Nobody Expected a $28 Folding Clipboard to Be This Well Thought Out

The clipboard is one of those objects that hasn’t changed much because the problem it solves seems too simple to revisit. It holds paper flat while you write, and that’s essentially the brief it’s been fulfilling for decades. The rigidity that makes it useful is also what makes it awkward to carry. Most are sized for A4, and that footprint doesn’t get smaller just because you’re done with it.

Lihit Lab’s A-2068 Foldable Clipboard addresses that directly. It’s an A4-sized clipboard that folds in half at the midpoint, reducing its footprint to A5 for transport, then locks back open flat and rigid when you’re ready to write again. A slider on the side controls the fold, and the result is something that behaves like a proper clipboard when you need it and a compact document folder when you don’t.

Designer: Lihit Lab.

The slider is the mechanical decision that makes the whole thing work. Once the board is open, it locks both halves flush and stiff, so there’s no flex in the writing surface while you’re standing or moving around. That matters on a jobsite, at a site survey, or anywhere you’re filling out forms away from a desk. Clipboards flex when they shouldn’t, and this one addresses that specifically.

The clip is a lock-function type that can be loaded while the board is open, so clipping down a stack of pages doesn’t require holding the board shut with one hand while fumbling with the other. A paper stopper at the bottom keeps document edges flush when the board is folded closed, and a rubber band wraps around the outside during transit so nothing comes loose inside a bag.

The body is polypropylene, with the binder and slider made from ABS resin, and the elastic band from polyester and polyurethane. Open, it measures 234mm x 339mm and is just 14mm thick. Folded, the height drops to 165mm. The clip holds up to 15 sheets of copy paper, which covers most field documentation. It comes in three colorways: Terracotta Orange, Slate Blue, and Ivory.

Most people who regularly carry clipboards to fieldwork have had to choose between the convenience of a flat writing surface and the awkwardness of a full-sized board in a bag. Storage clipboards try to solve this by adding internal compartments, but they tend to get thicker rather than smaller. The A-2068 takes a different route by reducing the form factor through folding rather than adding more material around the sides.

The A-2068 retails for ¥1,300 in Japan and is available internationally through specialty stationery shops at around $28. It’s the kind of update to a familiar object that’s easy to overlook until you’ve actually had to carry a full-sized clipboard across a job site and back again. The writing surface, the clip, and the capacity are all exactly what you’d expect. It just happens to fold in half.

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Burying Your House Sounds Extreme. HiberTec Makes It Make Sense.

The first time I saw footage of a neighborhood completely leveled by wildfire, nothing left but chimneys and twisted metal, I had the same thought most people do: why do we keep building the same way? We’ve watched communities in California, Colorado, and beyond get erased in a matter of hours, and the standard response has largely been to rebuild in the same spot with slightly better fire-resistant cladding. It’s determined, in its own way. It’s also starting to feel like wishful thinking.

HiberTec Homes is proposing something entirely different. Their fully patented design allows a modular home to automatically lower itself underground when a wildfire or tornado threat is detected, then resurface completely unharmed once the danger has passed. The whole process takes 15 minutes or less. You press a button, the utilities shut off automatically, a fire-retardant system activates, a protective shell seals the structure, and the house descends into a sealed underground vault. Then you wait. Then you come back to a home that’s still standing.

Designer: HiberTec Homes

Founder Holden Forrest first conceived the idea in 2019 and spent several years developing it with a team of engineers specializing in thermal systems and structural design. He self-funded the project to the tune of $500,000 before appearing on Shark Tank Season 17, where he secured a deal with Barbara Corcoran for $1 million at 20% equity, plus a contract to build the first real working model at $1,000 per square foot. That price point is admittedly steep, but HiberTec’s stated goal is to eventually bring costs down to around $400 per square foot, which would put it within reach of a much wider audience.

And the audience that needs it is enormous. Over 300,000 homes are destroyed globally every year. In the U.S. alone, more than 25,000 homes are lost annually to wildfires and high winds. Perhaps the most staggering figure: more than 8 million American homeowners currently cannot obtain property insurance. The economic losses from Southern California wildfires alone have crossed $300 billion. At some point, fire-resistant landscaping and defensible space stop being sufficient answers to what has become a genuine housing crisis.

