INGLESINA ELECTA STROLLER DARWIN BATTERY BEIGE+ CHASSIS IRIDIO BLACK 4 IN 1 FULL SET
SKU: 16440958117

INGLESINA ELECTA STROLLER DARWIN BATTERY BEIGE+ CHASSIS IRIDIO BLACK 4 IN 1 FULL SET

Sale price$2655.00 Regular price$2950.00
Save 10%

Shipping Estimate
USA
  • USA
  • CAN

Ships within 48 hours · Estimated delivery Jul 9 - Jul 14

Promo Codes Available:

For Your Every Summer RSVP, with Code: SUMMER15

Description

INGLESINA ELECTA STROLLER DARWIN BATTERY BEIGE+ CHASSIS IRIDIO BLACK 4 IN 1 FULL SETELECTA: The System Quattro ideal for city life. Thanks to its lightness and compactness, it can be taken everywhere without ever neglecting the baby wellness. Included with System Quattro Carrycot. Welcome Pad + mattress. Standup support. Stroller seat. Darwin Car Seat Footmuff for stroller. Chassis. Storage basket. Cup holde Carrycot. 5 Windows for Ventilation The new Open Up carrycot is designed to provide perfect ventilation thanks to 5 ventilation

ELECTA:

The System Quattro ideal for city life. Thanks to its lightness and compactness, it can be taken everywhere without ever neglecting the baby wellness.

Included with System Quattro

  • Carrycot.
  • Welcome Pad® + mattress.
  • Standup support.
  • Stroller seat.
  • Darwin Car Seat
  • Footmuff for stroller.
  • Chassis.
  • Storage basket.
  • Cup holde 

Carrycot.

5 Windows for Ventilation The new Open Up carrycot is designed to provide perfect ventilation thanks to 5 ventilation windows: one at the head, two on the right side, and two on the left side, all independently adjustable. This system allows you to regulate airflow and maintain optimal climate control for your newborn, ensuring maximum comfort at all times of the day.

Incredibly spacious For the correct physiological development of the newborn baby, it is important to ensure that they are lying down and horizontal as long as possible. Thanks to its large internal dimensions (79 x 37 cm) they can lie down comfortably at least until 6 months old, even when wrapped in a winter muff or wearing a padded babygrow

Temperature Control The Open Up carrycot, with its adjustable ventilation windows, creates the ideal environment for your newborn. It protects the baby from excessively high or low temperatures and prevents discomfort caused by high humidity. The five ventilation windows ensure optimal airflow, promoting constant air exchange and maintaining a consistently comfortable environment. Thanks to the independent control of each window, you can adapt the ventilation to the moment’s needs, ensuring maximum well-being for your little one.

Visual Contact The ventilation windows promote constant visual contact with your baby, which is essential in the first weeks of life. This continuous interaction strengthens the initial bonds, creating a reassuring connection and moments of play and discovery, even with older siblings.

Welcome Pad® To welcome your baby in the best possible way, encouraging the correct posture and helping them to feel protected and cocooned, we equipped the Aptica carrycot with the Welcome Pad®, the support designed in collaboration with the department of Neonatology of the Maggiore Hospital in Bologna in compliance with the latest scientific guidelines in terms of well-being and safety.

Lighter and More Protective The carrycot’s shell is now lighter, while still maintaining all the strength and protection your newborn needs. The inner lining, equipped with a rigid mesh at the head opening, provides additional safety, offering protective support for your baby’s head.

Adjustable backrest The backrest reclines into different positions to facilitate digestion after feeding and to allow children to look out when they are older.

Seat Unit. 

The reversible seat allows the stroller to be used in two different directions.
Facing the parent for the first few months when the baby needs reassurance from the gaze and contact of mum and dad, facing the street for when they are older.

The right time to change direction? It will be the child itself who will make it clear: if they turn continuously to look around, then it will mean that they are ready to discover the world and that will be the right time to position the seat so that it faces the street.

 

Ideal for the city The stroller is ideal for city life. Extraordinarily manoeuvrable, easy to open and close and, thanks to its lightness and compactness, it can be easily carried up and down stairs and on and off public transport, while holding the child in your arms.

Compact when folded The stroller can be folded either with the seat facing you or facing the street, standing on its own. Once folded up, the handle and fabric parts never touch the ground.

Incredibly spacious Thanks to the very wide and padded seat (54×32 cm) your child will be comfortable even when they are older.

Darwin Car Seat It is approved according to the new ECE R129/03 regulations from birth to 75 cm. It can be used with Darwin i-Size and Darwin 360° i-Size base. Base should be purchased separatelly.

