The No-Burn Iron

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The resting upright design of current clothing irons leaves pets and kids susceptible to dangerous burns. The PUSHE iron, however, introduces an innovative and intuitive new way to leave your iron at rest. Its default mode elevates the plated hot section of the iron off the surface. To activate it, the user must simply push down on the handle. When finished, simply let go and it will elevate the plate and keep it concealed and safely out of reach from kids and pets.

Designer: Hwang Daye

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Drive Away Dehydration

Over the past few years, several techie products have been launched to combat dehydration. As we know from various journals, dehydration leads to a severe lack in concentration. Of late, rehydration has taken the front seat in a lot of work spaces with the introduction of more water dispensers and more laid-back liquid container at-the-work-desk rules – leading to more and more products and apps telling us when and how to rehydrate better. However, Droog Design have taken an entirely unique approach to dehydration indication in the form of a sweat-sensitive textile coating SOAK (created by designer Paulien Routs), a color changing material, which is responsive to the composition of the micro-fluids found in our sweat.

SOAK changes color when it comes in contact with the perspiration due to human contact. The indication is simply beautiful – when a person is sufficiently hydrated the SOAK coating turns blue, when a person is dehydrated it turns yellow, warning of low hydration levels. Droog Design partnered with Nissan to apply this innovative textile coating across the custom made, perforated leather steering wheel and seats of Nissan Juke. Routs had ideas of his own for the technology initially but soon after Nissan approached him “with plans to implement the technology in a Juke to demonstrate the technology as a concept in their ‘do drink (water) and drive’ campaign” Routs says he ‘thought it was fantastic”. Having such a cool and striking impact visually, it won’t be long before we start seeing this technology everywhere, especially the office chair.

Designers: Droog Design & Nissan

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Underwater Movie Magic for Kids

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The only thing that makes underwater playtime more fun is by reliving it! Now, kids can do so with the 360° Underwater Toy Action Cam. This sealed camera is safe to use in and under water and durable enough to withstand all the throwing and splashing you can give it. With included accessories like a buoy holder, grapple mount, underwater selfie stick and wearable strap for first-person perspective, kids can customize their shots and hone their moving making skills with a variety of differing shooting styles.

Designer: Jung Myeongha

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Charge this Smartwatch Every 2 Years

There’s the glorious past… the traditional Swiss-made watch. The forgotten past… the digital watch. The innovative future… a miniature computer for a watch. And the appropriate future, the analog smartwatch. I say appropriate because it isn’t difficult shrinking computers to fit around our wrists. Moore’s law pretty much predicts that computers will get twice as fast/small every year. However, it’s a true challenge integrating a computer’s vast range of functionalities into something that’s sole purpose is to be an indicator of time, and a person’s taste/style. The analog smartwatch is a true design functionality challenge, and that’s why it’s the appropriate blend of tradition and technology.

The SWINGS seamlessly merges classic Swiss and futuristic Silicon Valley. While outwardly being an analog timepiece, it possesses the bragging rights to call itself a hybrid smartwatch, taking pros from both worlds and fusing them into a timelessly classic wristwatch. Encased in a 316L Stainless Steel case is some of the finest Swiss engineering backed by a next generation chipset that’s capable of powering the watch with unmatched accuracy and battery life. The Sapphire glass on the top covers a dial that’s hybrid in its visual language too, allowing it to go well with classic leather as well as metal bands, giving the watch its different personas. It borrows from the idea that watches should perform everywhere including underwater, and like most good traditional watches, is waterproof up to 300ft, and boasts of an IPX8 rating. Most smartwatches only go up to an IPX7 water and dust proof rating and can only go a couple of feet underwater (for only half an hour).

At the heart of the SWINGS is its chipset that is exclusive only to this one watch model in the world. While your smartwatch/fitness tracker can give you up to 24 hours of run-time on a single charge, the SWINGS doesn’t measure its battery capacity in hours, or days, or weeks. Not even months for that matter. On a single full-charge, the SWINGS can power itself for nearly TWO whole years! With an unmatched performance, the SWINGS needs battery replacement only once every 24 months…

Outwardly styled like a dapper timepiece, the SWINGS includes certain features that allow it to be called a smartwatch. With one regular dial and 3 subdials, the watch is capable of giving you alerts and notifications (even allowing you to snooze phone reminders and dismiss calls). Built with a world-class gyroscope, the watch even functions as a fitness and sleep tracker, sending all the collected data to your phone. Armed with 3 pusher buttons (one at the crown’s position), SWINGS connects to your phone, allowing you to control music playback, while even working as a remote camera trigger for some remarkable remote selfies (because outstretched arms are so yesterday). The smartwatch even comes with a find my phone feature that you can manually trigger, or have automatically go off if your phone gets too far from your watch.

