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Archive for the ‘Creativity’ Category

Live in a Bubble with the Cocoon 1 Room Pod

27 Nov

[ By Steph in Design & Fixtures & Interiors. ]

Sometimes, living in a bubble isn’t such a bad thing. Cocoon 1 by Micasa Lab is a plastic pod providing a room-within-a-room, a separated space in which to disconnect from the rest of the world without feeling completely separated from it. Cocoon 1 can be used indoors or out, and is small enough to easily fit inside most interior spaces.

With built-in furniture in primary colors, this living pod looks a bit like a child’s playhouse, but it actually contains a kitchen and a power pack that can provide either 40 hours of light, or 20 hours of light and 30 minutes of cooking. It’s even available with running water, and comes with a hanging net that can be used to suspend it from a tree.

Micasa Lab envisions the Cocoon 1 transcending the border between space and object, providing a variety of functions that can be tailored to the individual user.

“The confined space is the bottom line when it comes to the human need for shelter, for survival against nature, for solitude among people or against people or for defining the different functions in our lives. Spaces work on all levels, rooms, houses, countries or worlds. The spaces differs but is ever-present.”


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Urban Living Room: Feel at Home in Public Places

A cozy, blue-painted living room entices passersby to sit, get to know each other and enjoy entertainment in Rotterdam at the ‘Urban Living Room’ installation.
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Interior Aerial Photos: Room Portraits Show Personal Stories

Day in and day out we see the same rooms in the same ways. But what if you could get a unique new view on your home, office, school or favorite coffee shop … from above?
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Fantastic Floor Coverings: 13 Unusual Rug Designs

26 Nov

[ By Steph in Design & Furniture & Decor. ]

Rugs are more than just a soft, sound-dampening covering for bare floors. They’re a chance to make a design statement and, in the words of The Dude, “really tie the room together.” These 13 modern rug designs eschew the same old traditional Oriental designs in favor of topographic maps, puzzle pieces, crystals, cut-outs and the shapes of internal organs.

Wooden Carpet by Elisa Stroyzk

(images via: elisastroyzk.de)

While the hard surface of wood isn’t exactly a typical material for carpeting, Elisa Stroyzk’s design retains a warmth and coziness with laser-cut geometric pieces that are bonded to a textile backing. “The project “wooden textiles” intends to look at the material wood in a new way. Geometric wooden pieces compose a flexible surface which can perform in different three-dimensional shapes. The material ranges between hard and soft, parquet and carpet, blurring relationships between furniture and textiles.”

Cell Rug by Lama

(images via: lamaconcept)

In contrast, this rug by Lama is so soft and squishable you’ll want to examine it up close. Made up of foam channels stitched together, the rug even features built-in LED lights.

DIA Cutout Rugs

(images via: iqmatics)

Laser-cut rugs with complex patterns by Magdalena Lubinska and Michal Kopaniszyn add padding and interesting patterns to the floor, looking a bit like giant modernized doilies.

Redeploy Rug by Rebekah Rauser

(images via: rauser design)

Temptingly tactile, the Redeploy Rug by Rebekah Rauser is constructed out of wool blankets, which are stitched together and stuffed with a wool blend.

Bandage Rug by Richard Garza Marcos

(images via: rgarzamarcos.com)

Cover wounds and imperfections in your floor with the Bandage Rug by Richard Garza Marcos.

Flat Surgery by Mathieu Lehanneur

(images via: mathieu lehanneur)

Delicate internal organs are not only put where we can see them, but where we can step on them, too, in this collection of rugs by Mathieu Lehanneur. The designer says, “The human body in radical mode – ‘Flat surgery’ plays with our vital organs to compose motifs and messages. These are rugs to map out habitat: digestive system in the dining room, brain in the office, genitalia in the bedroom…”

Clouds by Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec

(images via: bouroullec.com)

This strange modular textile can be used as a blanket, a wall covering, a rug or a room divider. ““The point of Clouds is that we do not have to replace all of the things that are already in our homes. Clouds is an extra and new element that provides the opportunity for personalised design where individuals are the architect, designer and workman. The ingenious click system, combined with a couple of simple screws and strings makes it possible to create anything from a wall to a specific figure and expression to fit one’s taste. Clouds enables all imaginable uses, as it can be hung on walls or from the ceiling, placed on the floor or add colourful liveliness to railings and stairs. In other words, Clouds represents a new typology, or a new interpretation of the use of textiles.”

