SKU: 50428647333
bugaboo cameleon weight limit

bugaboo cameleon weight limit Bugaboo OPEN BOX Cameleon 3 Stroller Limited Edition Atelier

Sale price$24.61 Regular price$27.34
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Description

bugaboo cameleon weight limit Bugaboo OPEN BOX Cameleon 3 Stroller Limited Edition AtelierSpecifications Stroller weight: 21 lbs ___________________________ Recommended Use: Birth to 37. 5 lbs ___________________________ Open Width (in): 23. 2 ___________________________ Folded Dimensions (in): 35 L x 20 W x 12 H _____________________________________ What's Included: Raincover What's NOT Included: Cup holder, child tray Why it's special: Stone m? lange fabrics Hand stitched faux leather handles Black chassis Matching inlay included From

Specifications

Stroller weight: 21 lbs
___________________________
Recommended Use: Birth to 37.5 lbs
___________________________
Open Width (in): 23.2
___________________________
Folded Dimensions (in): 35 L x 20 W x 12 H
_____________________________________

What's Included: Raincover

What's NOT Included: Cup holder, child tray

Why it's special:

Stone m?lange fabrics

Hand-stitched faux leather handles

Black chassis

Matching inlay included

From-Birth Solution

Attach a car seat for easy travel or a bassinet for ultimate comfort.

Reversible Seat

Reversible seat allows baby to face parents or explore the world.

Adjustable Handlebar

Easy one-handed steering and a comfortable ride regardless of your height.

Independent Bassinet

Use the self standing seat and bassinet independently on the ground.

Bugaboo introduces the Atelier Collection, a limited-edition design for the Bugaboo Cameleon3 and Bugaboo Buffalo. With its sleek lines and a contrasting color palette, the collection's most eye-catching feature is its bold silhouette. By using a light melange fabric and black faux leather details, the designers have cleverly added another dimension to the contours of the stroller. The Atelier Collection showcases the craftsmanship of Bugaboo's in-house design studio, which has been producing fashion-forward strollers for over 15 years.

Created with the utmost precision, every element - from the faux leather details to the rich, melange fabric - has been carefully considered to create a statement piece. As a finishing touch the Atelier Collection strollers feature a hand-stitched faux leather handle bar and carry handle. Want to keep your little one warm when the temperature drops? The matching padded Bugaboo Footmuff Atelier in black is available to purchase separately.

The Atelier Collection Features:

  • Black chassis, black faux leather details and hand-stitched carry handle/handle bar
  • Stone melange fabrics
  • Matching seat inlay in the box
  • Matching footmuff sold separately

From a groundbreaking invention that changed the way strollers look and work, to an established design icon, the Bugaboo Cameleon has been making parenting easier for more than 15 years.

Versatile and easy to use, the Bugaboo Cameleon adapts effortlessly to the challenges of navigating modern life with kids from getting in-and-out of the car, to running errands, dining out or simply strolling and turning family life into a never-ending adventure.

On four wheels or two, around the city, over sand or through snow, you can take the Bugaboo Cameleon off-road thanks to its large wheels and adjustable suspension -- while the independent seat always allows you to carry your child with you everywhere you go. Pushing or carrying your Bugaboo Cameleon3 in style just got even more comfortable with the addition of a precision-stitched faux leather handlebar and carry handle.

Continue living the rich and varied life you lead. Put your child in a Bugaboo Cameleon so you can keep living life to the fullest.

  • Faux leather handlebar and carry handle
  • Suitable from birth up to 17 kg/37.5 lbs.
  • One-hand release bassinet and seat.
  • Precision-stitched faux leather handlebar and carry handle.
  • Five-point harness with height-adjustable shoulder straps.
  • Mattress with aerated inlay.
  • 15 cm/6? Swivel wheels & 30 cm/12? rear wheels with durable foam-filled rubber tires.
  • All fabrics machine washable.
  • Weight (chassis, wheels, seat) 9.6 kg/21 lbs.
  • Folded lwh 90 x 50 x 31 cm/35" x 20" x 12".
  • Unfolded width 59 cm/23.2".
  • Underseat bag 23.8 l/6.3 gal, 4 kg/8.8 lbs.
What you get
  • Chassis with wheels
  • Seat/bassinet frame
  • Faux leather carry handle
  • Base bassinet fabric
  • Base seat fabric
  • 1 tailored fabric set (includes ONE extendable sun canopy and apron)
  • Underseat bag
  • Rain cover
  • 3 year warranty
What it does:
  • Quick and easy maneuverability
  • Modular folding system
  • Suitable from infant to toddler
  • Reversible bassinet; can be used separately
  • Mattress with aerated inlay
  • Car seat adaptable
  • Reversible seat with three reclining positions; can be used separately
  • Height-adjustable faux leather handlebar
  • Multi-terrain
  • Reversible handlebar for city & rough terrain
  • Adjustable suspension on swivel wheels

