Ball Mic phone accessory concept is compact, cute, and easy to lose

Some say that the best phone accessories are ones that you can easily slip into a pocket and forget. This external mic definitely fits that bill, perhaps a bit too well.

The use of smartphones as amateur equipment for making videos has forced manufacturers to step up their game when it comes to cameras and imaging. Videos, however, are only one part of the process, and audio plays an equally important role when making a professional-quality clip. Sadly, phones haven’t improved significantly in that regard, leaving plenty of room for external microphones like this concept.

Designer: foodesigner

Premium, more expensive phones naturally have more sophisticated mics and audio processing hardware. But given how much space is left inside a phone, mics often take lower priority compared to cameras and batteries. Most are content with just making sure that voices in calls come out crystal clear, which may not always work when trying to record ambient sounds, music, conversations, or even interviews.

External mic accessories offer the opportunity to add dedicated audio recording hardware to a smartphone, often at the cost of using up the charging port. These come in all shapes, sizes, and designs, though most try to emulate traditional mics or even lavaliers, including the wires. Some try to be too innovative and come up with a design that is also unfamiliar.

The Ball Mic, in contrast, is a nod to simplicity and familiarity. Looking like a small ball head mic, the accessory simply plugs into a smartphone’s port, and that’s that. The designers mention using USB-C, but it doesn’t exclude the possibility of a version made specifically for an iPhone’s lightning port. Either way, the design is so simple it’s almost impossible to get it wrong.

The design is also small, making it trivial to bring the mic along with you anywhere. It can even share the same pocket as your phone, provided you even have enough space for your phone in there. The size, however, also means it’s too easy to get lost in jeans, bags, and honestly everywhere. And this time, there won’t be a thin cable to lead the trail to its location.

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Top Automotive and Transportation Designs from the A’ Design Awards 2021

One of the A’ Design Awards’ standout features is just its vastly multidisciplinary nature. Conceived as the one award program to cover every single aspect of the design industry, the A’ Design Award looks at as many as 100 categories, spanning everything from Architecture to Interiors, Graphics, Packaging, Furniture, Film, Social Design, Medical Product Design, Consumer Technology, Jewelry, and a category that’s truly close to our hearts… Transportation Design.

With its Vehicle, Mobility and Transportation Design category, the A’ Design Award hopes to identify and reward game-changing innovations made in the mobility and transport sector. The awardees aren’t just your average cars, motorbikes, and cycles, they even look at recreational vehicles like skateboards (there’s one in the list below!) as well as mobility solutions for the physically impaired. Currently in their 2021-22 edition, the awards are looking for the next generation of life-changing, life-bettering transportation designs, with as many as 211 Jury Members covering all of the award categories. Moreover, winners of the A’ Design Award don’t just win a trophy and a certificate, but receive an entire PR Campaign dedicated towards pushing their career, clout, and even their projects to newer heights. A’ Design Award’s winners and even its participants are included in its annual award book and business network, while additionally contributing to their country’s overall design ranking that paints a holistic picture of how design-centric and design-forward each country is… so if you’ve got a great idea for a product and all it needs is a bit of a push and some validation from some of the most accomplished professionals and educators in the design industry, head over to A’ Design Award’s website and submit your design for this year’s award! Hurry, there are only 2 more weeks till the award’s final submission deadline of 28th February! Your design, your profession, and even your country could really use that bit of clout!

If you’ve got a great transportation/mobility design that’s innovative and award-worthy, click here to register & participate in the A’ Design Award and Competition 2022. Hurry! Submissions close on February 28th, 2022.

CanguRo Mobility Robot by Shunji Yamanaka – fuRo

The CanguRo Mobility Robot is a classic example of building the future by looking at the past. For centuries (if not millennia), humans have rode on horses as transport. The horse, unlike a car or motorcycle, forms a relationship with the rider over time, following, responding to commands, and remaining subservient to its owner. The CanguRo Mobility Robot provides a similar experience with a three-wheeled robot that the user can ride, summon via their smartphone, and even walk ahead of as the robot follows them along. The three-wheeled mobility bot is autonomous, which gives the rider a certain degree of freedom. It can be summoned from the parking lot by simply tapping a button, and can even follow you around as you walk. However, when you want to ride it, straddle yourself in its seat and the three wheels spread apart, providing you with a comfortable, controlled, and stable driving experience!

