CARS.COM — The mifold booster seat is a game-changer for families. This compact booster is small enough that it can be stowed in a car’s glove box or packed in a child’s backpack, so it’s always on ...
CARS.COM — Booster seats are perhaps the easiest car seat to use — until taxi rides, carpools or rental cars complicate things. Many families in these situations opt not to bring along this important ...
The Mifold booster seat ($37) is compact enough to tuck away in any piece of luggage or even into the seat pocket of a car, yet it provides the same level of child safety as a booster 10 times its ...
Traffic accidents are the number one killer of children in the US, and of the children that died in a car crash in 2019, 43% of 8-12-year-olds and 41% of 4-7-year-olds were not buckled up*. Using only ...
The next big thing in parenting may be a smaller thing. The mifold “Grab-and-go” booster seat is ten times smaller than a backless booster seat, can fit in a backpack, glove box or pocket, and is ...
British entrepreneur and inventor Jon Sumroy was living and working in the United States when he first hit upon the idea for a product that would fill a worrying gap in the car safety marketplace. “I ...
If you have young children, or your children aren’t so old that you can still remember what a pain clunky car seats can be, you might want to acquaint yourself with three-year-old, Ra’anana, ...
Cheap, light, and small, the Mifold also changes how the car seat operates, to make it easier to use. The Mifold is one of those inventions that seems so obvious when you see it that you wonder why it ...
In 2015, Jon Sumroy, a British-born pharmacist-turned-inventor living in Israel, posted an Indiegogo campaign for his new product concept, a child’s booster seat, for use in cars, that folded down to ...
More and more children are going without booster seats in cars—to potentially devastating effects. “The single largest killer of American children is car crashes,” says Jon Sumroy. “This is a ...
More and more children are going without booster seats in cars—to potentially devastating effects. “The single largest killer of American children is car crashes,” says Jon Sumroy. “This is a ...
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