Designed for a duality of audiences, the SWINGS works for both men and women, for both analog and smartwatch enthusiasts, and for both the working professional and the fitness enthusiast. With its automatic time-zone detection, the SWINGS tells time with remarkable accuracy. Its analog watch face doesn’t stop it from working as a smartwatch too, with its ability to track messages, notifications, calls, fitness and sleep while also allowing you to operate your music player and camera. Plus, with its stunning battery-backup which can only be described as practically eternal, you won’t just be able to tell time, you’ll be able to save time too!

(Assuming you charge your smartwatch once a day, you have to charge the SWINGS seven hundred and twenty nine times less since it lasts two years on a single charge. Now if that isn’t time saving, I don’t know what is!)

Designer: Derek Mao

Click here to Buy Now: $149.00 $299.00

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Click here to Buy Now: $139.00 $299.00

Journalist Taffy Brodesser-Akner on How to be a Successful Features and Profile Writer

In the short span of seven years, she went from prolific personal essay writer to prolific feature writer for The New York Times Magazine and GQ Magazine. At The Times, she won the New York Press Club award for her profiles of Gaby Hoffmann and Damon Lindelof, and at GQ, she won the same award for her profile of Don Lemon, which also garnered a Newhouse Mirror award.

She can make anyone or anything interesting, which is probably why editors all over the country want to hire her. In addition to The New York Times Magazine and GQ, she has written for publications including Bloomberg Businessweek, Afar, Playboy, Cosmopolitan, ESPN The Magazine, Texas Monthly, Outside Magazine and Matter.

In June, it was announced that Brodesser-Akner, who worked at Mediabistro from 2001-2007, would join The Times as a features writer for Culture and a staff writer for The Times Magazine.

Why did you decide to start writing personal essays?

I started writing personal essays after the birth of my first son, which was traumatic. Something horrible had happened to me and thank god my son, and I were ok, but I was really traumatized. It opened up something in me where I no longer felt compelled to have any privacy. I just needed to be heard and listened to. So I wrote personal essays, and I couldn’t believe how much people responded to them. For the first time in my life, I didn’t have to be screaming to be heard, and I was heard way more effectively.

You wrote A LOT of personal essays in a short amount of time for many different magazines. Did you learn anything while writing essays that carried over to your feature and profile writing?

I learned that people will leave at the drop of a hat if you are not precise, interesting, entertaining and informative. If you are not those things in a very brief period of time, then readers will leave.

Anything else?

Yes. Always send in clean copy, spell checked copy and all in one font. People to this day remark on how clean my copy is and I think, what are other people turning in? Also, with edits, be amenable, never defensive and never late with the edits.

Did your essays help launch your feature writing career?

Being willing to talk about anything and really bare my soul got me in doors. My first story for The New York Times was a personal essay about why people are so mean on the internet. (“E-Playgrounds Can Get Vicious” April, 2010)

Did you know someone at the Times or did you cold pitch?

I cold-pitched someone whose name I got from somebody else, and I said, ‘I have this idea for a story and I would like to track down some internet trolls and figure out why they are the way they are.’ And he said, I don’t think you will be able to do that but you could try. So I did and I came back with what I found, which was that no one was willing to talk to me. But I still had feelings about the subject, so I did what I still do to this day which is when the story that is supposed to happen doesn’t happen, I fill the space with something that is equally or more interesting.

And they published it as is?

There were edits, which I was so nervous about. I received each of them as a scathing criticism. But in reality they were really just innocuous, gentle edits for a line there or here. I remember saying to my husband, ‘I’m so glad I will never have to do this again. I never want to write for The New York Times again. I’m so glad that I will be able to say that I wrote for them once and that was that.’ I didn’t want to do it again because I was so nervous the whole time. The stakes seemed so high and I don’t think it was one of my best stories. I liked it but I noticed when the stakes were lower I was freer.

You are a confident writer who isn’t scared to say what she thinks in essays, profiles or features. That can be hard for writers. Did you learn it or have you always been a confident writer?

I didn’t always have it. I learned very quickly from writing personal essays that people responded to them because they related to them. We are not that different than each other. The more specifically and the harder I go on the things that I’m feeling, the more I am guaranteed that people will relate to it.

Sometimes you incorporate yourself into your profiles. That can be tricky. How do you decide when it’s appropriate?

I think my profiles are personal essays applied to other people. Any time I’m in a story I have to be very, very careful not be self-indulgent. I’m there as the reader in a very general, readerly way. I only bring myself in when I think that I can elaborate better on the thing that (my subject and I) are talking about.

You have profiled many celebrities including Tom Hiddleston, Nicki Manaj and Rob Pattinson. What do you do as a writer when you aren’t interested in the person you profiling?