Dark Side of the Moon Rug by Martin Mostböck for Vorwerk

(images via: martin-mostboeck.com)

Inspired by humanity’s fascination with the moon throughout the ages, ‘Dark Side of the Moon’ is a rug perforated with laser-cut circles resembling craters.

Playing with Tradition Rug by Richard Hutton

(images via: object rotterdam)

If you spun a circular traditional rug really fast, it would probably blur until it looked like the Playing with Tradition Rug by Richard Hutton. Says Hutton, “The idea behind the carpet was to build a bridge between the old and the new, east meets west. From this starting point I looked at various ways to give a reinterpretation.”

Raining Lights Crystal-Embedded Rug

(images via: sahrai.com)

20,000 of the finest Swarovski Elements crystals add shimmer and sparkle to a dark silk rug made by SAHRAI and displayed at the Salone del Mobile in Milan. The crystals are concentrated on one side to give the appearance of falling rain.

Landcarpet by Florian Pucher

(images via: behance)

This unique rug by Florian Pucher is a map of Hong Kong as seen from above. It even has a raised topographical design that enables you to feel the geographical variations of the region with the bottom of your feet.

Rug with Scale by Kwon Sunman

(images via: yanko design)

This rug won’t let you avoid the number on the scale – it has one built in, displaying your present, past and goal weights.

A Persian Puzzle by Katrin Sonnleitner

(images via: yanko design)

Put a rug together in the exact colors, patterns, shapes and sizes that you want with completely customizable puzzle rugs by Katrin Sonnleitner. The rug is made from cut pieces of recycled, natural and synthetic rubber.


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445 Fantastic Furniture, Furnishing & Fixture Designs

The art of furniture making has expanded dramatically with advent of ever-new technologies and the extension of mass-production to furnishings and fixtures.
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21 Radical Rugs and Must-See Mat Designs

rugs and mat designs are enjoying the same creative comeback as any other item of furniture. Which of these 21 examples would floor you?
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The Real Deal: 13 Geeky Playing Card Decks

25 Nov

[ By Steve in Design & Products & Packaging. ]


This baker’s dozen of geek-themed playing cards may be old school in concept but their sci-fi and Internet-savvy themes will suit most any game-lovin’ fanboy.

Nintendo Playing Cards

(images via: Jyunkissa-Sakuraba and Odai)

What does Nintendo, famed for Mario, the NES and the Wii have to do with primitive paper playing cards? Quite a lot, as it turns out. Originally incorporated as the Nintendo Playing Card Company on September 23rd of 1889, the firm changed its name to the more generic Nintendo Co., Ltd. in 1963 but never forgot its card-making roots. The vintage deck above is evocative, predictive, futuristic… and awesome!

(images via: OnlinePlayer EX)

What’s old is new again, and Nintendo has come full circle after over a century in business. In 2010, the company announced a series of three Mario-themed playing card decks: one with a standard red back, another with a black “neon” back and a third featuring 8-bit renderings of the suits, numerals and face cards.

iPhone Playing Cards

(images via: Gearfuse and Meninos)

If smartphones get any thinner, they’ll be hard to tell apart from credit cards or, you guessed it, playing cards. Since arguably the most well-known smartphone on the planet is Apple’s iconic iPhone, that’s what the makers of this otherwise regulation deck have used for their design inspiration. One imagines a poker game played with an iPhone deck would feature few raises but a whole lotta calling!

