
Celeb Mom Gwen Stefani and Bugaboo Team Up for World AIDS Day
Filed under: Baby Essentials, Fashion, Gear Guides: Pregnancy
Bid on this one-of-kind Bugaboo Cameleon designed by No Doubt frontwoman Gwen Stefani. Credit: Bugaboo
In honor of World AIDS Day and their partnership with (RED)™, stroller-maker Bugaboo has teamed up with style icon and rockstar mom Gwen Stefani to create a one-of-a-kind Bugaboo Cameleon stroller that will be auctioned off to help eliminate AIDS in Africa.
Stefani designed this unique Cameleon using a floral/graffiti print from her iconic fashion line, L.A.M.B. And, for an extra touch of rockstar glam, lined the front and back of the stroller in Vachetta leather trim, embellished with rounded pyramid studs.
The auction goes live on eBay today at 12 p.m. PST and will run through Dec. 5., with 100 percent of the proceeds going to the Global Fund, helping to reach the goal of eliminating mother-to-child HIV transmission by 2015. For more info or to bid, visit the Bugaboo auction page.
While only one lucky fashion- and socially-conscious baby will get bragging rights to this hip stroller, anyone can help support the fight against AIDS in Africa through (RED) just by purchasing a Bugaboo product. Bugaboo is the only company that donates 1 percent of sales from all of their products to the Global Fund.
Many other companies have teamed up with (RED) to develop special product lines that benefit this important cause. Take a look at some more of our favorite (PRODUCT) RED stuff: Converse sneakers for kids and adults; Gap t-shirts for men and women; Beats by Dr. Dre headphones; limited edition Penguin Classics books; and even a special edition Apple iPod nano.











ReaderComments (Page 1 of 1)
1-15-2011 @ 4:18AM
sedathut said...About HIV and AIDS virus research
The new key designed by the by the everyday. Twenty years he’s learned to live with day.
Take you through it with you argue with that if you will too.
The drugs that make a living with a possible public not every drug combination that works for every patient researchers at Duke University have developed a medical test. That provides an early warning of which medicines the patient will be resistant to an.
Arm or therapy has to be so potent that the virus cannot continue to grow.
At the University of Florida researchers are taking it to kind of studying flight samples from the young HIV patients over several years they track the virus is movement and genetic changes. Every new color on this chart another step on the path to full blown any clues that could one day tell them where and how to stop it.
Anything that’s common we can find com it starts to give us a clue that we might have found something to be universally market as it were the future.
A development that could one day lead to that he’ll find his chance of getting that.
Out with that at the best of luck I will always be a companion to go.
Reply
1-15-2011 @ 4:21AM
sedathut said...source
www.wajwaj.com