Recycle Your Electronics (And Get Paid!) With YouRenew.com

imageWant to get paid to recycle your electronics? It’s so much easier to do the right thing when there’s a cash bonus being dangled in front of you! You may not know it, but electronics like cell phones and laptops leak lead, mercury, and other icky stuff into our trash and water systems. That’s where YouRenew comes in! Started by college buddies out of their dorm room, YouRenew coaxes you into going the extra step to recycle old electronics for some cash money. Search through their site and find the electronics you’re trying to ditch by answering a few quick questions about the basics for your item (Does it turn on? Do you have the charger?). It then analyzes the data and tells you how much they’ll pay for it. Print out the pre-paid shipping label and send it away (aka: make room for that fancy new iPhone!) and they’ll pay you via PayPal! YouRenew will then either fix them up and resell them, or send them to their recycling partner. Some examples of what you can get back: a working 32GB iPhone can get you up to $396, and up to $20 for your Harry Potter box set of DVDs. Log on the YouRenew.com and see what you can get for those old electronics you have lying around!

Vote for your favourite design in the Bombay Sapphire Designer Glass Competition

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Dezeen has teamed up with the Bombay Sapphire Designer Glass Competition to allow readers to vote for their favourite martini cocktail glass. (more…)

zaza

Zaza was formed in two parts. The upper part of the chair was initially created from a flat plastic sheet,cut with laser technology and layered with f..

Takin It to the Street: Gap Outfits New York Stock Exchange in Jeans

gap NYSE.jpgIn case you’ve not yet been touched personally by the multimedia publicity blitz, we should let you know that Gap is celebrating its fortieth anniversary with a new line of jeans that head designer Patrick Robinson describes as “rengineered…cool, sexy, and relevant for right now.” However, as double-digit decreases in comparable store sales have become the norm at Gap Inc., can the investor community be convinced that the company is a smart buy? Free jeans can’t hurt. On Friday, a day after announcing second-quarter earnings, Gap outfitted 1,200 New York Stock Exchange Traders in its new 1969 Premium Jeans. “The fact that we’re dressing the New York Stock Exchange in jeans for the first time in history really speaks to the role that Gap still plays in our culture today,” said Marka Hansen, president of Gap brand North America. We smell a tautology there, but the plan seems to have worked, at least in the short term. When members of Gap’s founding Fisher family rang the closing bell on Friday, Gap stock had reached $19.48 per share, its highest price since last September.

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Book Review: Classic Cars: 100 Years of Automotive Ads, by Jim Heimann and Phil Patton

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The collapse of the US auto industry stands as one of the national tragedies of this generation, but it also provides boundless opportunities for ironic reflection when looking through a book like Heimann and Patton’s Classic Cars. The first time we opened their book of historic auto ads, it revealed a blue ’67 Olds Toronodo, complete with a matador against a red background, framed against the caption, “After you’ve walked off with all the honors, what do you do for an encore?” Regrettably we’ve found out. The copy on the back of this coffee table books contrasts the Stone Age and the Bronze Age with the 20th Century — The Automobile Age. The 20th Century has come to a close, and there’s little doubt that the age of the automobile is at an end as well. That said, a hundred year retrospective on any human endeavor reflects not only on the products produced, but upon the values and the cultures that produced them.

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So while Classic Cars is first and foremost a record of the graphic design that accompanied one of the first mass-produced assembly line products of all time, it also stands as a visual history of the industrial design of the 20th Century … and all of its attendant successes and missteps. Heimann covers pop culture for Taschen and Patton writes about automobile design for The New York Times, so their catalog of auto ads not only covers the classics like the Jaguar XK-E or the ’66 Mustang, but also cars like the Paige and the Lozier which exist now only in the air conditioned garages of white haired men who fancy themselves collectors. I couldn’t find some classic early automobiles like the Duesenberg J (one apocryphal origin of the term “what a doozy”) in their book, but perhaps that’s because the advertising medium barely applied to cars, or to the social class that could afford them, at that time. The advertisements themselves stand on their own merit. Most of the early ads are hand painted, a lost rendering art these days, and echo the Art Nouveau posters of Alphonse Mucha. Whether ignoring the naive copy meant to solicit purchase or not, those early ads have an artistic sensibility that stands on it’s own merit. While the written copy itself often confounds the rules of the grid, the earnest tone of the words hearkens back to an era where a ownership of a car was tantamount to success and we didn’t even know cigarettes were lethal.

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Exerpt from an interview with Jim Coudal

If it’s a good idea and it gets you excited, try it, and if it bursts into flames, that’s going to be exciting too. People always ask, ‘What is your greatest failure?’ I always have the same answer—We’re working on it right now, it’s gonna be awesome!

Jim Coudal

-> As published on Design Glut

–> Chris Glass

Marianne Batlle

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Of the many subversive crafts we’ve seen over the years—crocheted cupcakes, cameras and hamburgers come to mind—Marianne Batlle’s handmade mix of sex and fashion takes the concept to a decidedly more edgy level. The Paris-based artist crochets penises in a range of fanciful materials and colors, incorporating silks and bows, as well as fuzzy angora threads, pearls, sequins and more, to lend personality to each one.

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Her brooches pay homage to fashion legends Karl Lagerfeld, Yves St Laurent, Coco Chanel and John Galliano, along with Bob Dylan, representing the icons in finger-puppet size beadwork. You can buy these little wearable artworks online from Arty Dandy starting at €125.

See more and larger images after the jump.

The making of a flash drive

via Make

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FAT Fall/Winter 2009 Collection

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Tokyo-based clothing brand FAT (pronounced F.A.T) recently unveiled their upcoming Fall/Winter 2009 collection. We’re liking the athletic and military influences combined with modern, borderline baggy cuts.

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Simple looks punctuated with saturated colors and clever logos make up the latest collection of shirts, pants, denim, cargos, sweats and cut-and-sew pieces. FATYO, their accessories line of hats, footwear, eyeglasses, luggage, ensures you’re all suited up and matching nicely. All their offerings on their site deserve a look.

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Arriving in stores now, the Fall/Winter collection is dropping on a rolling basis on their online shop over the next couple months, so check back with them often.

See more images from the collection after the jump.

via Freshness

Me Hotel, Barcelona

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Like most of our favorite hotels,
Barcelona
‘s Me Hotel rivals the city itself with the various amenities if offers.

The one-year-old Dominique Perrault-designed hotel surrounds guests with glittering steel walls and sliding panels of vibrantly colored Lucite, complimented by dramatic views of the city from almost every angle and lending an omnipotent feel.

In the spirit of Barcelona’s legendary nightlife and the beach vibe lent by the sparkling blue Mediterranean Sea, the hotel keeps the momentum alive with a popular bar scene and in-room amenities—such as Wii and iPod docking stations.

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In addition to DJs at the Sky Food Bar, the stainless-steel swimming pool stays open for midnight swims or moonlit frolicking under the waterfalls created by giant sprinklers. Revelers can also take in the old movies projected onto the running water, while sipping cocktails in one of the poolside cabanas or they have the option of heading to the Angels and Kings Bar on the sixth floor to mingle with a flashy jet-set crowd and hip locals.

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After a long night out (and days taking in the sights) the rooms offer comforts like a pillow menu of eight pillow types.

With locations in Cancun, Cabo and Madrid, the Barcelona Me Hotel location stands out for its supreme level of service and attention to detail. Prices range from €250-400 per night depending on the room and season. Book through Mr & Mrs Smith.

Me Hotel Barcelona

Carrer Pere IV 272

08005 Barcelona, Spain map

tel. +34 902 144 440