(images via: M.I.C Gadget)

So, playing poker with iPhone playing cards makes you a geek, huh? Chinese fanboys can only look on and laugh as they wheel & deal with actual smartphones! Granted, knockoff mobile phones are both cheap and plentiful in China but there’s such a thing as laying it on a bit too, er, thick.

Solitaire.exe Playing Cards

(images via: Rocketnews24 and Kotaku)

In the fading years of the 20th century it seemed a host of familiar pastimes were being adapted for use on our newfangled desktop PCs. That was a good thing: try hiding an analog game of Solitaire from your overly inquisitive, pointy-haired boss. Let’s all thank Bill Gates, then, for bundling Solitaire.exe with Windows 98 and therefore allowing us to collectively crash workplace productivity to historic lows.

Since Windows 98 and its well-loved games have long since faded from our screens, so-called “interaction designer” Evan Roth (above, lower left) has taken it upon himself to re-imagine Solitaire.exe as an actual deck of playing cards. Produced in a numbered limited edition of 500, the decks sold out quickly based on nostalgia, geek-chic and pure unadulterated “whoa!” factor.

Stainless Steel Playing Cards

(images via: Geekalerts and Firebox)

In Soviet Russia, deck cut you! Sorry, couldn’t resist, and YOU won’t be able to resist the allure of these heavy metal playing cards made from real metal: stainless steel, to be exact. Forget about paper cuts, you could slice a t-bone steak with one of these bad boys. Oh, and they’re heavy indeed: the deck of 54 standard-sized cards tips the scale at a whopping 624 grams or just under a pound & a half.

(image via: Drinkstuff)

Sold for the exchange-rate converted price of roughly $ 140 per pack, these “sharp cards for card sharps” are meticulously etched on both sides and come in a natty black needle cord box. Old double-0-7 James Bond himself would appreciate this deck – when not used for playing, they make handy rectangular shurikens.

Atari Playing Cards

(images via: Sclick.net)

In the early Eighties it seemed video games were going to drive their non-digital counterparts to extinction. Thirty years later, pioneering game and console manufacturer Atari is long gone and playing cards are doing just fine, thank you. This deck of Atari Playing Cards from Aquarius rub salt in the wound by displaying the company’s retro-video iconography on both sides of each and every card.

(images via: Sclick.net)

Though the deck is regulation in size and number of cards, efforts have been made to go beyond the basic decorative back to make these cards Atari through and through. Take the suits, for instance: instead of Diamonds, Hearts, Spades and Clubs, the Atari Deck features graphics from arcade games Breakout, Asteroids, Centipede and Millipede.

Legend of Zelda Poker Cards

(images via: Fangamer)

If you can’t beat ‘em, join ‘em? This sleek, sweet deck of Legend of Zelda theme poker cards looks about as professional as you can get and no wonder: they’re produced by the US Playing Card Company, makers of Bicycle, Bee and KEM playing cards.

(images via: Fangamer)

Available with red or blue backs and packaged in gold foil security-sealed custom tuck boxes, the “Cards of Legend” feature thematic suits (swords, hearts, rupees and tri-force) with intricately detailed face cards. The deck includes two Jokers and a pair of “Z” cards inscribed “”

Domo Playing Cards

(images via: Wikipedia, Amazon.com and AnimeZ)

Who or what is a “Domo”? Long before he became an internet star, Domo-kun was (and still is) the official mascot of NHK, Japan’s government-owned TV station. Domo’s come a long way since his 1998 debut, however, having been adopted by netizens worldwide following his 2002 incorporation into the “God kills a kitten” image meme on FARK.com. Looks like Domo’s playing his cards right and now you can do the same with Domo Playing Cards.

(image via: Moonierocks)

Featuring scenes of Domo at work, rest and play (though not chasing kittens), the Domo Deck displays stylized hand-drawn text and numerals that give it an almost child-like vibe quite at odds with the meme’s origins. The deck is regulation sized, however, so they can be used to play the usual card games and maybe a few unusual ones, such as “Master of Your Domain”.