Created with Compare Ninja

Shipping Notes
  • Free Standard Shipping on $100+ Orders to the USA.
  • Except Preorder products are shipped in 48 hours.
  • Delivery to the USA:
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  • 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: 50428647333

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4.3 ★★★★★
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Anne Mills
Chelsea, US
★★★★★ 5
Great Reading, Mind Opening
Format: Kindle
This is a terrifically interesting and entertaining book, which presented me with at least two blockbuster ideas that changed the way I think about the past. I'll get to those in a minute, but first a few general points. Charles Mann is a science journalist:who seems to specialize in BIG topics. His 2005 book ("1491", which argues that the pre-Columbian population of the Americas was much larger and more sophisticated than generally assumed), was very well received. I enjoyed it so much, and thought it so valuable a book, that I was very anxious to read "1493". "1493" lived up to my (high) expectations. Mann is remarkable writer, with an extraordinary ability to present very complex facts and ideas in way that's not just accessible to the lay reader, it's fun for the lay reader. This isn't to say that the book isn't carefully researched -- the text is followed by almost 100 pages of footnotes, and throughout he cites and acknowledges the scientists and others from whom he has drawn information. It's just that Mann manages to combine a myriad of facts and hypotheses into a compelling narrative. And he often puts this in very concrete terms, focussing on individual people, commodities or events. It adds up to a fascinating read. It is also a very important one, with implications for the future as well as about the past. Mann's subject in this book is the Columbian Exchange, the sudden movement of plants, microbes, animals and people between the eastern and western hemispheres after Columbus' voyage to the Americas in 1492. A well known effect of this was the eastern hemisphere adoption of western hemisphere foods (tomatoes, potatoes, chocolate, coffee, and on and on). Another effect that's only been recently come to be widely understood is the devastating impact on the pre-Columbian population of the Americas; as many as 80% died in the epidemics that followed the introduction of diseases to which they had no immunity. But the population die-off and the exchange of plant species are not the only effects of the Columbian Exchange. Mann's book explores the myriad ways in which the Exchange -- globablization -- has shaped the world of today. Two things I learned from the book struck me particularly. First, like most Americans of my generation (older) I learned in school that the colonization of the Americas was carried out by white people, who moved into a largely uninhabited continent. "1491" took care of the uninhabited: "1493" takes care of the white. Mann says that from 1500 to 1840, about 3.4 million white Europeans emigrated to the Americas. Over the same period, about 11.7 million captive Africans were sent to the Americas. Except for New England, much of the United States and most of Latin American was far more black than white. (And probably in 1840 still more Indian/Native American than anything else). The racial balance changed as white immigration ramped up and as millions upon millions of blacks died too young, but the picture of early America looks very different to me now. Secondly, Mann discussed at length the 19th century ecological disaster that engulfed China. I had always assumed that the floods that killed so many millions in China had always happened, and were the result of geography. There have indeed always been floods, but their severity and human cost grew logarithmically in the 19th century. New crops led to more food and to rising population growth, and at the same time to more potential cash crops, increasing the pressure on existing land holdings, and leading to vast land clearances. That made the floods far worse when they came, undermining the political structure and compounding China's problems. This was interesting not just a light on the past, but as a warning signal for the future. The review is already too long, so, to sum it up: Great book!! Read it!! Give it to friends and family!!
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Reviewed in the United States on December 6, 2013
S
Verified Purchase
Scott Charles
Carnegie, US
★★★★★ 5
LOVED This Read! Blew Me Away
Format: Hardcover
What a fantastic read! Woah. All of the Americas have an extraordinary history. I was mesmerized from beginning to end. If you like knowing your history, you will love this book. Well researched and smartly written. Couldn't put it down. Books like this are why people love to read. If you think you know the Americas, you might be surprised to find that there's more, and be prepared for a bit of a shake up. This book was a real eye opener.
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Reviewed in the United States on November 18, 2025
J
