow’s Sunrise is portable, intuitive to set up and looks good. Makes sense since the brand’s founders linked up with legendary industrial designer Yves Behar’s design and innovation firm, Fuseproject, which helped create the Herman Miller Sayl chair, to make the Hamptons’ new favorite beach chair. The Sunrise beach chair has a four-way reclining seat made of lightweight rust-resistant aluminum and water-resistant fabric, and its setup is similar to that of a stroller

Buy Now: $198

NEMO Stargaze Recliner Luxury


“Luxury” is in its name, and you’re paying a premium for it, too. The Stargaze Recliner features a free-swinging seat that reclines at the behest of your own body movements. The chair was designed to work on uneven ground, so it’s perfect for sandy beaches as much as it works on flat land. The Stargaze is like the perfect combination of a chair and a hammock, no trees necessary.

Buy Now: $220

Assistant Editor, Home and Design Will Price is Gear Patrol’s home and drinks editor.
Tyler Chin is Gear Patrol’s Associate Staff Writer.

This content is created and maintained by a third party, and imported onto this page to help users provide their email addresses. You may be able to find more information about this and similar content at piano.io

Ikea’s Collaboration with Lego Will Bring Out the Kid in You

Messy kids playing with Lego bricks can lead to disastrous results for adult feet. In an effort to combat plantar injuries, Ikea and Lego collaborated on a line of storage boxes called the Bygglek.

Bygglek combines the Swedish megastore’s knack for making clever organization tools and the toy brand’s fun factor. Each box features a lid with Lego studs, which acts as a separate playarea to add Lego bricks, The white storage boxes come in three sizes: small, which comes in a three-pack ($10), medium ($13) and large ($15).

“Where adults often see mess, children see a stimulating creative environment,” Andreas Fredriksson, an Ikea designer, said in a press release. “And Bygglek will help bridge the gap between these two views to ensure more creative play in homes around the world.”

book shelf with lego

Ikea

Additionally, Ikea will be releasing a 201-piece Lego set for $15, which will not have a specific end product. Build whatever you want, because this may be one of the rare Ikea products where an instruction manual is unnecessary.

Your new favorite boxes and toys release in Europe and North America in October 2020, with a worldwide rollout expected at a later date.

Learn More: Here

Tyler Chin is Gear Patrol’s Associate Staff Writer.

This content is created and maintained by a third party, and imported onto this page to help users provide their email addresses. You may be able to find more information about this and similar content at piano.io

Robbox xDrill Digital Smart Cordless Drill

The last big leap in hand drills was making them cordless and battery-powered. Now, the Robbox xDrill takes it to the next level by adding brilliant smart features such as touchscreen controls, Bluetooth capability, a…

Everything You Need to Enjoy the Dying Breath of Summer

mature men standing by barbecue grill talking

The Good BrigadeGetty Images

Another summer in the books, except this one didn’t hit like it used to. Hopefully you got to go outside and (safely) enjoy the warmth — even if it meant lounging in your backyard or balcony. While we have a handful of weeks left before fall is here, these are the best things to buy to enjoy the final few days of summer.

The Best Outdoor Furniture


From Ikea to Herman Miller, this is your survey of the best outdoor and patio furniture at every price point.

Read the Full Story

The Best Part of Your Summer Will Be This Inflatable Pool


Mylle’s inflatable swimming pool is the perfect summer accessory for those with small outdoor situations and an eye for design.
Read the Full Story

The Best Beach Chairs You Can Buy in 2020


It’s all about portability, durability and affordability (though our high-end picks are worth the money).

Read the Full Story

The Best Gas Grills You Can Buy in 2020


The best charcoal grills you can buy at every price point and for every backyard.

Read the Full Story

The Best Charcoal Grills You Can Buy in 2020


Grab some charcoal and get to grillin’ because these grills are screaming to cook your next meal.

Read the Full Story

The Best Pellet Grills You Can Buy in 2020


The absolute best pellet grills, whether you’re on a budget, tailgating or setting up your backyard dream kitchen.

Read the Full Story

10 Tools You Need to Take Your Grill Setup to the Next Level


Once you’ve got your head around basics of grilling, you’ll want more. These upgrades are what you’re looking for.

Read the Full Story

The 5 Best Cold Brew Coffee Makers of 2020


Stop the (French) presses! These cold brew coffee makers make an excellent batch of joe with minimal effort.

Read the Full Story

15 Low-Calorie Beers That Are Better Than Hard Seltzer


An almost-end-of-summer plea: forgo the White Claw and reach for one of these low-calories beers that tastes better, and is still better for you.

Read the Full Story

The 10 Best Coolers of 2020


Looking to hide some sandwiches and 85 cans of beer from a bear? Probably not, but these coolers will do the job for that extreme.

Read the Full Story

Tyler Chin is Gear Patrol’s Associate Staff Writer.

This content is created and maintained by a third party, and imported onto this page to help users provide their email addresses. You may be able to find more information about this and similar content at piano.io