The Lamp That Wants to Be a Flower

This clever design might seem a little obvious, but it’s actually quite thoughtful! The BLUM lamp’s floral inspiration is apparent in its form, but it also takes inspiration from living plant’s energy process. Set the plant by the window, and solar panels harvest the sun’s energy to power the bright LED lights. It’s the flower that gives back after the sun goes down!

Designer: OneArtistStudio


Yanko Design
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(The Lamp That Wants to Be a Flower was originally posted on Yanko Design)

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Wheelchair Adaptive Stroller

Parenting in the first stages of infancy can be incredibly challenging – add a mobile disability to the equation and you can imagine how daunting it might seem. The Cursum stroller concept aims to make life a little easier by adapting to use in tandem with a wheelchair. Swivel wheels, complete height adjustment, attention to comfort and visibility and advanced safety features give parents added security and a little independence to an already challenging life experience.

Designer: Cindy Sjöblom

Cursum – Stroller for wheelchair users from Cindy Sjöblom on Vimeo.


Yanko Design
Timeless Designs – Explore wonderful concepts from around the world!
Yanko Design Store – We are about more than just concepts. See what’s hot at the YD Store!
(Wheelchair Adaptive Stroller was originally posted on Yanko Design)

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Friday Giveaway: 4 Adonit Jot Flip + Refill Bundles for 4 Lucky Winners!

The Adonit Jot Flip is this super-cool digital stylus that features a pen on one end and a stylus on the other. A clever twist to the barrel and a fine-tipped steel pen emerges. We love this kind of functional designing that makes everyday tools more valuable. With increasing number of people opting for touchscreen phones and tablets, we’d love for you to give this a try. Hence 4 sets of Adonit Jot Flip + Refill Bundles worth $200 are up for grabs, read on to know how you can win one set!

To Win Adonit Jot Flip + Refill Bundle

  • Tell us do you use your finger or a stylus for your touchscreen gadget and why?
  • 4 Adonit Jot Flip + Refill Bundles to be won!

Contest Rules

  • 4 Winners will be announced
  • Contest Closes 1st July – midnight PST
  • Contest Open Worldwide
  • Standard Contest Rules Apply
  • Only One Entry Per Person


Yanko Design
Timeless Designs – Explore wonderful concepts from around the world!
Yanko Design Store – We are about more than just concepts. See what’s hot at the YD Store!
(Friday Giveaway: 4 Adonit Jot Flip + Refill Bundles for 4 Lucky Winners! was originally posted on Yanko Design)

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World’s strangest wine bottle ‘2004 Block 42’

On the surface, it looks like nuclear warhead or part of an exotic anti-matter  weapon, but it ..(Read…)

JackHawk 9000 Sunglasses

JackHawk 9000 Sunglasses looks like other classic Ray-Bans, but there’s a secret – a functional bot..(Read…)

Loft Chair by Zbigniew Strzebonski

The new chair "Loft" by the designer Zbigniew Strzebonski of the studio  Modestwork. ..(Read…)

The Walking Dead birthday cake

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Havøysund Tourist Route by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

This snaking concrete ramp by Norwegian studio Reiulf Ramstad Architects winds down from a road to the beach along the edge of the Arctic Ocean.

Havøysund Tourist Route by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

Benches wrap around the curved walls, while the floor slopes down gradually to allow easy access to the water for wheelchair users as well as those on foot.

Havøysund Tourist Route by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

Circular openings of different sizes pierce the concrete walls.

Havoysund Tourist Route by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

Last year Reiulf Ramstad Architects completed a glass restaurant with jagged edges – see it here.

Havøysund Tourist Route by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

See all our stories about Norway »

Havøysund Tourist Route by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

Here’s some explanation from Reiulf Ramstad Architects:


Havøysund Tourist Route Project

The objective is quite simply to single out and magnify the experience of walking from the roadside down to the seaside at this very special place.

Havøysund Tourist Route by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

Therefore a chief concern was to slow down this movement and make the path itself a means of refocusing the experiential mode: a measured, restrained approach that creates awareness.

Havøysund Tourist Route by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

The primary functional concern was universal accessibility. Instead of opting for a dual solution with staircase and ramp, we came up with the notion of making the ramp the common entryway and develop it into the integral character of the project.