The Board Skateboard by Chia-Wei Chen

The Board is an award-winning collapsible skateboard that is inspired by the same mechanical linkage system seen in collapsing gates, in scissors, and in those expandable grabber toys you’re probably familiar with. It’s hard to think of how skateboards and gates have any design-process overlap, but The Board makes it clear that a detail found in one product can easily and effectively be ported onto another product with stunning results. The Board uses this collapsible linkage system to make itself more portable. Machined metal components are arranged, sandwiched, and connected to each other with multiple pivot points to make The Board’s body. These linkages allow The Board to expand and collapse just by pulling or pushing it, taking it from a long, skateboard shape to a much more compact and carryable circular shape that easily fits right into backpacks. The metal construction gives The Board its signature strength (so the pieces don’t bend or flex when you stand on the skateboard), while also imparting a unique appearance to it, whether open or closed!

XP Zero by Hugo Eccles for Untitled Motorcycles

Untitled Motorcycles (UMC) turned a lot of heads when it unveiled its XP Zero design. Based on Zero Motorcycles’ SR/F naked sportbike, the XP Zero floored audiences with its classic lines, modern performance, and minimalist styling. Since its debut at the prestigious Goodwood Festival of Speed, the XP has exhibited in Milan, Italy and Portland, Oregon; won nine design awards; and been featured in hundreds of magazine articles. Now that alone is pretty impressive… aside from that bare-basic beautiful design!

Sadler Foldable Electric Bike by Gianluca Sada

Another folding bike? Well, the Sadler is much more than that. The Sadler Folding Electric Bike, as its name suggests, comes with an electric powertrain that takes the effort out of manually cycling. Aside from that, it comes with a folding frame that’s also made further innovative by the two hubless wheels on the bicycle, and the frame’s carbon fiber construction. The foldable and portable design allows the Sadler to measure a mere 26-inches when closed, making it the world’s most compact folding e-bike. Designed and manufactured in Italy, the Sadler comes in three versions – a classic manual bike, a 3-gear shift, and the electrified version.

Cerberus Moped by Marco Naccarella

Although the Cerberus has the stylings of a café racer, it is, in fact, a moped owing to its lean lithe frame with the hollow design right under what looks like the moped’s fuel tank. The Cerberus sports one of the most interesting hybrid power systems. It comes equipped with a 2.3kw 50cc 4 stroke engine powered by a 2.8 kW electric battery and even has that aforementioned fuel tank to power the engine. If those weren’t enough, the Cerberus also has, wait for it, a set of foot pedals that allow it to live up to its moped name (the ped in moped standing for pedal)! The moped can reach speeds of up to 60km/h on both electric and fuel-based drives, and if you’re in the mood for some casual ambling about, you can just switch to the pedals and enjoy your bike ride!

Wusa Electric Personal Mobility by Anri Sugihara

As incredibly wicked as the Wusa electric scooter looks, it is, in fact, designed to help people with reduced mobility make their way around. The brief of the Wusa is a pretty interesting one – envisioned for Japan, a country that’s seeing a gradual reduction in its population along with an increase in the median age of its citizens, the Wusa hopes to provide a robust, reliable personal mobility solution for people who often opt for public transport but are seeing these options close down due to a reduction in population and in demand. The scooter/motorcycle is a pretty nifty-looking electric two-wheeler that not only lets you ride it around from point A to B, it also comes with the ability to strap a wheelchair to its rear, turning it effectively into a motor-powered trike. The beauty of the Wusa, mentions designer Anri Sugihara, is that it’s agnostic in its approach to the rider. “This compact mobility won’t separate user by their body ability”, Sugihara says. “It can be enjoyed by both manual wheelchair users and able-bodied people for their own usage.” By doing so, it elevates the status and position of a ‘welfare vehicle’, truly impacting all its consumers by being as inclusive as possible.

