<![CDATA[Gizmodo: stokke]]> http://tags.gizmodo.com/assets/base/img/thumbs140x140/gizmodo.com.png <![CDATA[Gizmodo: stokke]]> http://gizmodo.com/tag/stokke http://gizmodo.com/tag/stokke <![CDATA[Stokke Gravity Chair Leans Back and Forward: We're Stoked]]> Further proving you don't have to be in orbit to be weightless, the Gravity Chair from Norwegian baby products maker Stokke can sit upright as an office chair, function as a rocker, and lean way back for that serious contemplation your boss told you to stop doing. See it in its variety of unusual permutations, after the jump.


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The chair is available in a variety of fabrics and finishes, but all that versatility in inclination from steep to flat will cost you a steep $2310, if you're so inclined.

Stokke boasts Zero-Gravity chair [Slash Gear]

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<![CDATA[Tripp Trapp: High Chair or Torture Tool?]]> We recently bought the little one a Graco high chair out of desperation. We were in Babies 'R' Us, the walls were closing in, and I told the darling wife to buy any damn high chair we saw. So we got a baby blue Graco.

Had we seen the Tripp Trapp, however, I'm sure we would have changed our minds. Apparently the Tripp Trapp doubles as a log splitter and can churn pigs and cows into a delicious hunter's sausage because if it doesn't, then somebody has some 'splaining to do. Built by Stokke—a major figure in the expensive baby gear industry—this high chair costs $199 and is made of wood and other delightful, alterna-materials so you can feel good about the environment while stuffing little Junior full of mashed olive loaf.

Product Page [BabyStyle via DaddyTypes]

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