Here’s your job when you are assigned somebody: You stay there until you understand why a magazine that you love is interested in him or her. You have to figure out why people love this person. You are not there to say whether or not you like them. You are there to say what it was like to be with them. You are in a room with this person who has a lot of fans because more people like them than hate them.

You are known for being a prolific writer. How many stories are you working on at any one time?

A lot. There have been times when I’ve been assigned 12 or 13 stories at one time, but they aren’t due at the same time. Every story gets what it needs. Some stories are really easy and some stories are really hard and some stories I have to report and wait a few weeks while it percolates in my head and then I sit down to write it. I’m lucky I don’t find writing sentences excruciating.

What have you learned in the last six and half years freelancing for so many different publications?

I’m far more efficient now. I like to write for an editor. I know what each editor will like and what is going to push their limits. I know how it’s going to go.  So the thing that has changed is now I’m very focused on how do I tell this story to this editor in the most compelling way possible.

Any advice when it comes to working with editors?

Be decent. If you are decent in every single way nothing can really hurt you. People will always remember your decency. This is a relationships business. If you don’t act decent this world can turn on you very quickly, but at the same time whatever your flaws are, and we all have flaws as writers—I overwrite—they are made up for in being a decent person and being somebody that people would like to interact with over and over again.

How do editors handle your “overwriting”?

I find that if you apologize, and say that you have really tried to keep it to the word count, that helps and you don’t get yelled at. You have to make a compelling case that you could not figure out a way to tell this story differently. And if you show your passion and show that it was never a function of laziness, then people will work with you.

After all of your success is there anything you are still trying to improve upon?

You are always at war with the last thing you did. How can I make it better? That’s what I try and concentrate on—getting better than I was last time. I’d always like to get better at telling the most complete version of a story.

Why leave the freelance world for a staff position?

One of the reasons I wanted to take a job was to not write quite as much as I was. I always wondered what it would be like to be able to immerse myself for longer and more exclusively into one subject. What would that do for my writing? I’d like to see.

The post Journalist Taffy Brodesser-Akner on How to be a Successful Features and Profile Writer appeared first on Mediabistro.

Touching Portraits in Kyrgyzstan by Elliott Verdier

Le jeune photographe Français Elliott Verdier a passé quatre mois au Kirghizistan, à photographier dans sa sublime série « A Shaded Path » la transition générationnelle en cours dans ce pays encore peu connu des occidentaux. Une série profonde au grain magnifique. L’approche de Verdier éclaire d’une douce lumière une génération nostalgique de l’URSS en même temps qu’une jeunesse dynamique aux yeux tournés vers la modernité. La série, entre portraits et paysages, est touchante et apaisante, pleine de nostalgie et d’espoir. 

Retrouvez le travail d’Elliott sur Instagram

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 









Poetic Black & White Pictures of the Far North by Laurent Baheux

Le photographe Laurent Baheux nous avait éblouis avec ses photographies de l’Amérique sauvage et de la savane africaine. Il nous transporte maintenant dans le Grand Nord. Il a saisi en noir et blanc les paysages et la faune qui les habitent. Dans un nouveau livre intitulé Ice is Black, l’artiste nous évoque avec poésie ce que la fonte des glaces provoque sur cette faune qui a tant besoin de cette flore pour continuer à peupler cet environnement. Il nous plonge dans les yeux de ces petits et grands habitants qu’on a immédiatement envie de protéger, des renards aux ours polaires.










Reflective « Life in Cities » Photographies by Michael Wolf

Depuis une quinzaine d’années, le photographe Michael Wolf dresse avec son appareil un portrait de l’entité que représente, aujourd’hui, la ville moderne. A travers plusieurs séries aussi abruptes que poétiques, le photographe capture les habitants comme les bâtiments, allant chercher dans la banalité les traits les plus marquants de son travail. Un magnifique travail presque documentaire, à la croisée des genres, pour un résultant vibrant de symboles.

Suivez le travail de Michael Wolf sur Instagram .













Night Zen Garden by Daniel Arsham

Fasciné par les jardins zen, Daniel Arsham nous présente cette fois-ci une version nocturne appelée « Lunar Garden », illuminée entièrement au neon. L’ambiance se fait onirique et laisse la place au songe, qui vient se mêler à une atmosphère de méditation aux frontières du réel.





Joshua Tree Residence Made of Containers

La résidence de Joshua Tree dessinée par le studio Whitaker est située au beau milieu du désert californien. La particularité de cette construction est d’être entièrement construite à partir de containers. Chaque bloc est disposé dans le but de magnifier la vue du paysage ou isoler chaque chambre. La maison est alimentée exclusivement par l’énergie solaire.