Deck of the Dead

(images via: Ufunk and Kickstarter/Postumo)

Darren J. Gendron‘s “Póstumo – The Deck of the Dead USPC-Printed Playing Cards” is a Kickstarter project one hopes achieves its goal. Why? Because OMG ZOMBIES!!1!, that’s why.

(image via: Ufunk)

Equal parts grotesque, gory and gruesome, this zombie-inspired deck of playing cards features startlingly vivid custom illustrations penned by Obsidian Abnormal. Printed on Bicycle-grade card stock with USPC printing, the deck’s suits are Hearts, Clubs, Spades and… Brains. The Hearts, by the way, are anatomically correct. Gendron’s funding drive ends on November 29th so pony up now to ensure Póstumo – The Deck of the Dead isn’t dead on arrival.

Futurama Playing Cards

(images via: Ringo Stalin)

Think folks’ll still be playing cards in the year 3000? Good news, everyone, if the world of Futurama is any indication they certainly will – and suicide booths are available should you gamble away your last Nixon $ 300 bill. Now you can get a jump on The World Of Tomorrow with the Futurama Playing Card Deck.

(image via: Ringo Stalin)

There are several Futurama-themed card decks out there but this particular deck claims bragging rights for its knowledgeably detailed face cards. The gang’s all here including Lrrr, Morbo, Mom, even Coilette from the Grand Duchy of Robonia. Best yet, the deck comes packed in a can of Slurm… using the cards is probably just as addictive as the drink.

Helveticards

(images via: Impermeable)

There are geeky fonts and there are font geeks who appreciate them, so why not font playing cards? Helveticards were “designed with both the typophile and card player in mind” by Tennessee designer Ryan Myers as a new, modern approach to traditional playing cards.

(image via: Core77)

Like your fonts sans serif? Then you’ll love Helveticards – even the suits (Clubs and Spades, at least) are serif-free. In addition, each card has its name spelled out in type with their numeral rendered much larger than life size. Myers has gone beyond the design stage and has actually produced Helveticards for retail sale. They’re priced at $ 10 per pack and can be ordered online from Myers’ website.

Internet Meme Playing Cards

(images via: The Mashable and Kickstarter/Raymond Thomas)

Playing cards have stood the test of time; playing cards designed around internet memes may have a tougher row to hoe. It’s an intriguing idea: 52 cards displaying 52 popular memes including Success Kid, Business Cat, Y U NO Guy, Sad Keanu, Hipster Ariel, Futurama Fry and Pepper-Spray Cop.

(image via: Kickstarter/Raymond Thomas)

Ray Thomas of Seattle conceived Internet Meme Playing Cards as a way to expand the concept of the meme from the virtual to the real world. In order to achieve this worthy dream, Thomas has instigated a Kickstarter project to crowdfund the deck’s design and manufacturing.

Actuators Steampunk Playing Cards

(images via: Kickstarter/Lance Miller)

Has the whole Steampunk thing jumped the shark? It may not matter, because when you’re involved in a fierce game of Go Fish it’s the cards that call the shots. Steampunk Playing Cards were designed by Lance Miller and they’re manufactured by USPCC (the Bicycle people) so you know they’re well-made.

(image via: Kickstarter/Lance Miller)

Displaying Miller’s original and quite beautiful artwork, Actuators Steampunk Playing Cards offer users a satisfyingly retro visual experience original inhabitants of the Brass Age would cherish. Modern manufacturing processes result in delightful depth of field replete with antiqued imagery from a world that might have been. Draw a Royal Flush with these cards and the ghost of Kaiser Wilhelm will nod sagely in approval.

Bicycle Hemp Playing Cards

(images via: Bicyclecards.com and BMPokerworld)

It may not be what most folks expect from Bicycle, an all-American business (est. 1885) that’s survived and thrived making the same basic product for over a century. The times, they are a-changin’ however and what’s blowin’ in the wind isn’t what a glance at the Bicycle Hemp Deck might lead one to believe. The deck isn’t a novelty either though it IS one of Bicycle’s newest decks.

