In this week’s edition of Good Finds, we’ve found a way to ensure you always get your deliveries (the first time), a commemorative low-top that once again proves why Nike has the streets, luxury activewear shows this whole fitness fad shows no signs of slowing down, and an AI-integrated notebook that goes far beyond this year’s bestsellers list.
Kindle, But Make It Colour

Amazon has spent years perfecting the monochrome e-reader, but now it seems they’ve finally listened to the many requests they inevitably receive from avid readers looking to upgrade their faithful Kindle setup.
The Colorsoft carries an 11-inch colour display, a new design, and, at just 5.4mm thick and 400g, it's extremely light for something that size.
Beyond just reading, the Scribe also serves as an AI-powered notebook with built-in cloud import from Google Drive and OneDrive, allowing you to annotate a PDF, convert handwriting to text, and generate summaries. Whether it justifies the jump over a standard Kindle largely depends on how much you write versus read. But for the note-heavy professional who travels, it's a compelling argument.
$1,099 at amazon.com.au
Balenciaga Gets Sweaty (By Design)

If you were wondering whether this fitness thing was nothing more than just a fading fad, well, Balenciaga has now entered the ever-growing space. And it might be time to finally get something in your size.
Pierpaolo Piccioli's Fall 2026 "Body & Being" collection treats the body as the actual reference point for design – not as an afterthought to the silhouette – with a line of tracksuits in mesh-membraned taffeta and leather windbreakers with flat, ultrasonically-welded seams and water-repellent aqua-zip closures. Sweaty workouts have just earned a luxury label.
Available at balenciaga.com
Knicks Tax


The New York Knicks just secured their first NBA championship in 53 years, and Nike, one of the few brands out there that always manages to authentically align with the biggest cultural moments in sport, wasted no time in leaning into the storm: releasing Air Force 1 Low '01 "NYC Knicks".
The commemorative low-top is built on the revived 2001 AF1 shape – something of a gold standard for sneakerheads – but the design remains firmly in 2026 and the Knicks’ historic championship victory.
The upper leather boasts alternating blue and orange Swooshes on either side, "2026" heel embroidery in the John Jay NYC logo style, and the standout detail: insoles featuring a pixelated image of Madison Square Garden.
The catch for anyone outside New York: pre-orders are open now through select NYC retailers including Kith and Awake NY, with delivery expected in October. It'll make its way to wider stockists eventually. Patience, as ever, is the price of not living in Manhattan.
US$160 at kith.com
Buzzing You In

For the third of Australian apartment dwellers who've watched their Amazon delivery disappear before they could get to the intercom, Ring Intercom is the belated fix.
Rather than replacing your building's existing system, it connects directly to the intercom handset and routes everything through the Ring app – so you see who's at the door, speak to them, and buzz them in from wherever you are. All installed in just 45 minutes.
$189 at amazon.com.au