If you’ve got a great transportation/mobility design that’s innovative and award-worthy, click here to register & participate in the A’ Design Award and Competition 2022. Hurry! Submissions close on February 28th, 2022.

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Retro Stripes Socks

Philadelphia-based American Trench’s crew-length, medium-weight socks recall the American letterman era of the ’50s. Complete with a cushioned footbed, pleats and retro stripes, these natural, unbleached cotton socks are both durable and stylish. For their spring/summer 2022 collection, American Trench expanded the range of colors the socks come in, now featuring vintage blue and red (Tile/Rust), dark green and mustard yellow (Forrest/Amber) and Orange and Chive. These fun tones paired with a classic shape make for a nostalgic wardrobe addition.

Yvette Mayorga’s Cake Decorations Critique Surveillance and Consumerism

Yvette Mayorga’s most recent work, “Surveillance Locket,” is a cake version of the Polly Pocket mansion that the artist dreamed of owning in her youth. Made with multiple layers of pink acrylic paint, pushed through piping bags, the faux confection melds the domestic interiors of the artist’s childhood with imaginary spaces. At first glance, the cake appears joyful and luxurious with its gold banisters and chandeliers, but a closer look reveals toy soldiers hiding throughout. These figures represent the military presence at the US and Mexico border, where Mayorga spent time between family visits growing up. Combing the gluttony of cake, children’s toys, soldiers and colonialist histories, Mayorga makes a critique about overconsumption and surveillance. Learn more about the work—which will be permanently installed at O’Hare International Airport’s Terminal 5—at It’s Nice That.

Image of Yvette Mayorga: Surveillance Locket, courtesy of the artist

Alphabet Project will make you want to buy all the letters to add to your NFT collection

NFT is a term loosely used these days. You have probably heard of it but don’t fully understand. Some of you may have already invested money on a few NFT designs. Expect more will be introduced. So what is NFT? It’s a non-fungible token used to own digital objects on a blockchain. Digital objects are any creation online that may cost something. An NFT could be digital drawings, art, or music.

Designer: Marius Longo

Yanko Design Marius Visual Arts

Sample Marius Visual Arts

At the moment, digital artists and creatives are going crazy over this trend. Just like cryptocurrency, NFTs will still be questioned and doubted but the system will still continue. A number of other products, services, and platforms are also being developed for NFTs and we can expect more will be introduced.

Several designs have been presented to the public and since last year especially, many people have sold and purchased digital products. The latest interesting collection is from Marius Longo, the person behind Marius Visual Arts.

Marius is a freelance motion designer and 3D artist based in France. He has recently come up with his first NFT collection named the ‘Alphabet Project’. His visual creations are mainly digital product designs. Each product is patterned after a letter from the alphabet.

The Alphabet Project shows the different letters in different forms. Starting with an astronaut, we see one formed like the letter A. A coffee machine is shaped like a C coffee-themed color.

A D-shaped bass drum is followed by an elephant-shaped like an E. The G-Game Boy will remind you of your childhood. A double hydrant looks ready shaped like an H.

Leaning Tower of Pisa is the choice of symbol for I while a J-shaped bottle is filled with jellybeans. THE upside-down K-shaped tomato ketchup is obviously after a bottle of Heinz tomato ketchup. Mario’s signature blue overalls with red shirt combo are the inspiration for the letter M.

N is nicely rendered with ninja accessories. The O shape looks more like a donut. The Q-shaped quartz looks unique while the R radio is something we want to see become an actual product.

An S-shaped Nintendo Switch is possible. The T telephone may remain a novelty because nobody ever really uses a landline phone. The U unicorn doesn’t have eyes or maybe they’re just hidden. We can’t quite figure out how a V videotape will work. The watermelon and xylophone are obvious designs.