(images via: Bicyclecards.com and Le Petit Magicien)

Bicycle knows fibers, and hemp fiber has a number of advantages over ordinary card stock: it’s environmentally friendly, durable, and resistant to UV rays. All that aside, Bicycle’s had some fun distinguishing the Hemp Deck from its brethren. Notable features include a burlap-look case, hemp-leaf imagery on the card backs, the Joker and the Ace of Spades, and the “liberal” use of grass-green coloring to highlight the court cards. Dealing in hemp suddenly got a lot more legal.


(image via: Memory Alpha)

Playing cards figure prominently in the geek universe – the final episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation featured the main cast members plus (for the first time) Captain Picard enjoying a game of poker. It’s not known exactly what kind of cards Data’s dealing but one thing we do know: “the sky’s the limit.”


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15 of the World’s Most Brilliant Business Card Designs

Not all business cards are boring pieces of paper. Some are awesomely creative, memorable and even intimidating.
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Brown to Green: Ashtray Doubles as an Urban Planner

24 Nov

[ By Delana in Conceptual & Futuristic & Technology. ]

Smoking is prohibited in plenty of public places these days, but for folks who just can’t quit, why not do something positive for the environment with the product of that habit? The Cindy ashtray also happens to be a planter – one that uses cigarette ash to fertilize plants.

(all images via: Mademoiselle Jean-Claude)

Cindy was created by French design collective Mademoiselle Jean-Claude. The minimalist white planter looks and functions like a regular ashtray for all intents and purposes.

Cigarette butts are put out in the hole in the top of the planter. The design of the planter allows ash to fall through a pipe all the way down to the bottom of the planter, but not the butts themselves.

A small, barely noticeable drawer near the top of the planter allows caretakers to remove and dispose of the discarded cigarette butts.

In theory, the ashes nourish the plant and help it to purify the air in the smoking area. In practice, however, it isn’t clear whether this technique would actually work. It doesn’t seem possible that cigarette ash would contain many useful nutrients. As a conceptual product, the Cindy is a quirky and lovely way to beautify an urban setting.


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Gone to Seed: 9 Green Plant-Sprouting Product Designs

These products all have one thing in common: they were designed to be reincarnated as blooming flowers, fragrant herbs or delicious vegetables.
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24 Fantastic Future Wonders of Green Design

From floating eco-cities to sustainable skyscraper farms, modular folding origamic architecture to gigantic green super-spires, here are 24 future green designs.
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Season’s Graffitis! 16 Santalicious Christmas Murals

23 Nov

[ By Marc in Art & Street Art & Graffiti. ]

Despite the fact that Thanksgiving just concluded, everyone’s eyes are already looking forward to the Christmas season. These fantastic holiday murals are a tease as the holiday rapidly approaches.

(Images via designalmic, crashwilliams)

Renowned 3D chalk artist Julian Beever is no stranger to holiday themes. This particular work is a glimpse into Santa’s workshop, hidden in the North Pole. A gun-toting Santa is an interesting street art twist on the jolly gentleman.

(Images via artofsamevans, grafitiigallery, creativespark)

“Siberian Santa” is an art mural in Melbourne, Australia with an interesting Tim Burton-esque style to it. The muted colors differentiate it strongly from most Christmas-themed art, which seems to prize garishness as a defining motif. Few characters can light up a dark street corner like old St. Nick, spray painted here in a popular graffiti corner. For people who like to play devil’s advocate, the mural featuring the Grinch is a fun response to the typical messages of holiday cheer.

(Images via cultureclimax, heelsandwheelsonline, creativespark, democrashield)

Christmas isn’t all fun and games to these graffiti artists. In the top image, a tree defends itself against an ax-wielding assailant and does some morbid decorating of its own. A mural depicting a gangster Santa sits astride a warm beach in Australia. In Singapore, artist Slacsatu shows a badass Santa with fists of fury and enough muscle to take on the Hulk. Lastly, a flowing christmas tree adorns a lonely street corner.