Also, on the move Easily attaches to the optional car base, Stand-up or chassis, without the need for any adapters so you can switch between configurations with a single click, making it easier for your child to rest.

Easy and practical to use Easy to carry, thanks to the carry handle with ergonomic handle and its light weight (4.75 kg). Can be used as a baby carrier and baby chair at home, when attached to the stand-up support.

Standup 

Why waking them up? With the practical Stand-up you can use the carrycot to ensure your baby sleeps soundly, even at home. In the first months of life your baby will need a lot of sleep, even 16-18 hours a day. If they fall asleep when they come back from a walk, position the carrycot in a comfortable and hygienic way on the Stand-up, thus turning it into a real bed for a sweet rest.

Perfect for the night Newborns often prefer to sleep in a pram because they feel more protected than in a traditional carrycot or baby bed. Thanks to the Stand-up you can have your baby at the side of your bed to help you during the night feedings

Chassis.

Spirit of the city Thanks to Inglesina’s exclusive patented system, the frame opens and closes with one hand and stands upright on its own when closed, without the handle ever touching the ground.

Lightweight and surprisingly compact Incredibly lightweight. Only 5.5 kg. You can easily transport and load it anywhere! Once folded up, it is extremely compact, it remains upright on its own and the handle does not touch the ground.

Opening and closing a chassis has never been easier Thanks to the exclusive system patented by Inglesina, the chassis opens and closes with just one hand.

Extraordinarily manoeuvrable Thanks to a state-of-the-art chassis, Electa moves around all corners of the city with ease. It passes through the narrowest spaces thanks to the small overall dimensions (only 50 cm). It is extremely smooth and manoeuvrable thanks to the large wheels (215 mm rear and 175 front) and ball bearings on all four wheels.

 Large storage basket The very large and deep basket allows you to load everything you need to face your adventures. The reflective material profile makes evening strolls safer

Dimensions and Weight

Carrycot

  • Weight: 4.9 kg
  • Internal dimensions: 79 x 37 x 22 cm (length x width x depth)

 Chassis

  • Weight: 5,5 kg
  • Frame size open: 50 x 93-106 x 83-96 cm (width x height x depth)
  • Frame size closed: 50 x 73,5 x 28 cm (width x height x depth)

Stroller

  • Backrest width: 32 cm
  • Backrest height: 54 cm
  • Seat width: 32 cm
  • Stroller seat weight: 3,2 kg
  • Stroller dimensions open: 50 x 107 x 83-96 cm (width x height x depth)
  • Dimensions stroller closed (toward the world): 50 x 73.5 x 30 cm (width x height x depth)
  • Dimensions stroller closed (toward parent): 50 x 80 x 32 cm (width x height x depth)
  • Stroller weight (seat + frame): 8,7 kg


Shipping Notes
  • Free Standard Shipping on $100+ Orders to the USA.
  • Except Preorder products are shipped in 48 hours.
  • Delivery to the USA:
  1. Standard Shipping : 3-10 business days
  • If time is of the essence, please consider selecting expedited delivery for faster service.
Exchange/Return Notes
  • We offer a 30-day return/exchange service after receiving.
  • Final sale items are not eligible for returns or exchanges.
  • To process your return/exchange, please contact us at [email protected]
  • Please click here for more details>>> Return & Exchange Policy
SKU: 16440958117

