Green Polka Dot iPhone 16 Case – Olive Garden | MagSafe
SKU: 97090415290

Green Polka Dot iPhone 16 Case – Olive Garden | MagSafe

Sale price$40.46 Regular price$44.95
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Description

Green Polka Dot iPhone 16 Case – Olive Garden | MagSafeLarge dark olive dots sit across a sandy mustard ground in an even staggered grid, all warm earth and seventies ease. The two tone palette feels sun baked and lived in. Retro and grounded, like a ceramic tile from a Mediterranean kitchen you never wanted to leave. Designed for iPhone 16. CoreShock 10ft Drop Protection our signature drop protection technology, built into the case. You won't see it. Your phone won't feel a thing. MagSafe Ready N52

Large dark olive dots sit across a sandy mustard ground in an even staggered grid, all warm earth and seventies ease. The two-tone palette feels sun-baked and lived-in. Retro and grounded, like a ceramic tile from a Mediterranean kitchen you never wanted to leave. Designed for iPhone 16.

CoreShock™ 10ft Drop Protection — our signature drop-protection technology, built into the case. You won't see it. Your phone won't feel a thing.

MagSafe Ready — N52 magnets, 1600g hold. Snaps onto chargers and car mounts first try, every time.

Soft Microfibre Lining — a smooth inner layer that keeps the back of your phone safe from scuffs, scratches, and daily wear.

Glossy finish with scratch-resistant coating — colours stay bright and the design stays fresh, even months down the line.

Printed in our London studio. Made with 50% recycled materials. Every order ships in a gift box with a velvet pouch. If it's for someone else, you don't need to wrap it.

Why this is the best iPhone 16 case

Designed to fit the iPhone 16 precisely — every port, button, and camera cut-out lines up exactly where it should. It stays slim enough to slip into a pocket while CoreShock™ takes the hits a phone actually takes: the kitchen floor, the car park, the bottom of a bag. Because the print sits under a scratch-resistant gloss, the art that made you choose it still looks new months later. No bulk, no compromise — protection you forget is there until you need it.

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SKU: 97090415290

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4.8 ★★★★★
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J
Verified Purchase
John Moore
Grantham, US
★★★★★ 5
Guided tour through a difficult work
Format: Paperback
For the non-expert reader of Plato, this is a very good text for working through Timaeus. Actually, it may be useful to expert readers as well, but I wouldn't know about that, being firmly situated in the non-expert camp. Though some scholars may take exception to certain parts of Cornford's translation and interpretation, for those of us trying to get through it for the first time and on our own, this is still an exceptional guide. By the way, for an alternative translation and interpretation, the reader may want to check out Kalkavage's translation (Focus Philosophical Library), it is very good (I would rate it 5 stars also) and has some extremely helpful appendices for understanding references to music, astronomy, and geometry.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on January 6, 2013
R
Verified Purchase
Reviewer from San Ramon
Alexandria, US
★★★★★ 5
Cornford's Plato Cosmology/Timaeus
Format: Paperback
This is an excellent and invaluable reference book for Plato's Timaeus. If you are reading Timaeus you MUST have this book. It contains line-by-line commentary, and also, most valuable, some very helpful illustrations (example: illustration of the human body as Timaeus explained it). I would, however, balance this book with other books that attempt to place Timaeus within the rest of Plato's works. I recommend, for example, Peter Kalkavage's Timaeus. There, he attempts to link Timaeus and Republic.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on February 8, 2011
W
Verified Purchase
Wilbur F. Pierce
Battle Creek, US
★★★★★ 5
An Excellent Choice
Format: Paperback
Excellent introduction, notes and translation.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on June 8, 2017
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Verified Purchase
David Lemberg
Carnegie, US
★★★★★ 5
Five Stars
Format: Paperback
Professor Cornford's translation with running commentary is definitive.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on November 5, 2015
J
Jordan Bell
Fort Morgan, US
★★★★★ 5
Plato's dialogue about the physical world
Format: Paperback
The two biggest topics in the Timaeus are astronomy and the elements of bodies, which are constructed using triangles and the tetrahedron, octahedron, icosahedron, and cube. I would like to see a translation of the Timaeus that uses it as a way to introduce all the astronomy that appears in the dialogue. Introducing the astronomy does not mean just talking in words about spheres or the zodiac or the ecliptic, but actually explaining how these were used by astronomers. Cornford has much to say, but to someone who has not learned any Greek astronomy his commentary will be opaque and hard to use. I didn't know the astronomy well enough to readily understand Cornford's explanations. I plan to learn more classical Greek astronomy, perhaps using Evans' , and then read Waterfield's translation of the Timaeus . Before reading this you should have read the Republic and know some classical Greek natural philosophy, mathematics, and astronomy. Although Cornford's commentary makes the dialogue staccato, I am glad for it because I wouldn't otherwise have understood much of what Plato says. The Timaeus and the Parmenides are the two dialogues of Plato that one needs commentary to understand; the Parmenides demands the commentary because so much of what is happening depends on the original language, and the Timaeus demands the commentary because of all the things the reader is supposed to be familiar with. The following is a list of topics I kept while reading the dialogue: theory of Forms 27d-28a, 51a-52a; harmonics 35b-36b; time 37c-38e, 39b-e; vision 45b-46c, 67c-68d; space 52b; surfaces 53c; weight 62d-63e; sound 67a-67c; physiology 70c-79e, 80d-86a; antiperistasis 79e-80c.
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Reviewed in the United States on December 12, 2015

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