A mug that floats. A bag-free vacuum that compresses
dirt into "bales" so you don't get a face full of dust when you empty
it. A window garden that never needs tending.
The recent International Home and Housewares Show in Chicago featured
all sorts of innovative and just plain odd products, any of which could
be poised to hit the big time. Can you envision any of these in your
home?Spaces' Ilyce Glink was at the show; read her coverage in our post on the robots that are taking over our world, or at least cleaning it: the window-cleaning Winbot, the barbecue-cleaning Grillbot and the gutter-cleaning Looj.
Moisture ring stains on the table? Not anymore. The porcelain Floating Mug incorporates a coaster into its design, catching slight moisture in the little dish where the handle ends. The brainchild of Tigere Chiriga (and his wife's complaints about ring stains), it launched on Kickstarter last year. It's now available for preorder online at FloatingMug.com for $36.
[Note: I deleted a phrase above and added the following paragraph to
address comments about the mug design. Yes, I do read the comments!
Right after I put on my ego armor.] Skeptics and naysayers might say -- indeed, do
say in the comments on this very post -- that the collected moisture
would spill on you as soon as you take a sip. My fault! I said earlier
that the bottom dish catches moisture, but in fact, the disc seems to
simply elevate the mug so that tiny drips slide under the mug to
evaporate. Here's Chiriga's Kickstarter explanation
to another critic's misapprehension last year: "In my experience, some
sips result in a very small drop or two sliding down the side of the
mug. Sometimes that amount will evaporate well before it makes it to the
bottom of the mug; other times, it's enough to make it to the base of
the mug creating a ring on your coffee table." As he says: "If I spill
enough coffee that a pool of it collects on the coaster, then my wife is
going to be giving me a sippy cup." (P.S. Alas, I can't address
commenters' complaints about the mug cost. I can only point out that
products often cost more at launch. If the products are lucky enough to
go into mass production and sell well, the price often comes down.)
It weighs only about 7 pounds, it can fit into spaces as shallow as 3 inches high and -- my favorite part -- it doesn't have a bag or "cyclone" action. Instead, it compresses debris into bricks or, as the manufacturer calls them, bales. No dust cloud! It's available in the States at Brookstone for $350; visit the Brookstone link to see a video of the vacuum in action.
A starter kit with smart flowerpot and cartridge is $79. Refill cartridges are $20. Cheap? No. But if it's really as foolproof as it seems to be, maybe the price is worth it. After all, the founder was inspired by research that says the world throws away more than $20 billion in houseplants every year because people don't tend them properly.
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