A Yoda saber can be blinding. The Z Zippo lighter must be used responsibly. Some letters of the alphabet are not posted on OpenSea yet but we recognize the L lego, P PlayStation, B Basketball, and F football. Each letter has a corresponding cost. Starting price is $0.01 while the most expensive we see is at $0.4 for the Nintendo S Switch.

Yanko Design Marius Visual Arts 2

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This multifunctional WFH unit combines a library with integrated desks to feed our curiosity while we work

Curiosity-Go-Round is a cylindrical, miniature library that also functions as a workspace with integrated desks and tables.

As we adjust our routines to fit our work-from-home lifestyles, the furniture that gets us through the workday adjusts alongside us. Since WFH orders were first put in place, designers have found versatility in making integrative and modular home furniture.

Designer: Creative Project Base x Keigo Kobayashi

Taking the multifunctional and immersive spirit of WFH furniture to its maximalist end, architect Keigo Kobayashi was called on by the Creative Project Base team to create a bookcase that combines elements of a traditional workspace with integrated storage units to form a bookworm’s private working oasis called Curiosity-Go-Round. Before Curiosity-Go-Round reached completion, Japan-based company Creative Project Base told Kobayashi, “I want you to make a bookshelf that can hold all the books you have now…I want to make it a place where you can come up with ideas by yourself.”

The unconventional, miniature library stands alone as its own unit with embedded desks that engross workers in the shelves of books, as well as a central cavity that functions as a private retreat from the demands of the workday. Working amidst shelves of books can bring some calm so workers can focus and lose track of time for a moment. On different ends of Curiosity-Go-Round, the convex shelves curve to provide spacious tables for collaborative or solo work. The overall unit rises like a wonky cylinder with an open internal center that leaves room to explore the unit’s bookshelves.

By transforming the traditional office space into a zany bookworm’s retreat, work begins to feel more creative, collaborative, and manageable. Once Curiosity-Go-Round was completed, Creative Project Base describes, “After completion, many people visited, picked up books, read, talked, came up with ideas, and many creative [undertakings] became more [dynamic]. Everyone goes around, goes inside, [and] tickles their curiosity to the fullest…”

Primarily functioning as a standalone library, the internal volume is left open for people to enter and explore the bookshelves. 

Curiosity-Go-Round is designed to flow freely between the floor and ceiling. 

Integrated desks jut from the central volume to provide table space for working. 

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Exoplanet Orbiting The Nearest Star To Our Solar System Discovered

An exoplanet (an Earth-like body that orbits a star that isn’t our Sun) has been discovered orbiting Proxima Centauri—the nearest star to our solar system. Found using the European Southern Observatory’s Very Large Telescope (ESO’s VLT) which is located in Chile, the exoplanet—called Proxima d—could be significant, as it orbits Proxima Centauri’s habitable zone, where “it’s not too warm nor too cold for liquid water to exist at the surface of a planet.” When searching for life on other planets, water is crucial. Additionally, Proxima d’s proximity to Earth means it could feasibly be the destination of a future mission. Lead researcher João Faria says, “The discovery shows that our closest stellar neighbor seems to be packed with interesting new worlds, within reach of further study and future exploration.” Read more at Inverse.

Image courtesy of ESO/L. Calçada

This bubble-wrap inspired semi-translucent luggage is easy-to-spot and carry

In a world where the brand Rimowa is very popular among travel influencers, it may be time for us to look for an alternative. It’s not the only brand in the world. And no, we’re not getting any monogrammed trunk from another luxury fashion house.

Running Guy Studio is offering something new and different. From the same team that introduced the Air Type Keyboard a few weeks ago, here comes a new suitcase that will already come with bubble wrap-like protection. It’s not just another design that should remain an idea. We think this one should go into production. And if it does, we know it will quickly fly off the shelves.