(Images via cultureclimax, graffitilife, graffiti-walls)

In this top image, Santa’s sleigh is envisioned as an endless chain, like a train pulling the world’s gifts through the sky. A take on the classic Coca-Cola ads adorns the side of a building, created by Graffiti Life, a graffiti service that does custom work in the UK. Lastly, a train car is dressed up like a giant gift, traveling miles on the tracks to end up under one lucky kid’s tree.

(Images via whereverdesign, panoramio, canalstreet, graffiti-walls)

Holiday cheer can be drawn from any source, even the dust (or frost?) on the windshield of a car. On the back of one building in Australia, Santa stands next to a kangaroo, clearly lost during his trip around the world. Artist Choq came up with this festive and crazy ode to Christmas, tagging, and chaos. Last but not least, Santa raises a cup and wishes everyone a happy holiday season!


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40 Fantastic to Freaky Merry Christmas Greetings in Graffiti!

The debate rages on if graffiti is art or vandalism. Whether freaky or fantastic, writers spread holiday cheer with these 40 Merry Christmas graffiti greetings.
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Strange Decor: 35 Bizarre & Creepy Christmas Tree Ornaments

When people mess with holiday themes, they win some, and they lose a lot. Some Christmas ornaments go beyond tacky, and into the strange and bizarre.
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Give Thanks for 5 Eye-Opening Black Friday Infographics

22 Nov

[ By Steph in Culture & Cuisine & Global. ]

Black Friday, that annual post-holiday shopping ritual sharing more than a few characteristics with Spain’s Running of the Bulls, is starting earlier than ever this year, with many stores opening at 8 or 9pm on Thanksgiving Day. While many people participate in this frenzy of commercialism with the relish of a competitive athlete, others find the whole thing a bit baffling. Here are 5 infographics offering some interesting facts about this year’s festivities. Click each image to view full-sized.

Nearly a quarter of American adults plan to start shopping before 3am on Black Friday, according to a survey by market research firm Lab42. Shoppers also plan to spend more money.

In fact, $ 60 billion is expected to be spent this year, compared to $ 41 billion in 2008. 160 million people plan to shop on Black Friday, or about half the U.S. population – more than the number of people who voted in November’s election.

Mobile technology is playing a larger role than ever in holiday shopping, particularly during ‘Cyber Monday’, the Monday following Black Friday.

Why should you consider shopping at small local businesses rather than big box stores? This infographic lays out all of the ways in which small businesses benefit communities.

Another infographic from Manolith throws in a little bit of everything, telling shoppers how they can prepare, giving stats on Black Friday violence, and peeking into shoppers’ carts.


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10 Black Friday Shopping Tips By Urban Ninjas

Black Friday . . . are you preparing to battle the holiday shopping crowds? Brush up on your ninjas skills before you go into the battle of the urban ninjas.
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Visualizing Architecture: 15 Building-Centric Infographics

Learn about the history of architecture, the design process, architectural styles, the world’s tallest buildings and more with these 15 building-centric infographics.
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Public Camouflage: Make-Up Artist Makes Models Invisible

22 Nov

[ By WebUrbanist in Design & Guerilla Ads & Marketing. ]

Illusion relies on expectation – we glance but only glimpse what is familiar and the rest blends neatly into the background, particularly as we go about our busy lives in a bustling urban center.

As nifty as these body-painted costumes by Carolyn Roper (via DailyMail) are, the reactions of passers by are the best part – a shocked bus rider or fruit-stand shopper caught in their moment of surprise by waiting photographers.

To complete the spectacle, every element is critical, from the lines of reflection on a vehicle to the details of fresh vegetables drawn on to carefully mimic tomatoes, beets, pumpkins and lettuce.

