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Frequent fliers rejoice: Tumi and Studio Dror re-invent the carry-on bag

By | April 17, 2012, 8:26 PM PDT

The new Dror for Tumi expandable carry on, fully extended

This week in Milan, high-end luggage maker Tumi launches a new type of carry-on bag with a hard case that can expand via a hidden, hinge-like mechanism, created in collaboration with hip product designer Dror Benshetrit of New York-based Studio Dror.

The studio is best known for poetic products such as the Peacock Chair, an eye-catching, fan-like seat created for Italian furniture maker Cappellini. It’s now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s permanent collection. And Tumi is betting that its latest invention will catch on with frequent fliers that attend high-profile global events like the Salone Internazionale del Mobile, also known as the Milan Furniture Fair–taking place from April 17-22, and for which the new bag’s launch is timed.

“The biggest challenge was probably designing the living hinge for the expansion suitcase. We went back and forth with the Tumi engineers countless times,” Benshetrit told me in an e-mail message. In a press release, Studio Dror cited 18 months of research and development conducted with Tumi to develop the expandable bag and ten other items in a product line called Dror for Tumi.

“We went out of our respective comfort zones and pushed boundaries, denied obstacles,” he continued. “It was so rewarding to overcome that challenge and feel that although I was new to luggage design work, I was able to contribute to an innovative product with my fresh eye and [determined] character.”

...and the same case, folded shut

Benshetrit, who said he is a long-time Tumi customer himself, designed the patent-pending bag after creating about 40 prototypes, according to a recent piece in Fast Company’s April 2012 print edition. The depth of the case can increase from 9 to 14 inches. The cool-looking carry-on comes with a premium price tag: $895.

Yes, that’s getting into elite, luxury-goods territory. But the collaboration between Benshetrit and Tumi is more than just a stylistic or status-conscious one. Benshetrit’s imaginative, playful approach to design, informed by his own customer experience and travel habits, resulted in a possible new patent and a technical solution to every business traveler’s packing nightmare.

That Studio Dror, which works with a variety of brands known for their style, from high-end automaker Bentley to mass-market retailer Target, doesn’t hurt. The association helps build Tumi’s brand as a design-conscious one, too. Launching the luggage during the Salone Internazionale del Mobile was a wise marketing choice, given the types of globe-trotting, design-conscious audiences who will be in Milan this week. (Note: the luggage will be shown at a venue outside of the main furniture fair, at an event called MOST from April 17-22 at Milan’s National Museum of Science and Technology.)

Here’s a video on the Dror for Tumi collection–in case you can’t make it to Milan, or are just curious about Benshetrit’s creative take on Tumi’s legacy of making sturdy, well-engineered luggage.

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Reena Jana

About Reena Jana

Reena Jana was a contributing editor for SmartPlanet from 2011 to 2013.

Reena Jana

Reena Jana

Contributing Editor

Reena Jana has written for the New York Times, Wired, Harvard Business Review online, Fast Company, Architectural Record, Artforum, Time Out New York, Harper's Bazaar, and GQ. Previously, she was the innovation department editor at BusinessWeek. She holds degrees from Columbia University and Barnard College.

Follow her on Twitter.

Reena Jana

Reena Jana

Reena occasionally consults with companies, and when her writing discusses a corporation or other organization with which she has worked, she will disclose this fact. Reena does not hold any investments in the companies she covers.

She writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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backpack
love that backpack design. hard to find something really versatile that's also muted/all business color scheme
Posted by MCOC
18th Apr 2012
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Carry on?
I don't quite understand the purpose of expanding the bag, if it is your only bag, and a carry-on. Carry-ons must fit in a predefined space or you get charged (by some airlines) as regular baggage.
Posted by 16Tons
18th Apr 2012
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An idea for this
Make the case vacuum tight and include a pump to evacuate the air, compressing whatever you put in there to easily fit in the collapsed bag mode.
Posted by BitwiseCGU
18th Apr 2012
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