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Showing posts with label home. Show all posts
Showing posts with label home. Show all posts

Top 17 Home Products Innovation Winner (16): Hamper Pack

posted by my-blogmedia | Sunday, January 04, 2009 | ,

Hello, my-blogmedia readers. We meet again. Here we are posting the winner of product innovations that might be usefull for you.


Honorable mention: The Hamper Pack
As described by designer Phillip Padilla, a junior in industrial design at Virginia Tech, the Hamper Pack is designed to use door space — not floor space — for dirty laundry. A plastic hook hangs the pack on the back of a door, and dirty clothes can be dropped into the hamper's molded rubber laundry port. When it's time to head for the washers and dryers, the Hamper Pack can be worn like a backpack.


A great detail on the Hamper Pack is the onboard coin slot. No more rummaging for quarters on laundry day — just unzip the change pouch below the slot and start feeding the machine.



(source: realestate.msn)

Top 17 Home Products Innovation Winner (13): RightStep

posted by my-blogmedia | Tuesday, December 02, 2008 | ,

Hello, my-blogmedia readers. We meet again. Here we are posting the winner of product innovations that might be usefull for you.


Honorable mention: RightStep
RightStep is designed to assist the elderly in ascending or descending stairs. Mounted between handrails, the device acts as a handle for climbing steps, allowing users to pull themselves upward without extending their arms sideways or lunging dangerously toward the banister. For the descent from the top of the stairs — which can be frightening for anyone with unreliable limbs or eyes — the device acts as a weight-bearing brace. Users can lean against RightStep as they step down at their own pace, and it provides a barrier between the user and a perilous fall.

Created by Ben Taber, a junior at Purdue University, RightStep is a far more affordable option than a motorized lift or home elevator. For people on a fixed income, Taber's design is a big step in the right direction.


(source: realestate.msn)

Top 17 Home Products Innovation Winner (12): Level

posted by my-blogmedia | Saturday, November 22, 2008 | , ,

Hello, my-blogmedia readers. We meet again. Here we are posting the winner of product innovations that might be usefull for you.

Honorable mention: Level
Leave it to a college student to work out a smarter way to carry cool beverages. Level, designed by Purdue University junior Byron C. Lee, is an ice cooler with a single, center-mounted handle. If two people carrying Level were to walk up a flight of stairs, the handle would rotate a few degrees to accommodate the angle and keep the cooler level.

A button on the handle's center point allows you to lock the bar in the horizontal position when it's all flat land between your car and your party. A concave base with bottom draining hole means you never have to lift and tilt the cooler to drain water, and it simplifies cooler clean-up at the end of the day.


(source: realestate.msn)

Top 17 Home Products Innovation Winner (11): circuitDESK

posted by my-blogmedia | Thursday, October 30, 2008 | ,

Hello, my-blogmedia readers. We meet again. Here we are posting the winner of product innovations that might be usefull for you.


Honorable mention: circuitDESK
In a time when the common work space includes a lamp, computer monitor, speakers, phone and cradles for various gadgets, it's surprising that so few desks are designed to accommodate standard electronics — let alone the tangle of cables that inevitably tails behind them.


Nicholas Komor, a junior at Georgia Tech, designed circuitDESK with mounted power outlets and a track-based logic for managing cables. "I was most inspired by two things: electric cable mess and vampire energy," says Komor, referring to the energy drain of devices left on standby power.


With the flip of a switch on circuitDESK, your whole desk goes right off the power grid, preserving the life span of devices while saving energy and money.



(source: realestate.msn)

Top 17 Home Products Innovation Winner (9): Rake N Take

posted by my-blogmedia | Friday, September 12, 2008 |

Hello, my-blogmedia readers. We meet again. Here we are posting the winner of product innovations that might be usefull for you.


Honorable mention: Rake N Take
Ryan Jansen's
Rake N Take has that telltale mark of great design: It addresses an age-old issue with a simple solution.

Rake N Take cuts out the most tedious aspect of yardwork in one clean sweep. Rather than picking up leaf piles by hand or awkwardly trying to trap them between a rake and shovel, you can rake, grab and dump debris using Rake N Take.