Havøysund Tourist Route by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

Because of the inclination of the site, and in order to create the reductive motion, the ramp had to be very long.

Havøysund Tourist Route by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

The winding river of the path prolongs the approach and in so doing opens up new perspectives and experiences for the visitor.

Havøysund Tourist Route by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

Located in the extreme north of Norway, in a landscape almost lunar in its barren and inhospitable beauty, the facility should ideally be completely self-sustainable in terms of power input and waste output.

Havøysund Tourist Route by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

The general notion was to create a human detail in the vastness of the landscape that is as timeless as the landscape itself and that brings attention to the relationship between the duration of experiences and the hugeness of the spatial circumstance.

Havøysund Tourist Route by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

Location: Havøysund, Finnmark Norway

Havøysund Tourist Route by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

Program: Development and Design National Touristroutes Havøysund

Havøysund Tourist Route by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

Client: Norwegian public roads administration

Havøysund Tourist Route by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

Architect: Reiulf Ramstad Architects: Reiulf Ramstad, Anja Strandskogen, Kanog Anong Nimakorn, (Kathrine Næss)

Havøysund Tourist Route by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

Commision type: Direct Commission (2007),

Havøysund Tourist Route by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

More Than Meets the Eye: "LumaHelm," a Gesture-Controlled, LED-Embedded Helmet

RMITExertionGamesLab-LumaHelm-lead.jpgA nod to Daft Punk?

Don’t be fooled by the pictures, this light-up headgear is more DIY tech than discotheque. The brainchild of Wouter Walmink, Alan Chatham and Floyd Mueller of RMIT’s Exertion Games Lab, the “LumaHelm” certainly isn’t the first bicycle illumination concept we’ve seen, but it might be the smartest one… not least because it’s attached one’s cranium as opposed to one’s conveyance (no offense to Mitchell Silva et al). The prototype is an off-the-shelf helmet that’s been augmented—at once hacked and adorned—with several LED strips, such that the array of 104 multicolored lights is mapped evenly onto the hemisperical surface (they left the padding intact to ensure that it still meets safety standards). An accelerometer serves as an input for Processing via Arduino: deliberate motions of the head activate corresponding sections of the surface, approximating left and right turn signals, as well as braking (with a quick backwards tic). A translucent vacuum-formed shell serves to protect the LEDs and diffuse the light they emit.

RMITExertionGamesLab-LumaHelm-shellprocess.jpg

While the safety applications of the LumaHelm are obvious, the designers abide by a broader outlook, emphasizing the potential of light as a medium for expression.

LumaHelm turns the helmet into a display through which we can communicate, express and play. We are exploring how this can make cycling safer, skateboarding more expressive, improve communication on construction sites, and affect any other activity requiring a helmet. Through this design and research process we want to find out what wearable technology in the future may look like and how it can be more intimately integrated in our everyday lives.

In an interview with ABC Radio, Walmink notes that the materials cost them about $400 and that they’re planning on releasing instructions so that the average DIYer have the means to make their own LumaHelm. And while commercial availability is still a long-term goal, he comments that an LED-embedded hardhat might bypass the noise issues specific to construction sites as a new form of communication.

RMITExertionGamesLab-LumaHelm-viaTheAge.jpgPhoto by Craig Sillitoe for The Age

Thus, the project is as much a thought experiment as a cycling solution, a new way to broadcast our thoughts in an RGB dot matrix that happens to enclose their very source.

(more…)


Rock, Paper, Scissors: Three Things that Fit in a Handbasket You Can Carry Straight to Hell

0jankenpoi2.jpg

It has now come to my attention that the same guys working on sensor-equipped robots, who are clearly hellbent on our destruction, are now developing them so that they can consistently defeat human beings in competitions. The geniuses over at U. of Tokyo’s Ishikawa Oku Lab have developed a dishonorable robot hand that uses its lightning-quick vision to cheat at Rock-Paper-Scissors:

Nice going, guys. When are you gonna get around to teaching them how to box and fire handguns?

“The purpose of this study,” write the researchers, “is to develop a janken (rock-paper-scissors) robot system with 100% winning rate as one example of human-machine cooperation systems.”

Uh, that is not cooperation.

(more…)