The stunts were a marketing move by Really TV for a CIA drama titled Covert Affairs – it is hard to say how well such guerrilla marketing campaigns translate to new viewers for television shows, but thanks to publishers picking up the story, well, surely a few of those spooked by these urban camouflaging antics will check out this show about spooks.


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Urban Camouflage: Liu Bolin, The Invisible Man

Chinese artist Liu Bolin painstakingly paints his subjects so that they seem to disappear into their surroundings in amazing urban camouflage photography.
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Urbex Camouflage: Hiding, Sneaking and Disguising During Urban Explorations

The ability to hide plain site can be a real advantage when exploring urban abandonments.
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Tap That: 10 Terrifically Techy Keyboard Concepts

22 Nov

[ By Delana in Gadgets & Geekery & Technology. ]

With the exception of a few spectacularly ill-advised ergonomic keyboard redesigns, the collection of keys that we use to input data to our computers has been relatively unchanged for quite some time. These ten new takes on the keyboard might change the way we type forever…or at least the way we look at our keyboards.

Portable Keystick Concept

(image via: Yanko Design)

Touching a shared keyboard – particularly one on a public computer – is a frightening concept for germaphobes and anyone who doesn’t want to contract the latest annoying virus. The Keystick concept from designers Yoonsang Kim and Eunsang Park eliminates the yuck factor from keyboards by putting a keyboard in every pocket. The portable device resembles a folding fan, but when it folds out it reveals its full set of keys. Users would take their own keyboards with them so fear of contamination and germs would be eliminated – at least as far as computer keyboards are concerned.

Typewriter USB Keyboard

(image via: Instructables)

If you miss the constant clack-clack-clack of typewriters, the USB Typewriter mod will take you back. A clever DIY kit helps users turn their old, neglected typewriters into cool new USB accessories that work with Macs, PCs or tablet computers. The mod is surprisingly easy to implement and results in one of the coolest custom keyboards any typer could ask for.

Flexible Entertainment Keyboard

(image via: Victor Johansson)

The Microsoft Keyflex is a flexible keyboard meant for playing and entertainment – not for work. The bendy ‘board removes the negative work-related connotations from its design, focusing instead on being the perfect living room companion. Rather than relying solely on key taps, the Keyflex uses physical manipulation to get the user’s point across online. Squeezing, bending, and twisting the keyboard itself all activate different functions such as changing the volume, “liking” something on Facebook or exiting whatever program is being used at the moment.

One-Handed Jellyfish Keyboard

(image via: Erik Campbell)

The chorded keyset was invented in 1968 by the inventor of the computer mouse, but unlike the ubiquitous mouse the five-key input device never quite caught on. The keyset requires users to press the five keys in certain combinations to create each character rather than pressing one key at a time. In this way, the keyset is able to take up much less room than a QWERTY keyboard and, with a lot of practice, users can type faster on it than on a standard keyboard. This version is a conceptual redesign of the classic concept, its shape inspired by the rounded body of a jellyfish.

Folding Laptop Keyboard

(image via: Yanko Design)

Using computers with tiny screens usually means also using computers with impossibly tiny keyboards. This concept from designer Yang Yongchang puts a folding keyboard onto a small laptop, providing space for fingers but not forcing the screen to increase in size just to accommodate the expanded keyboard.

Mossy Keyboard

(image via: Robbie Tilton)

Being in an office all day can really dampen one’s connection to nature. Designer Robbie Tilton decided to bring the outdoors in with his Natural Keyboard concept. Although the prototype uses fake moss, the designer intends the keyboard to be seeded with natural grass, allowing for an unprecedented amount of comfort and connection to nature in the office.

Apple’s Mouse-Killing Keyboard

(image via: US Patent & Trademark Office)

No, this little keyboard won’t actually kill literal mice. But it may just make your computer’s mouse obsolete. The concept was patented by Apple and features four tiny cameras that track hand movements. As the user’s hand moves around, the on-screen cursor follows, doing just what a mouse would do but without the need for another cumbersome piece of equipment on the desk.

