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Quality Importers Solana Desktop Cigar Humidor, Rosewood with Maple-Burled Wood Inlay, Glass Hygrometer, Spanish Cedar Tray with Divider, Accessory Drawer, Holds 75-100 Cigars

  • Based on 1,312 reviews
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Availability: In Stock.
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Arrives Wednesday, Nov 27
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Style Name: Solana


Features

  • Large desktop humidor in high-gloss rosewood with a maple-burled wood inlay; holds up to 100 cigars
  • Lined with premium kiln-dried Spanish cedar for excellent aroma and moisture retention
  • Convenient, felt-lined accessory drawer on the bottom; scratch-resistant felt-lined bottom
  • Front-mount glass hygrometer with brass ring; brass inset carry handles on the side
  • Measures 14-1/2 by 10-1/2 by 8 inches (WxDxH)

Product Dimensions: 14.5 x 10.5 x 8 inches


Item Weight: 10.58 pounds


Department: mens


Manufacturer: Quality Importers Trading Co.


Item model number: HUM-100MS


Is Discontinued By Manufacturer: No


Number of Pieces: 1


Warranty Description: One year.


Batteries Required?: No


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Wednesday, Nov 27

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • A Finely Made Humidor. How to buy a Humidor. How to care for it. Humidor Basics 101
Style Name: Milano Glasstop
First - this is a well made and attractive humidor. The top is real glass (not plastic) and the interior is Spanish cedar. I've spent more hours than I care to admit researching this topic, visiting various web sites, reading tutorials, looking at You-Tube videos and looking at a variety of offerings from a wide number of sellers of cigar humidifiers and then reading their instructions. Humidor Basics 101: 1.) Virtually every humidor sold (I'd guess at least 99%) are made in China. I think it is likely that all of the various styles of humidors are made in the same Chinese factory but that is nothing more than a guess. These humidors are marketed by a wide number of importers under various names even though the humidor often appears identical. I've run across the same pictures, same dimensions, etc on a number of web sites that appear to be selling the same humidor yet occasionally they use different names for what appears to be an identical product 2.) There is a dizzying array of sizes and finishes of humidors but they all appear to be Chinese made. I'd pick what you like, choose the size you need and assume the same humidor is widely available and sold elsewhere, perhaps under a different name. 3.) All these humidors employ Spanish cedar on the interior which is widely accepted as a superior lining. When you open the humidor - the smell of cedar should be VERY strong. 4.) What is not to like. Most of these humidors come with an attractive brass/gold analog gauge (hygrometer) that is of dubious value and quality. You will often hear of the "salt test" to calibrate it. Whether on blogs, you-tube videos, other tutorials - almost endlessly - you will be told to wet some salt in a bottle cap - place it in a sealed bag, along with the hygrometer and wait. Wait 4 or 6 or 8 or 24 hours (depending on the tutorial) and the gauge should read 75%. If not, adjust the hydrometer to read 75% and it is now "calibrated". Hmmm - how wet should the salt be? At best, some of these tutorials suggest it should not be dissolved. Rather vague. The size of the container - equally vague. I got varying results based on time, the size of my test container, the type of container and how wet the salt was. 5.) How to calibrate your hydrometer (my take): a) To achieve the best results I'd recommend you use a SMALL "Tupperware" type of container which has a very tight snap type of seal. The smaller the container the better. I would not use a "baggy" because it appears they all leak some air or the bag collapses down on the hydrometer and blocks air flow. I got different results using different baggies. The best baggies had a triple seal. b) Put some salt into a jar cap, small dish or bottle cap. Add some water - mix it with some kind of stirrer. Mix for a half minute or so. You want a slurry - a wet mix - but you are not trying to dissolve the salt. If it is too wet you throw off the calibration and if it is too dry you have the same problem. Wait five minutes and drain off any water standing on top of the slurry (the salt should not be dissolved). You should now have a wet salt mix with NO standing water. c) place your salt slurry and hydrometer in a small Tupperware type of container. Wait 24 hours and then immediately adjust your hydrometer to read 75%. The theory behind the salt mixture is it wants to be at 75% humidity and thus the surrounding air will also be at 75%. Of course, if the salt is too wet or too dry, if the container leaks air (even a little bit) or the container is too big (has too much air) - the salt test won't work that well 6.) How to test the seal on your humidor: It should have a tight seal - remember it is basically a fancy Tupperware container with a cedar lining (cedar imparts some flavor and the wood also stores and releases some moisture so that analogy is a bit flawed). Open your box and partially insert a dollar bill. Close the top and pull on the dollar bill. You should feel some resistance as you try to pull out the bill. Shift the bill around the entire lid. IF the dollar bill pulls out without ANY resistance I'd return the humidor. At the same time, don't expect the dollar bill to be locked in place. 7.) Why you might want to spend another $30 to $50. a) most (if not all) of these humidors come with a small plastic container (a humidifier), open at the top, that encases a florist sponge that you are required to wet with distilled water. If you watch your gauge - when enough distilled water has evaporated from the sponge - you just add more distilled water to it. A gallon of distilled water costs about $2.00. That may be as reliable a system as you'll ever need and a gallon of distilled water could last you years. b) a more elegant solution is to use acryl polymer crystals such as those sold by Xikar (and others) rather than the typical sponge. These crystals are better than a sponge because they hold more water and are usually wetted by the manufacturer's solution, a mix of distilled water plus propylene glycol (a food safe product). While a wet sponge works only one way - expelling water into the surrounding air - these crystals work two ways. They expel moisture if it is too low (below 70%) but also suck up excess moisture if it is above 70%. But plan on spending an additional $6.00 to $12.00 (or more) for the crystals and another $6.00 to $13.00 for the solution. There is one further advantage of using this method in that the solution is naturally anti-bacterial as well as a fungicide. By using this type of solution it is very unlikely you'll ever grow any mold on your cigars or within your humidor. c) Finally consider adding a digital humidistat (gauge) such as those sold by Xikar and others. These generally affix anywhere INSIDE your humidor and cost between $20 to $30. This assures you that all is well and your cheap analog gauge one is not misleading you. The Xikar gauges come with a magnetic base so they can be easily removed to read them but they are meant to be affixed somewhere inside the humidor so they are not a direct replacement for an exterior facing analog gauge. The simple sponge wetted with distilled water will likely work just fine for you as a humidifier. Even your analog meter may prove accurate enough. If you have expensive cigars or would simply like to do everything "right" then the Xikar system is definitely better and a digital hydrometer (gauge) provides some additional assurance that the humidity level is correct. Note the praise for digital hydrometers is far from universal. I wish I could find a humidor that had all these features included. My $60.00 dollar purchase turned out to be a $110.00 with the above upgrades. Addendum: I never anticipated that I'd add to this review, but after three weeks with my cigars in this humidor they all smoke and taste better. The extra moisture improves on the burn/taste fairly significantly. All of my cigars were purchased from major retailers, sealed in either cellophane or metal tubes and further sealed in shrink wrap cedar boxes. Yet having stored these cigars in this humidor for a few weeks with two Xikar humidifiers there is a noticeable difference in their burn rate and taste. I thought I was just storing my cigars correctly but what I found is I'm actually improving them! I never anticipated this and it comes as a bit of a surprise. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ on April 10, 2013 by JustAnotherEngineer