A sliding sleeve surrounding the elongated handle locks in place for raking, or releases for the back-and-forth motion of leaf pickup. As the sleeve moves forward, the combs of the rake head bend and entrap the leaves. Due to the curled shape of the closed head, collected debris can easily be dropped into a garbage can.

In addition to winning honors in the IHA's Student Design competition, Jansen's design took first place in the Dyson Eye for Why competition and was the United States finalist for the International James Dyson Award. Jansen is a graduating senior at Southern Illinois University Carbondale.


(source: realestate.msn)

Top 17 Home Products Innovation Winner (8): One-Handed Rolling Pin

posted by my-blogmedia | Thursday, August 28, 2008 |

Hello, my-blogmedia readers. We meet again. Here we are posting the winner of product innovations that might be usefull for you. Here is another winner. Enjoy.


Honorable mention: One-Handed Rolling Pin
The convenience of the One-Handed Rolling Pin is obvious to any baker or pasta-maker, but the idea was inspired by the difficulty that traditional rolling pins present for the disabled.

"This problem really became relevant to me when I found out my neighbor had lost the ability to fully use one of her hands due to Parkinson's disease," says designer Mark Schoolmeester, a sophomore at Kendall College of Art and Design in Grand Rapids, Mich.

The rolling pin can be changed out so that users may roll something flat (such as pie dough) with a nonstick roller, or create texture in the dough with a patterned roller.

Great idea. Now let's put Schoolmeester to work on strollers and lawn mowers.

(source: realestate.msn)

Top 17 Home Products Innovation Winner (7): Echo

posted by my-blogmedia | Monday, August 18, 2008 |

Hello, my-blogmedia readers. We meet again. Here we are posting the winner of product innovations that might be usefull for you. Here is the number 7. Enjoy.


Honorable mention: Echo
Even in a kitchen with generous countertops and cabinets, large items are a hassle. Echo, designed by Daniel A. Hopkins, a junior at Purdue University, is a multipurpose item that takes care of several jobs in one compact design.

Made of plastic with molded rubber, Echo can function most simply as a fruit bowl. However, the nested two-piece design is set on a center pin; rotate one shell out of line with the other and the side panels open up like flower petals. Now Echo is a dish rack. With aerating columns along the sides and a draining bottom, Echo works equally well as a colander.

Hopkins developed Echo with bachelors in mind, figuring his creation would be well-suited to their bachelor pads and assumed low tolerance for kitchen duties. But Echo will sound good to anyone who needs to prep a meal and clean it up without cluttering available space.

(source: realestate.msn)

Top 17 Home Products Innovation Winner (6): BathDam

posted by my-blogmedia | Wednesday, August 06, 2008 |

Hello, my-blogmedia readers. We meet again. Here we are posting the winner of product innovations that might be usefull for you. Here is the number 6.Enjoy.


Honorable mention: BathDam
To kids it may just look like a lot of fun, but BathDam resolves many of the problems that arise at bath time. The apparatus is a water dam, allowing parents to fill only the far end of a tub. The idea is the brainchild of Collin Smith, third-year student at the College of Design at Arizona State University. Smith identified and solved several issues with his creation.

First and foremost is safety: In a more confined bathing area, children won't slip, bump or have the space to lie
face-down. Half a tub away from the faucet, a child is not at risk of scalding himself by turning on the hot water.

BathDam also saves water — and keeps it warm longer — since the whole tub needn't be filled for a small bather. Plus, the toys attached to BathDam appear whimsical but are designed to help get the child clean. Now the only problem is persuading your kid to get back out.


(source: realestate.msn)

Top 17 Home Products Innovation Winner (5): Guarden

posted by my-blogmedia | Tuesday, July 29, 2008 |


Hello, my-blogmedia readers. We meet again. Here we are posting the winner of product innovations that might be usefull for you. Here is the number five. Enjoy.


Honorable mention: Guarden
To most anyone with a vegetable garden, rabbits are not cute, cuddly creatures but destructive pests. Keeping them away from your homegrown carrots and beans can be a real problem. Unsightly, rusting chicken wire has long been the common way to protect a planting area.