Motorized Ergonomic Keyboard

(image via: Dvice)

Ergonomic keyboards are (let’s be honest here) usually ugly and kind of a pain to use. This one seems like it wouldn’t be much of an exception in those areas, but it does something other ergo keyboards don’t: massages your hands and wrists. The twin halves of the keyboard move around slightly and vibrate about twice an hour to prevent carpal tunnel syndrome and a variety of other repetition-based injuries.

Paper Keyboard for iPhone

(image via: Telegraph)

The touch screens on iPhones are a huge pain when trying to compose a message quickly or with any length. A student project would make it possible to use a tabletop as a keyboard instead. The Vibrative system designed by Florian Kraeutli analyzes the vibrations caused by typing on a regular piece of paper placed on a table. Once the system is calibrated, experienced touch typers don’t even need the paper – they can simply tap away on the table as though they were using any QWERTY keyboard.

Puzzle Keyboard

(image via: RedDot)

If you’ve ever wondered why the standard keyboard is set up the way it is, or if you’ve ever come up with a better solution, the Puzzle Keyboard would let you rearrange the keys to your heart’s content. The design was created by Wan Fu Chun and won a Red Dot design award. While the concept of a puzzle-like keyboard is delightful, it isn’t all for fun – the concept could also be helpful for making keyboards easier to use for people with injuries or handicaps that prevent them from comfortably using a standard keyboard’s setup.


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[ By Delana in Gadgets & Geekery & Technology. ]

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Superstitions, Illustrated: A Calendar of Fallacious Thought

21 Nov

[ By Steph in Art & Drawing & Digital. ]

Even in a world of smart phones, high-speed trains, artificial intelligence and Mars exploration, many of us still bow to old superstitions. We avoid crossing under ladders, knock on wood, cross our fingers and worry about ‘jinxing’ things by speaking them aloud. Illustrator Fortuna Todisco features twelve of these superstitions in ‘Unfortunately013‘, a simple, modern calendar.

‘Fortune: Or other people’s bad luck,” reads the quote for March, beside an image of a rabbit with a peg leg. December proclaims, “Santa Claus doesn’t exist.”

The calendar was inspired by the common superstition that the ending of the ancient Mayan calendar, which is coming up in just a few short weeks, predicts the end of the world.

Todisco says, “UNFORTUNATELY013 is a reflection, through images, about the anachronistic persistence of superstitions in the present society.”


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Brewed Fresh: 10 Hot Coffee-Centric Designs & Prototypes

20 Nov

[ By WebUrbanist in Design & Products & Packaging. ]

A hot black cuppa bean-infused water was only the beginning, but beyond Espressos, Americanos, Cappuccinos, Latte art and creative coffee mugs lies a world of stimulating design ideas for the caffeine-dedicated aficionado. Some are a bit green yet and perhaps worth roasting a while longer, but others are already rich with promise.

Not enough space on your kitchen counter? No worries: Song Ah Lee is developing a wall-mounted coffee maker for one (custom cup included) that blends into the background but remains handy for refills.

No time to wait around while your morning roasts warms up? Consider brewing coffee right on your commute, instead, with Handspresso, sold as the world’s first car-worthy espresso machine – just stick to using it at stop signs and lights, please.

All of these are well and good for getting your caffeinated brew going in the morning, but what happens when the heat starts to dissipate? An obvious but elegant solution when you cannot refresh is to rewarm, with something like this mobile reheating stick by Hyewon Lee.

Now you have made your coffee, kept it hot, and are at the office … where suddenly you cannot find your workday mug. Clearly you forgot to pick up the Lock Mug with a hole specially keyed so that only you can use it!

State fairs are known for putting just about anything on a stick, but coffee sounds a bit far-fetched … at first. Heo Jeong Im took up the challenge, though, and combined instant coffee packets with stir spoons to invent what he has dubbed the Cappuccino Coffee Stick. As you stir to mix your brew, the mass of coffee crystals dissolves, leaving only your stirrer behind.


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