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What Happens When You Combine a Garment Bag and a Roll Bag?

by Madelyn Miller

If you are a serious traveler, you have probably rolled your clothes to keep them wrinkle-free and squeeze in more stuff. A frequent traveler figured out a way to combine a roll bag and a detachable garment bag and make it small enough to meet airline carry-on requirements. But it is still big enough to hold clothing for a two-or three-day trip. Without trying to hard, we packed: 3 polo shirts, 2 T-shirts, 3 pairs underwear, 3 pairs socks, sweatpants, shorts, belt, tie, dress shoes, toiletries, a suit, a pair of pants, and 2 dress shirts.

The SkyRoll has two main components, the roll bag and the detachable garment bag. Shoes, toiletries and small articles of clothing fit inside one of two compartments inside the roll bag, or in accessory pockets at each end. Suits, pants, dresses and large articles of clothing are placed inside the detachable garment bag. The garment bag attaches easily and rolls around the outside of the roll bag. Because your clothing is rolled instead of folded, wrinkles are minimized. It is perfect for short business trips or weekend getaways when you don't have time to wait at baggage claim. And now that the FAA is limiting you to one piece of carry-on luggage, SkyRoll is the perfect carry-on.

Available in Black

from Magellan's www.magellans.com

from National Geographic www.shop.nationalgeographic.com

Suggested retail price: $175 plus shipping and handling.

A complete list of retailers carrying SkyRoll is at www.skyroll.com

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