Extreme Ice Cube Stunts
Posted in: UncategorizedShane and Collin send 63 ice cubes flying, dropping, and sliding into 61 Coca-Cola glasses — all..(Read…)
Colliding Galaxy Pair
Posted in: UncategorizedThis striking NASA Hubble Space Telescope image, which shows what looks like the profile of a..(Read…)
BUILD modular shelving
Posted in: UncategorizedBloom
Posted in: barbecue, bloom, motiongraphicBasé à Francfort en Allemagne, le studio de motiongraphic Barbecue nous propose de découvrir « Bloom », une expérience visuelle réalisée à l’aide d’After Effects et divers outils, présentée sur un sound-design de Michael Kadelbach. Plus d’images et de détails dans la suite.
Interview: Molly Guy of Stone Fox Bride: The founder of the destination for “anti-brides” on the traditional and nontraditional rules of engagement
Posted in: brides, engagement, rings, weddings
Lit by a wall of windows overlooking a bustling intersection where Greenwich Village meets Soho and decorated with feathered dreamcatchers and a gauzy tent, Stone Fox Bride’s loft studio is not necessarily a traditional bridal salon….
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The SolSource: A Rugged, Portable Solar Cooker with a Himalayan Testing Pedigree
Posted in: KickstarterIt’s strange that what we in developed nations think of as a recreational activites, like camping and/or grilling, mimic the real-world living conditions of those in developing nations. But that can lead to some interesting design crossovers. A good case in point is the SolSource, a solar cooking grill originally designed and tested with nomads living on the Himalayan Plateau, where there isn’t a lot of firewood, fuel-gathering is a chore, and the burning produces unhealthy smoke.
Having proven its mettle under rugged real-world conditions, the SolSource is now making its way to the rest of us via Kickstarter.
Everyday, SolSource cooks food for large Himalayan families. It withstands sand storms, wind, snow, and -40 degree temperatures. We’ve used it around the world, from grilling Kobe beef on the streets of Japan to making popcorn on the Mall in Washington, DC. Just point it towards the sun and start cooking. As long as you can see your shadow, you are good to go!
The SolSource was designed by One Earth Designs, a San-Francisco-based outfit “dedicated to bringing better energy options to people around the world.” To that end company founders Scot Frank and Catlin Powers have been working with rural communities in the Himalayas since 2007, and they formed the company last year to design clean energy technologies.
Following the relatively quick success of the SolSource, the company—which has since expanded to 18 employees covering R&D, Sales & Marketing, Business & Operations, Admin and H&R—went to Kickstarter to dig up $43,000 for tooling and a proper production line.
Daily Obsesh: Light Sweaters
Posted in: UncategorizedThe summer is here and the heat is rolling in! However, we all know that the summer often holds the occasional chilly night. Especially if you’re near the ocean! This light sweater is the perfect piece to throw on during one of those chilly seaside nights. We are loving the neutral color with the bright orange polka-dots. The print is subtle yet adorable! Wear this sweater with a pair of white cut-off shorts and neutral wedges. This is a great item for this summer because it will give you the little bit of warmth you’ll need while you cozy up to watch the fireworks. |
Synth[e]tech[e]cology by Chang-Yeob Lee
Posted in: architecture movies, Graduate shows 2013, other moviesRoyal College of Art graduate Chang-Yeob Lee has developed a concept to transform the BT Tower in London into a pollution-harvesting high rise (+ movie).
Entitled Synth[e]tech[e]cology, the project predicts the eventual redundancy of the 189-metre tower – currently used for telecommunications – and suggests repurposing it as an eco-skyscraper that collects airborne dirt particles and helps to reduce the level of respiratory illness in London.
The process would involve extracting the carbon from petrol fumes and using it to produce sustainable bio-fuel.
“The project is about a new infrastructure gathering resources from pollutants in the city atmosphere, which could be another valuable commodity in the age of depleting resources,” says Chang-Yeob Lee.
Lee describes his proposal as “a hybrid between a vertical oil field and laboratory for future resources”. The exterior of the tower would form a giant eco-catalytic converter, while the interior would house a research facility investigating methods of increasing air movement and maximising the efficiency of the structure.
Similar structures could also be fitted to other unused high rises to create a network of pollution-reducing architecture.
Referencing a quote from architect Buckminster Fuller, Lee says: “Pollution is nothing but the resources we are not harvesting. We allow them to disperse because we’ve been ignorant of their value.” He adds: “Pollution could be another economy”.
Synth[e]tech[e]cology is Lee’s diploma project from the architecture programme at the Royal College of Art in London and he was one of two winners of the Student Prize for Architecture at the Royal Academy of Arts‘ Summer Exhibition.
Other projects from this year’s RCA graduates include bristly headdresses made from colourful plastic spikes and bicycle helmets made from old newspapers. See more projects by 2013 graduates.
Other conceptual skyscrapers we’ve featured include a building that would produce energy and clean water from algae, a tower constructed from rubbish and a hairy skyscraper that functions as a wind farm. See more conceptual architecture.
Here are a few words from Chang-Yeob Lee:
Synth[e]tech[e]cology _ Greenhouse Gas to Economic Asset
“Pollution is nothing but the resources we are not harvesting. We allow them to disperse because we’ve been ignorant of their value.” – R. Buckminster Fuller
Harnessing advancements of various particle-capturing technologies, this project envisions that air pollution as a valuable commodity in an age of depleting resources. The scheme utilises the Post Office Tower adjacent to Marylebone Road, one of London’s most polluted areas, as a hybrid between a vertical oil field and laboratory for future resources scrubbed from the atmosphere.
The project aims to show how hybrizided new infrastructure can gather pollutants, store, digest, and harvest them to dilute minerals and biofules, celebrating clean air process on the ground level. The ultimate ambition of the project is to be deployed as a retro-fitting strategy to tall unused or derelicy buildings in London, showing that alternative routes to ‘economic profit’ meaningfully engaged into pollution can be a provocative strategy for ‘sustainable ecology’.
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by Chang-Yeob Lee appeared first on Dezeen.
Cecil & Merl Cherry Bitters: Juicy bitters destined to elevate summer cocktail-making adventures
Posted in: artisans, cocktails, foodanddrink, gin
Launched in 2012, the company name Cecil & Merl honors the two “sweet-tooth” patriarchs of the founders’—Deborah Williamson and Bryan Calvert—families. Together, Williamson and Calvert began their business with rustic cheesecakes—lemon ricotta, mango, dulce de leche and…
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