Boobzies for beer cans

Unique design! The Boobzie ($9) for your beer cans, available online in 14 styles!..(Read…)

Izhar Gafni’s Cardboard Bicycle

I love this bicycle! It’s made completely from cardboard. It can handle a hefty 308 pounds. It’s waterproof and it’s cheap. The bike costs only $60 for the standard model, or $90 if you opt for the extra attachments like a removable motor. With a production costs of only $9-12, this eco-friendly bike could be the next solution to transportation woes for both developing nations and hipsters alike.

Fire Time

A short film exploring the art of Fire Breathing. Awesome! Shot in Vancouver by local film maker Chr..(Read…)

Autobacon

"How about some bacon at the touch of a button, desktop deliciousness on demand."$16…(Read…)

London Olympics 2012: Banksy and Other Street Artists Ready for the Olympics

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Reporting by Kyana Gordon

Let the graffiti games begin. With the Olympics just mere days away, street artists have been making their presence known around England. Even Banksy couldn’t resist an opportunity to show his satirical support with these two new pieces. One stencil features a javelin thrower armed with a missile while the second is a portrait of an Olympic pole vaulter in mid-jump landing in the direction of a filthy mattress below.

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Equally impressive is other Olympic-themed work that has cropped up all over. This timely McDonald’s jab (in case you aren’t aware McDonald’s will be the only French fries, or ‘chips’ sold at London Olympic venues) by an unknown artist was photographed by Pogorita outside the Brighton tube station.

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Even this piece of a female diver plunges headfirst into an open toilet captured by Tim Callaghan makes quite the provocative statement. And a multi-colored pigeon by Ronzo depicts city birds getting in on the action.

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Seeing beautiful street art in London? Leave a comment on where we can see more work below!

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Free Falling Flower: Amazing record 88-way female formation skydiving

The 88 member ‘Pearls of Russia’ women’s skydiving team has just successfully pulled off a white, bl..(Read…)

Spiral Vegetable Slicer – Endless Julienne

$29.95 (vegetables not included)…(Read…)

Swim-friendly Chainmail Bikini Top

This handmade, swim-friendly, waterproof chainmail bikini top is made from anodized aluminum and lat..(Read…)

And Everything Is Going Fine

Criterion Collection releases new commentary to the 2010 documentary
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For fans of Spalding Gray familiar with his monologues from films like “Swimming to Cambodia” (1987), directed by Jonathan Demme, or “Gray’s Anatomy” (1996), directed by Steven Soderbergh, “And Everything Is Going Fine” (also directed by Soderbergh in 2010) is somewhat of a departure from form. In an effort to create a more complete picture of who Gray was, Soderbergh pieced the documentary together entirely from Gray’s performances, interviews and candid moments. Because the very nature of the documentary demands it to be a series of segments that Soderbergh has strung together, don’t expect to ride through from start to finish on the steam of Gray’s signature rapturous, breathless delivery. Still, what Soderbergh’s documentary lacks in momentum it makes up for with its sensitive portrayal of a man possessed by the art of storytelling.

Gray described what he did onstage as “Using myself to play myself.” Equipped with only a spiral bound notebook to which he rarely referred and a glass of water from which he seldom drank, Gray enacted rich scenes and played multiple characters in rapid fire dialogue with one another and with himself. Soderbergh begins his documentary the way Gray began all his monologues, with footage of a man alone onstage in the quiet moments before he launches into an explosive performance. Criterion‘s recent release of the film includes writer Nell Casey‘s essay, which perfectly describes that scene.

“At first, we see only a wooden table and a chair on a stage. The scratchy video recording skips and jumps a bit, giving the viewer a hint of the history; this is raw footage shot in 1982. The happy murmur of the unseen audience suggests a large crowd is awaiting the performance. A man walks onstage—dressed plainly in a plaid shirt and jeans—and applause rises up. He puts a glass of water down on the table. He offers a quick, offhand thanks, as if he were slightly embarrassed to find himself there. He pulls a spiral notebook out from a drawer in the table. He places it in front of him, takes a sip of water, and looks skyward while summoning his thoughts. He looks out on his audience—now with an open, direct expression—and he begins to tell a story.”

In an event that a shocked many, Gray jumped off the Staten Island Ferry in 2004. Through Soderbergh’s loving autobiography we get a little closer to man who continually bore his soul onstage but nevertheless remained a mystery. Criterion’s release includes The Making of “And Everything is Going Fine,” as well as Casey’s essay and Gray’s very first hour-long monologue, “Sex and Death to the Age 14“. The new edition is available for $32 from Criterion Collection.


Must-See Video: The Barriers for Female Skydivers are… Plummeting

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Granted this has nothing to do with design, but this is a visually freaking amazing thing to see. Eighty-eight members of a female skydiving team known as the Pearls of Russia jumped out of a plane, and this is what happened:

According to the YouTube description, the 88-woman “flower” now holds the world’s record.

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