It looks like a pillow with a cell phone glued on the side. Closer up, you see a solar panel and a tiny red light.
Odd products come across my desk every week. But the LuminAID, a solar-powered inflatable lamp, takes a prize.

It looks weird, no doubt. In use the PVC plastic light is a simple solution for campers in need of a lantern in a tent our outdoors at a site.
Sunlight and the solar panel charges an embedded lithium battery. Once full, the light can shine for 6 hours at about 35 lumens — bright enough to cook or read by.
It folds up and packs as small as an iPhone. Clip it on a backpack with its solar panel exposed to recharge the unit as you hike.

Then blow it up to convert the LuminAID to lantern mode — the translucent plastic “pillow” serves as a diffuser to spread light in an even cloud.
Though flimsy feeling in the hand, the company built the LuminAID to last for a couple years of use. The battery can be recharged up to 500 times.