Verified Purchase
James Ferguson
Phoenix, US
★★★★★ 4
A Brave New World
Format: Hardcover
It wasn't quite what I expected, but Charles Mann leads the reader on a fascinating journey in the wake of Columbus, focusing mostly on the environmental impact of his "discovery" of the New World. Mann literally spans the globe, as the establishment of Spanish colonies in the Americas would have far reaching consequences. Most interesting to me was how silver came to be the currency of exchange, allow Spain to trade with China, when it established its trading outpost in the modern-day Philippines. Along with silver, came corn, rubber and potatoes which would radically alter the landscape of the world. Mann discusses how corn came to replace rice for many Chinese, and how rubber trees would be transplanted to Indochina, bringing with them unsuspected pests that would wreak havoc on ecosystems. In this sense, the book has similarities with Jared Diamond's but explores different terrain. One of the most interesting chapters was on the highly profitable mining of bird guano and how the British cornered the market in this new fertilizer. Mann describes how the shift to mono-cultures had a tremendous impact on agriculture. At first, these new crops seemed to solve much of the world's food shortages, but then as the Irish famine made all too painfully aware, putting all your "eggs in one basket" can lead to devastating consequences as an unforeseen blight wiped out much of Ireland's food supply. Mann also offers a long study on how slavery evolved and re-shaped the ethnic identity of many countries, particularly those in Central and South America. The miscegenation that took place, with particular focus on Brazil, reshaped cultural patterns and changed the political dynamics in these countries. He offers a number of intriguing case studies, and discussed the long term impact of this human cross-pollination. 1493 is a fascinating study and meditation on life after Columbus. We don't fully realize how rapidly the world changed after this fateful "discovery," and how continents became so interdependent, where before they had been relatively isolated from each other.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 30, 2012
R
Verified Purchase
Russell C.
San Leandro, US
★★★★★ 5
Great History book
Format: Paperback
This book was a gift for husband. He loves it. He is a slow reader, but he can’t put book down. New and interesting history facts and stories.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on February 6, 2026
J
Verified Purchase
John D. Cofield
Pawtucket, US
★★★★★ 5
Consequence After Consequence
Format: Hardcover
"In Fourteen Hundred Ninety Two, Columbus Sailed The Deep Blue Sea" is a ditty sung by generations of school children. Most of those students learned and believed that Columbus was the only man in Europe who believed the world was round and proved it by sailing three ships west to find the East. In 1493, Charles C. Mann dismisses these legends and goes on to demonstrate that Columbus (or as he refers to him, Colon) and the other Europeans who sailed across the Atlantic in the 1400s and 1500s did far more than just discover a New World, they helped create a planet wide system in which people, plants, animals, and diseases travelled further and were linked in more ways than had ever before been possible. In other words, 1493 was the beginning point of a new age of globalization. This is not a new theory. Alfred W. Crosby developed the term Columbian Exchange back in the 1970s to describe the changes that took place after 1492. Jared Diamond's Guns, Germs, and Steel and Collapse also detailed some of the consequences of the European "discovery" of the Americas. What makes Mann's new book so appealing is his ability to tell an engrossing story that ably explains how one consequence led to another, fundamentally changing society after society and helping to creat our modern world. This is global history at its best, jumping from Ming and Qing China's opulent but troubled societies to the fast growing but still relatively backwards European states to the myriad African and Native American cultures, all of them to be affected by the transfer of peoples, plants, diseases, and ideas. Mann has a keen eye for an appealing and informative anecdote which really details the consequences of seemingly small decisions, such as how the introduction of the sweet potato to China led to deforestation, or how the Little Ice Age was affected by the abandonment of the Native American practice of burning off underbrush in North American forests. Its books like 1493, as well as Mann's earlier and equally excellent 1491, which make studying history so fascinating. I taught Advanced Placement World History to high school students for many years before retiring, and I regularly amused them (at least I hope I did) with many references to Jared Diamond and Alfred Crosby's ideas. With 1493 Charles C. Mann deserves equal recognition by global historians.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on August 19, 2011

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