  • Box is beautiful, the hygrometer is useless and the only cedar inside that I see is the tray
Style Name: Old World
Box is fairly well build and is beautiful. My only real complaints are: 1. The hygrometers air exposure is through the back, and it mounts against a flat magnet the does not allow nearly enough exposure. causing a reading far lower than accurate. I put a tested hygrometer inside the box with the hygrometer that came with it and got a difference of 12% 2. The tray is the only Spanish cedar in the box that I can see. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ on January 6, 2023 by Tony

  • Great Deal For Price, Its inexpensive for some reasons though
I bought the capri-elegant glass top humidor from Quality Importers for $35.31 after taxes and shipping. Let me say upfront that I consider this a great buy and well worth the money. I was tempted to give the product 5 stars since the price of the humidor more than makes up for the issues I had with the humidor. This humidor will do a great job keeping your cigars moist and perfect. Your cigar collection's happiness has little to do with the humidor and more to do with the operator of the humidor. For a humidor to be effective it needs to seal tightly enough to create a "mini-climate" tailored to your cigar and this humidor seals nicely (tighter than many humidors I have seen, but not too tight). You will have to "season" the humidor (as the manufacturer recommends and as all websites will tell you), as the wood inside the humidor upon arrival at your house is extremely dry and will absorb moisture in the air until it is no longer drier that the climate it is currently in. Seasoning a humidor is a way to quickly "undryify" the wood inside your humidor. Its more important to season this particular humidor because it is lined with dried Spanish cedar which is drier than other linings you might find in a humidor. Please read this document below, as it mirrors my opinions about humidors. Cigar Humidor Myths Exposed: [...] The Good 1. Looks nice at a distance. 2. Larger than I expected. 3. Quality hinge work. 4. Seems to be well assembled (except for the one small issue I had with the sticker on the glass). The Bad 1. Included brass hygrometer is a pain to get to work. This was the biggest hassle of the product. (a) The needle of the hygrometer was resting against the dial of the hygrometer (which was making it so that the needle couldn't move freely), so I had to pry the back off of the hygrometer and bend the needle so that it floated above the dial. (b) The screw available to calibrate the hygrometer is almost useless. I had to pry off the back of the hygrometer (which isn't and easy task) and hold the needle while I turned the screw, as just turning the screw simply turned the needle and accomplished nothing. (c) The hygrometer comes with a silicon ring/seal which fits around the hygrometer and is used to create a compression seal into the hole drilled into the front of the humidor. This works well, except that the silicon ring/seal was too thick and I had to use a knife to shave it a bit so that the I could push the hygrometer flush into the hole on the front of humidor. Before I shaved bits of silicon off, I could only push the hygrometer in 95% of the way, causing it to stick out a bit. 2. The people that assembled the humidor left a sticker on the glass that said "Tempered Glass". The sticker was partially underneath the wood that encased the glass and was a bit difficult to remove. They should have removed the sticker before installing the glass, or put the sticker in a place that is easier to remove. 3. The finish on the outside of the humidor is not terribly high quality. I am going to use my own furniture wax (I may apply a coat of poly) on the humidor to compensate for that, but, it would be nice if they had applied a few more coats of sealant at the factory. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ on May 8, 2010 by L. Hengst

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