Beyond the visual drama of a house literally sinking into the earth, what makes HiberTec’s approach feel genuinely smart is its open platform model. Rather than operating as a closed, proprietary system, the company has designed its hydraulic technology to integrate with dozens of existing homebuilders and their modular models, with little to no modification required. That’s a meaningful distinction. It means this isn’t a niche luxury product for a handful of custom home clients. It’s being positioned as infrastructure, something that can scale across the industry instead of living at the edges of it.

The skeptics will have fair points to raise. The technology is still in the prototype phase, and until a real home descends underground and resurfaces in an actual fire event, all of this lives in the realm of engineering promise. Hydraulic systems are complex. Underground environments bring their own challenges around moisture, soil shifting, and structural integrity. These aren’t small details to work out. There’s also the question of what happens to everything around the home. You save the structure, but the neighborhood, the trees, the infrastructure that connects you to the rest of the world, all of that remains vulnerable.

Still, the premise refuses to leave your mind. We’ve spent decades trying to make homes better at withstanding fire. HiberTec’s answer is to simply remove the home from the equation entirely, if only for a few hours. It’s the kind of lateral thinking that sounds absurd right up until you realize the conventional approach keeps failing people at catastrophic scale.

Whether HiberTec becomes the future of housing or a fascinating proof-of-concept that reshapes the conversation, it’s already doing something valuable: forcing the question of whether we need to rethink not just how homes are built, but how they survive. When whole towns can disappear in a single afternoon, that question deserves a serious answer.

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Louis Vuitton unveils bespoke Trophy Trunk for FIFA World Cup 2026 ahead of the final

France is shown the door, and Spain has triumphed into the final of the FIFA World Cup, now waiting patiently for either England or the favorites, Argentina. While who will make it to the final to contest for the most coveted trophy against Spain remains uncertain, at the time of writing, what’s certain is that Louis Vuitton has readied the bespoke trunk that will be used by the winners to carry the golden trophy out of the New York New Jersey Stadium on Sunday, July 19.

Like it has been doing in the last four editions, LV has unveiled its licensed 2026 FIFA World Cup Trophy Trunk to showcase and transport the most iconic cup in sports. It has previously designed trophy trunks for the 2010 edition of the FIFA World Cup in South Africa, followed by the 2014 Brazil, 2018 Russia, and 2022 Qatar editions.

Designer:  FIFA and Louis Vuitton

The fifth such trunk, in as many editions of the World Cup, is made by Maison’s artisans in its Asnières-sur-Seine workshops near Paris. It is meticulously covered in the iconic Louis Vuitton monogram canvas and will, for the first time, be officially disclosed at the final match of the World Cup.

The 2026 FIFA World Cup Trophy Trunk will be brought onto the pitch for the finals ceremony and will become part of the music and entertainment programs when football’s greatest achievement is celebrated. Making its presence etched in the annals of history, the 2026 FIFA World Cup Trophy Trunk comes enclosed in an all-LV Monogram canvas cover and features a pair of front panels adorned with a golden “V,” which, according to the press statement, stands for both Vuitton and Victory.

The exterior doesn’t give out much about the official partnership. It is more reserved for the interior, which is done in light beige leather and a space in the center for the “world’s most coveted trophy—a symbol of dedication, collective ambition, and the ultimate celebration of victory.” Here, a patch on the lid is used to showcase the partnership logo between Louis Vuitton and FIFA.

Returning to the exterior, it features LV’s signature leather trim known as “lozines.” The trunk corners are protected with gold-plated brass, while clasps and a lock are used to secure the precious trophy inside. Lock and clasp design is reminiscent of those used by the maison since the 1860s.

Unless you are the FIFA museum in Zurich, Switzerland, there is no chance you can keep the trophy or the trunk. Louis Vuitton understands it better than any of us and has therefore created three look-alike limited edition trunks. Since each of these is inspired by the trunk designed for the original solid gold trophy, they feature monogram canvas, a hand-painted FIFA World Cup logo, and the golden “V”.

The first of the three iterations is the Coffret 8 Montres, made to hold eight watches; the Cotteville 16 Montres is designed for the same purpose but with the capacity to store 16 watches. Malle Courrier Lozine 110 is a different breed; it is a trunk for the purpose of carrying luggage. There is no word on how each of these will be priced, but we learn that users will have an option to personalize their purchase with their initials.

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