Thanks to Louis Filosa, a third-year designer at Purdue University, a better option may soon be available. Guarden features a retractable gear system, in-ground stakes and a magnetic closure to surround your fruits and vegetables. Just stand the retractable housing on end and extend the green netting to stake your ground against the cotton-tailed critters.


(source: realestate.msn)

Top 17 Home Products Innovation Winner (4): UCan

posted by my-blogmedia | Wednesday, July 23, 2008 |

Hello, my-blogmedia readers. We meet again. Here we are posting the winner of product innovations that might be usefull for you. Here is the number four. Enjoy.


Honorable mention: UCan
In households that recycle, nearly all the plastic, metal and paper come straight out of the kitchen. But what about all the recyclable material from bathrooms and bedrooms?

"I feel that for recycling to be more widely adopted, it must be made as effortless as possible," says Justin Atwater-Taylor, a senior at the University of Kansas.

"I narrowed the problem down to the household bathroom because there is so much recyclable packaging sent from there to the landfill, even in households that recycle, because of convenience and sanitation issues."

Atwater-Taylor designed UCan, which divides trash from recyclables, to ship flat (the user assembles it) and to sell with no exterior packaging.

UCan itself is made of recycled materials, too. If you're wondering whether you can reduce your ecological impact without going too far out of your way, this clever receptacle has the answer: Yes, you can.

(source: realestate.msn)

Top 17 Home Products Innovation Winner (3b): BIN

posted by my-blogmedia | Sunday, July 20, 2008 |

Hello, my-blogmedia readers. We meet again. Here we are posting the winner of product innovations that might be usefull for you. Here is the the Third place (tie). We have two winner in number 3 position.Enjoy.


Third place (tie): BIN
Cleaning up the kitchen floor is a multitool task. So why should the vacuum, broom and kitchen pail all be kept in separate closets and cabinets around the home?

San Jose State University sophomore Faris Elmasu believes everything belongs right there in the kitchen, at the source of a mess.

BIN, his refined design, features a lightweight vacuum with a flexible head and a motor-powered brush on the bottom for sweeping up debris. Best of all, the spring-loaded handle telescopes down to snap into storing position right on the front of the BIN garbage can. The young designer credits his mother for inspiring his invention: "She's a great cook but also a neat freak," Elmasu says.

(source: realestate.msn)

Top 17 Home Products Innovation Winner (3a): Della

posted by my-blogmedia | Tuesday, July 15, 2008 |

Hello, my-blogmedia readers. Here we are posting the winner of product innovations that might be usefull for you. Here is the the Third place (tie). We have two winner in number 3 position. Enjoy.


Third place (tie): Della
In a class at San Jose State University, sophomore Alex Brown was reviewing photos of various products in their environments. When he saw a collection of flashlights — all of them without batteries and uselessly stored in a basement — he sought a solution to an age-old problem.

The invention he calls Della not only renders the conventional household flashlight obsolete but also functions as floor lamp, flashlight and lantern. Portable and fixed lamps, looking like short lightsabers, are cradled in holders on the arms of a slender post.

Della casts ambient light as a decorative lamp, and its base charges the portables so that they can easily be removed any time a flashlight or lamp is needed.

Brown's design has the singular appeal of updating the look and function of a gothic candleholder for the contemporary home. Much like a candle would have been lifted from its post to be carried around the castle, each of Della's illuminating bars stands ready at all times to light the way.

(source: realestate.msn)

Top 17 Home Products Innovation Winner (2b): Opus

posted by my-blogmedia | Wednesday, July 09, 2008 |


Hello, my-blogmedia readers. Here we are posting the winner of product innovations that might be usefull for you. Here is the the second one (tie). We have two winner in number 2 position. Previous post was also in number 2. Enjoy.

Opus

What's fun about doing the laundry? Not much. But it doesn't have to be a backbreaking chore, either. That's what Rick Hagee realized as he gave shape to Opus, a portable hamper that eases the tasks of holding, carrying and loading laundry.

"Laundry is not a quick thing," says Hagee. "You're doing it all day, up and down stairs. I've always had to do my own laundry, so I know it all too well."

Hagee, a senior at Columbus College of Art & Design in Columbus, Ohio, considered that people of every age need to store and cart their dirty clothes, and developed Opus with benefits for all.