Discover Niche Categories That Outsell

Top-Converting Item to Boost Your Average Order

4.5 ★★★★★
Based on 121 reviews
Sort
Highest Rating
Newest First
Oldest First
Product Reviews
H
Verified Purchase
Hubert Herring
Lowell, US
★★★★★ 5
great resource for high school parents
Format: Paperback
A terrific book -- on many levels. It is, first, a series of excellent suspense stories, with vivid characterizations of the students seeking admission to Wesleyan. The author found some fascinating students to follow, with the result that the reader really cares what happens to them. Even more important -- especially to someone about to embark on the college hunt -- he provides an invaluable insight into how the admissions process works. The admissions game, I now realize thanks to this splendid tale, is a crazy-quilt mixture: at Wesleyan, at least, the process focuses on the individual, quirks and all, far more than I imagined. At the same time, the process comes off as frighteningly random -- with so much depending on which admissions officer reads the application, and what that person focuses on in the few minutes available. The book is also a vivid reminder that admissions officers are people, too -- people of infinite variety. So it was a pleasure to read -- and it will also prove immensely useful to parents. One common theme kept repeating: take the hard courses, even if it means lower grades. Another: having a passion is a real plus, but the rest of the record can't be a disaster. But those are just the beginning.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on September 11, 2003
B
Verified Purchase
Brian Tarbox
Pawtucket, US
★★★★★ 4
Very accurate view of admission (I worked there); compelling read, enlightening even for people who think they already know
Format: Kindle
I was a Senior Interviewer during my senior year at Wesleyan 1981 and so I worked with many of the main characters in the book. Although the book describes a later time period it rang entirely true to me. The volume of applications...the controlled chaos...the searching for a hook or a champion for an application was very familiar. At least at Wes it seemed (and seems) that unless one's application has some unusual feature that the school is looking for that year (a particular athlete or a particular musician or a particular tough background that was overcome) the road to admission will be challenging. An area that did surprise me was the emphasis on the family of the applicant...and the degree to which an applicant was held to a higher standard if their parents were deemed to be college fluent. I guess this makes sense and actually provides a leveling of the playing field but it was surprising none the less. It may also be surprising to some that these days you don't just need to convince the gatekeepers that you could be successful at the school..you must also show how your presence would enhance the school. This is of course an enormous burden for most teenagers. Like it or not this is the reality at many "top" schools. If you or your child is applying to college you owe it to yourself to read this book....either to understand the game or to make an informed decision not to play.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on May 20, 2013
P
Verified Purchase
P. Meltzer
Massapequa, US
★★★★★ 5
What is better? The overachieving 6 or underachieving 8?
Format: Hardcover
First, let me say that I thought that this was an excellent book and would recommend it to anyone who is at all interested in the college admissions process. Second, I was surprised at how many of the reviewers seemed shocked--shocked!--that applicants got bonus points for coming from minority backgrounds. Was this some kind of revelation? However one thing that surprised me a little bit is how--even moving beyond race entirely--the more advantages you have had in life, the more disadvantageous it will be for your admissions process. For example, I was unaware that having successful parents would be, in essence, held against you on the theory that more would be expected of you. While other reviewers have (jokingly?) said that they would advise their white kids not to check the "Caucasian" box, I might advise my (still very young) kids to say that their parents have been unemployed their whole life. I suppose that the main issue which this whole process really boils down to is the following: As a college applicant, is it more important to succeed in life relative to the world around you (i.e. relative to your classmates, to others of your race, to others of your geographical area, to your own parents' life and accomplishments, etc.) or is it more important to succeed absolutely and not on a relative scale. This book clearly informs us that the answer is the former and not the latter. Whether that should be the answer is another question. For example, say that a student's entire life could be distilled into 2 numbers each on a sliding scale from 1-10. The first number is simply your academic performance (grades, SAT's, course load, etc.) The second number is your background (race, economic circumstances, gender, etc.) In the case of Wesleyan, it seems clear to me that they would rather have a student whose first number was, say, a 6 if his or her second was a 2 (take Mig for example in Steinberg's book) than a student whose first number was an 8 if the second number was a 9 or 10 (take Tiffany Wang for example). Whether that is the right approach is certainly a legitimate issue for discusion and I'm not saying that it's not. I suppose that one of the things that would be interesting to know (even though one never really can know of course) is whether those numbers will change in the future. For example, if one were to know that Mig would always be a 6 and Tiffany would always be an 8, would that change the analysis as to which is the right approach? I suspect that part of the reason that a school like Wesleyan would favor the overachieving 6 over the underachieving 8 is due to the hope or expectation that those trends will continue in the future and that one day the 6 will actually be ahead of the 8. And maybe that's the way it works. Who knows.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on February 28, 2003
J
Verified Purchase
Jeremy W.
Phoenix, US
★★★★★ 5
You will find out how a selective private college evaluate and admit students
Format: Paperback
I'm a high school counselor and college advisor. Fifteen years ago when I started my college counseling position, I struggled to understand or explain to students and their parents how a selective private college evaluate and admit students. It was this book that helped me understand the essence of selective private college admissions. Compared to other dry theory books, this book tells the admissions practice as stories that are easy to read, understand, and associate with. I highly recommend this book to students, parents, and new counselors.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on December 5, 2024
M
Verified Purchase
M. Tucker
Fort Morgan, US
★★★★★ 3
Who edited this mess?!?!?!?
Format: Kindle
This is a very interesting work of nonfiction. I found it intriguing and read it very quickly. I actually got invested in these students and their stories and their journey to get admitted to the college that was right for them. BUT, and this is a big but, this book is so poorly edited, it is disgraceful! If a person were reading this for research purposes, and it could be useful for just that, good luck to them. The dates are all over the place. At one point, the kids are being considered for the class of 2004, then it makes a reference to the current year as 2000, then it reverts back to 2004 for a long while, then it mentions how the kids--currently at their various chosen colleges--reacted to the events of 9/11/01. What the hell? It's very confusing. It makes it very difficult to keep things in context.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on August 8, 2013

recommand products