Designer: Running Guy Studio

The Running Guy luggage is made of plastic shell. The translucent design comes from the bubble wrap idea. It doesn’t just show what’s inside but also protects everything in it. Like any bubble-wrapped item, your stuff can be well-protected.

The hard case is polycarbonate which is now a common material used for luggage. The overall look and feel of the Running Guy luggage are edgy. It’s not totally loud as your things are kept slightly covered but the design is one of a kind. Heads will definitely turn if they see you with this at the airport or rolling down the aisle of the plane.

The Running Guy Semi-Translucent Luggage Where to Buy

The bubble wrap inspiration translates to the kind of protection it offers. The aluminum hardware found in the corners and edges provides a rugged but classy look. Running Guy Studios’ design philosophy can be sometimes irrational but not this one.

The Running Guy Semi-Translucent Luggage Details

As an experience studio, the Running Guy Studio aims to make experiences real. There are reasons why a product design is such. It often answers the needs of the consumers. With this luggage, our demands to have an easy-to-spot and durable piece are answered. A metal version is also ready for those who don’t want others to see what’s inside their suitcase.

The life of a jet setter is something we may not freely live these days but no one’s stopping us to dream. And here we are dreaming and living vicariously with all these product ideas and concept designs. When the pandemic is over and tourism will be fully open as before, we’ll be ready with this translucent luggage from Running Guy.

The Running Guy Semi-Translucent Luggage Design

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Bruk: A Better, More Recyclable Design for Carton-Based Beverage Containers

California-based industrial designer Pushan Panda has come up with an interesting concept for recyclable containers for drinks. Called Bruk, it’s meant to replace the packaging for beverages that come in mixed plastic/paper containers, like juice boxes and the cartons that resemble little houses.

Why? Because although “Environmentally conscious consumers may think that a paper carton is more sustainable because it uses less plastic than a similar carton made from plastic,” Panda writes, “due to their construction the common paper beverage carton is surprisingly difficult to recycle. Conventional paper milk cartons are made using paper sandwiched between two thin layers of plastic, in order to recycle them, the paper and plastic must be separated which requires a special process that is both expensive and not widely available. As a result in the USA only 16% of [those types of] beverage cartons are recycled and only 49% are recycled in the EU.”

Panda’s Bruk design thus consists of an HDPE, Doi-pack-like sleeve inside a paperboard carton-shaped housing.

“When it’s time to recycle it, the consumer simply tears Bruk in half, releasing the HDPE liner so it can be recycled separately from the cardboard. This process is fast, simple and fun. We designed Bruk to be intuitive and inclusive, easy for everyone regardless of physical ability. Bruk is as convenient and easy to use as a conventional carton, but uses less plastic than a plastic carton and is 100% recyclable with conventional equipment unlike paper cartons.”

I think the concept is sound, but I am skeptical it would succeed—because of consumers, not the design. The roads of even my rural, supposedly idyllic county are littered with plastic bottles thrown out of the window by passing drivers. If they can’t be bothered to take the single step of throwing a PET bottle into a single bin, can we rely on them to take the extra steps required by Bruk? I wish the answer was “yes.”

Virgil Abloh’s Air Force 1’s Raise $24.5 Million For Charity

Two hundred pairs of Nike Air Force 1’s designed by Virgil Abloh for Louis Vuitton’s spring/summer 2022 collection recently sold for a combined $23.5 million at a Sotheby’s auction. The proceeds go to Abloh’s Post-Modern Scholarship fund, which fosters equity and inclusion in the fashion industry by supporting the next generation of Black designers. The sale is the most valuable charitable sale at Sotheby’s in almost a decade, setting a new record auction total for fashion as well as a new participation record for the total number of bids received on opening day and number of bidders for online sales overall. “Today’s record-breaking auction, which saw unparalleled global participation, is a testament to Virgil Abloh’s legacy as one of the most visionary artists and designers of his generation whose widespread influence and impact is still palpable,” said Sotheby’s Chief Executive Officer Charles F Stewart. Read more about it at Bloomberg.

Image courtesy of Sotheby’s