This morphing hamper can sit flat on the floor, fold for one-hand carrying, or hang open-mouthed on a closet rail — which makes it great for shooting hoops with some rolled-up socks.


(source: reallestate.msn)

Top 17 Home Products Innovation Winner (2): KitchenSync

posted by my-blogmedia | Sunday, July 06, 2008 | ,

Hello, my-blogmedia readers. Here we are posting the well produc innovations that might be usefull for you. Enjoy. Here is the the second one.


KitchenSync
"I realized there was this phenomenon of people storing recipes on a computer but needing them in the kitchen," says Noah Balmer, a senior at California College of the Arts. "To get the recipes where you need them, people are either bringing a laptop or reprints into the kitchen. Neither is the way to do it!"

Answering the need, Balmer designed KitchenSync, a gateway between computer and cooking area. The device connects to a home network and displays recipes in the form of a small book that stands open on a countertop. KitchenSync's dual touch-screens, which are washable, also allow users to chat online about the recipes.

A major in industrial design and self-described computer nerd, Balmer has found a way to bring social networking (and great potential for advertising) into the kitchen.

(source: realestate.msn)

Top 17 Home Products Innovation Winner (1): Elizabowl

posted by my-blogmedia | Thursday, July 03, 2008 |

Hello, my-blogmedia readers. Here we are posting the well innovation of producs that might be usefull for you. Enjoy.

For the past 15 years, a nationwide design contest has been recognizing and encouraging the talent of young
industrial designers. Here's a look at the winners of the International Housewares Association's 2008 Student Design Competition, whose creations may appear in your own home someday soon.


1. Elizabowl

Everybody knows, thanks to an old cliché, that one bad apple can spoil the whole bunch. But never before has anyone offered such a thoughtful solution as Sarah O'Brien, a senior at the University of Louisiana.

O'Brien took first place in the 2008 Student Design Competition for her Elizabowl, an interlaced system of pockets that blossoms to accommodate the amount of fruit on hand. "Because each piece is kept in a separate container, if one piece starts to go bad it can't have that chemical conversation with neighboring fruit telling them to go bad," explains O'Brien.

Elizabowl demonstrates O'Brien's keen sense for industrial design and also her appreciation for history: Her invention is named for its similarity to collars worn during the Elizabethan period.



(source: realestate.msn)

Cool Espresso Machine for your home..

posted by my-blogmedia | Sunday, April 20, 2008 | ,


Whoaaaa, here is the cool espresso maker as a luxury stuff for your home quoted by my-blogmedia from msn.


Gaggia's Platinum Vision is the Ferrari of espresso makers, a graceful combination of design and functionality. A touch-screen on the stainless-steel face allows you to program options such as water temperature and cup size, and additional settings for grinding, brewing and tamping allow you to automate while still preparing a cup of espresso exactly to your liking. Features also include a water reservoir with filter, a topside cup-warming plate, and a "bypass doser" so you can brew the occasional cup of decaf without dumping all your caffeinated beans out of the hopper. Latte and cappuccino lovers will appreciate the optional Milk Island attachment for steaming milk at the turn of a knob. Gaggia's machine has the mark of Italian elegance and will turn the average joe into a world-class barista.


(source: msn)

Biomatic Key for your Luxury Home

posted by my-blogmedia | Friday, April 18, 2008 |


Hi lads and gents,

When I stucked to a site, I was interested by the unique feature about the biomatic key. Have you ever heard about that before?. Okay then, my-blogmedia quoted the article for you. This came from MSN. Enjoy...


Forgot your keys? Well, as long as you have your fingers on hand, you'll be able to open your front door with a Bio-Matic lock by iTouchless. Designed as much for security as for convenience, Bio-Matics unlock your door when the built-in optical scanner recognizes a fingerprint. Up to 150 fingerprint scans can be stored in the lock (iTouchless suggests scanning several prints for each user), which is completely reprogrammable — so when you decide you really shouldn't have
given your mother-in-law access, you can just delete her prints. Bio-Matics are available in deadbolt and latch models for securing doors to the outside or to an interior room. The locks also include digital pass codes and conventional keys as backup systems.

(source: Rich Maloof, MSN Real Estate).


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