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The portable gas heater: a thing of beauty?

By | January 21, 2010, 3:00 AM PST

“Love of Beauty is Taste and the Creation of Beauty is Art”. Those are the words of Ralph Waldo Emerson but whoever thought they’d apply to Portable Gas Heaters?

You know what we’re talking about…those clanky aluminum towers that hold propane tanks and keep us warm while cocktailing outdoors on cool nights? Thankfully a new company called Kindle Living has reinvented them. Good friends Arturo Fis and David Tannebaum were sitting in a friend’s yard one day while she tried to plan a party. The conversation got around to those ugly and dented heaters she’d have to rent. Arturo, who studied architecture but made a career in product design, had an epiphany. What if the heaters could be art? They immediately got to work on prototypes. Now their company, Kindle Living, is supplying the warmth for Hollywood’s coolest parties and creating real buzz in the design community.

I’ve asked David and Arturo to share a little more about Kindle Living and the development of the business. Gents, welcome to Smart Planet.

How did you move from idea to product?

The largest hurdle was ultimately making the decision to step away from the design firm I had worked with for the past 20 years. That said, between David’s enthusiasm, my wife’s loving support, a real need in the market, and a couple of thorough patent searches, we decided the opportunity was irresistible. Any new venture is handled through a series of necessary steps –first, a real sense of what a patio heater could look like, then, how it should work, how manufacturing should address the needs of the environment, experimentation to overcome the technical hurdles. After two years, the first Kindle prototype was ready for testing. Obviously, that’s simplified, but it truly was a birthing process—labor pains and all—and all the more rewarding when you consider how our Kindle Living concept will forever change the way people look, for the first time, at what a patio heater should look like.

Where did you find your first customers?

We knew everyone who uses a patio heater, and even some who refuse to have one because of their looks, would appreciate and desire a Kindle heater. That included countless venues, such as restaurants, hotels, malls, concert or sport halls, museums, etc., as well homes. Then, we explored the possibility of testing the product by offering a large number of production units to the rental market. Rental companies are notoriously hard on their products and we knew that the Kindles would be put through heavy use over the season. As expected, they have withstood beautifully and we’ve gotten really wonderful feedback.

How important has PR been to your success?

Very! When you bring out a new product that re-writes what an industry, or consumer has come to expect, you need to get the word out that it even exists! Then people go, “Wow, why has no one thought of that”? Until then, the idea of a Kindle Living product didn’t even exist. We have also been fortunate that the product has attracted wonderful enthusiasm from many notable bloggers, magazines and newspapers.

What was the smartest move you made?

My friendship with David. He is the ideal business partner and our skill sets complement each others, while maintaining and respecting what the other does. We also manage to have a good time in most everything we do. Our wives and kids are also very close friends, which certainly spur us on.

What was the dumbest?

Hmm, maybe not dumbest, but let’s say, most difficult. Everyone who sees a Kindle heater is smitten. We just need for more people to see it. It’s interesting because in commercial properties, historically the engineers would be the ones placing the orders for heaters, which were strictly a utilitarian product. With the introduction of the Kindle, we have entered the territory of designers, where the aesthetic is paramount. So, there needs to be a shift in the thinking and an integration of form and function.

What’s next for Kindle Living?

We are just warming up! We are absolutely looking towards the future with a slew of ideas, designs, and complements to the initial Kindle model. Look for some great, mind blowing stuff and ultra cool designs, coming your way.

Thanks David and Arturo!

Visit them on the web: www.kindleliving.com
Become a Facebook friend at: www.facebook.com/KindleLiving

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Vince Thompson

About Vince Thompson

Vince Thompson was a contributing editor for SmartPlanet from 2009 to 2010.

Vince Thompson

Vince Thompson

Contributing Editor, People

Vince Thompson is a digital revenue consultant, author, speaker and host of the popular BNET show Dog and Pony. His firm Middleshift LLC helps Internet companies build revenue by creating advertising solutions and scaling sales efforts. He is based in Los Angeles.

Follow him on Twitter.

Vince Thompson

Vince Thompson

Vince Thompson is the managing partner of Middleshift LLC, a digital revenue consultancy specializing in helping media companies sell online advertising.

Within the scope of his consultancy Vince works with a number or startups as well as major media companies and in many cases holds stock in those companies as well.

Vince is also the founder of Media2Watch LLC, parent company of Girl2Watch.com, a consumer content company that profiles up and coming actors and the shows they are going to be in and them connects them with audiences.

If at the time he writes an article or post he has a business relationship or investment related to the company or person featured, Vince will disclose his involvement. He writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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+1 Vote
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RE: The portable gas heater: a thing of beauty?
Wow, a giant table lamps. WTF? Who would seriously want one? This is supposed to be art and inspiration not reproduction of an old idea supersized.
Posted by I Hate Malware
21st Jan 2010
+1 Vote
+ -
Really bad for the environment
These heaters are really bad for the environment. Forget your 4x4 these just waste the heat and produce more Co2 than your average car.
Posted by jsargent
22nd Jan 2010
+1 Vote
+ -
RE: The portable gas heater: a thing of beauty?
I have to agree with the detractors here. These are pretty self-indulgent - there's nothing "Smart Planet" about these resource wasters. The Hollywood crowd will all pull up smugly in their Priuses and then go out and sit around these? Put on a fleece or go back inside for crying out loud.
Posted by ejhonda
22nd Jan 2010
+1 Vote
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RE: The portable gas heater: a thing of beauty?
Have to agree with the other posters. It's a repackaging of bad idea as a large table lamp. Not exactly a huge leap. It looks like a Reese's cup on a Kmart lamp base. And why are we heating the outdoors when we're trying to make our indoor environments so efficient? Sorry, not the "great, mind blowing stuff and ultra cool designs" I'd expect...
Posted by ckless
22nd Jan 2010
+1 Vote
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RE: The portable gas heater: a thing of beauty?
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Posted by bayaneskort
24th Jan 2010
+1 Vote
+ -
RE: The portable gas heater: a thing of beauty?
Given the advent of small hydrogen cells these could become more respectable - currently a way of flaunting your non-green credentials
Posted by dieseltaylor
1st Feb 2010
+1 Vote
+ -
RE: The portable gas heater: a thing of beauty?
i personally think these are incredible! gas lamp heaters are so ugly
and this makes them cool & playful. i checked the website, and the
article does not mention that the materials used are made from
green resources and 100% recyclable.
Posted by syfi88
20th Apr 2011
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