Finally, I got one.
By talented Dutchman Helmut Smits.
(Via)
Maybe this magazine appealed to me initially because my first and only dog was named Muff. I was 5, and I really enjoyed Chocolate Chip Muffins, and I didn’t care that it was a girly name for a male dog. Regardless, designer Ramon Coronado’s hair magazine design is rad, and methinks he should continue with it!



Yep. That was what designer Patrick Mohr came up with for a show at the Berlin Fashion Week. What they are wearing on their head looks more like genital things with real pubic hair in my opinion.
Freaky, but it works good as a viral I guess when you make ’super models’ into ’super ugly models’. More here.
(Thanks Vio!)
The Gesundheit Radio sneezes once in a while to clear itself from dust, the Floppy Legs Disc Drive stands up when a liquid is nearby to keep itself dry and the Anti Touch lamp moves away when a person comes too close to its sensitive halogen lamp.
All three are designed by the (fictive) Attenborough Design Group, better known as Chambers and Judd, to investigate how animal behavior can protect technology. Funny.
(Via)
A erasable Persian carpet created by using a dry erase marker on whiteboard pallet. By Chris Held.
(Via)
By Tristan Perich.
(Via)
The postman won’t forget this number I guess.
Architecture by Japanese studio MMA Design, who also made this one!

Rosetta Stone Gravestone. Does it need more explanation?
(Via)
Not really. Artist Pinar Yolacan used poultry parts to dress up these elder women. Sounds creepy, but the result is quite remarkable I must say, although it looks a little like the ladies are naked or in camouflage when you narrow your eye sight…
(Via)
Handlebars like animal antlers. Damn nice designs called Bi-King by Sungkug Kim.
Something for you, Chaim?
(Via)





Quite like these ABC chairs designed by Dutchman Roeland Otten.
(Via)
“Developed by one of the UK’s leading creative talents, Thomas Heatherwick, the centrepiece of the UK pavilion is a six storey high object formed from some 60,000 slender transparent rods, which extend from the structure and quiver in the breeze. During the day, each of the 7.5m long rods act like fibre-optic filaments, drawing on daylight to illuminate the interior, thereby creating a contemplative awe-inspiring space. At night, light sources at the interior end of each rod allow the whole structure to glow. The pavilion sits on a landscape looking like paper that once wrapped the building and that now lies unfolded on the site.”
(Via)
This guy made a suit with 200 laser lights. Why? Don’t know, but it sure delivers nice images.
(Via)
I love this heart shaped vase designed by Tsunami Glass Works.
(Via)
How beautiful Take Out Beverage Lids can be? Especially when you put them in a collage like Sarcoptiform did. Sweet.
(Via)