Cravt lets you enjoy high-quality music without distractions

While music streaming services like Spotify, Apple Music, etc have made accessing our favorite songs and albums more convenient, it has fundamentally changed how we consume music. There are still some purists who listen to vinyl and even compact discs, but most of us have gotten used to firing up the apps and listening on our smartphones or smart speakers. If you’re not that particular about music compression then that will do. But those who long for higher quality sound and the lost art of listening well are always on the lookout for products that can bring some semblance of that back.

Designer: Simon Schuster

Cravt is a product concept that can do just that if one day it does get made into an actual product. The name is a derivative of the word “Craft” which of course can be connected to the creation of music. Some might even say the art of listening can be considered a craft as well. The designer wanted to bring back the habit of appreciating music by designing something that can be both convenient and give you uncompressed, high-quality music. There are three components to his product design: an album player, a speaker, and a remote.

The Cravt Album seems to be a combination of an LP and a CD player. The audio files for a specific album of an artist is stored there but the format is not compressed and is analog. It is encased in a durable shell to protect the files and internal components housed in it. It can have packaging to show off the album cover, tracklist, and band or artist photos. This is another thing that has been lost with the digital revolution so it’s interesting to see this kind of product design.

The Cravt 360-degree loudspeaker is focused more on giving your music the best sound quality rather than having a lot of smart functions and all that jazz. The shape itself is designed to let the sound fire upward to spread the sound of the tweeter. It also is designed to have high-end drivers (for mid, high, and low range) so that it will always give out a 360 degree sound. And since it’s not a smart speaker, there are no other distractions as you listen to your chosen album.

Lastly, the Cravt remote control unit is also simple enough to not distract you from the primary purpose of the device which is to listen to music. It only has the basic commands like play/pause, volume, and skip and all of these are done through touch gestures. You can also display what song is currently playing on the small screen included in the remote, also through an intuitive touch gesture. All in all, this is a premium-looking music-playing device that I would love to try out if ever it becomes an actual product. For now, though, I’ll have to make do with Spotify and my Google Home speaker.

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Listen Up

A transfixing collaboration, two slow-burning singles and more music from the week

Banks: I Still Love You

Banks (aka singer-songwriter, musician and poet Jillian Rose Banks) has released a fourth track teasing her upcoming album SERPENTINA. Minimal, delicate and tender, “I Still Love You” is a long time coming, as Banks explains: “I’ve held this song tight for over six years. It felt like a secret I wanted to keep just for myself. But I finally feel not only ready but so excited to share this with the world… I hope you feel like you are sitting next to me when you listen. And I hope it’s as special to those who hear it as it is to me.” About loving and missing somebody you no longer speak to, it’s a sweet song full of longing.

Kilo Kish feat. Miguel: Death Fantasy

Recording artist Kilo Kish returns with the ominous single “Death Fantasy,” a transfixing collaboration with singer, songwriter and actor Miguel. An eerie, electronic soundscape hosts Kish’s sharp spoken-word lyrics and Miguel’s rising vocals. The two-minute track will appear on Kish’s sophomore LP, AMERICAN GURL, out 25 March.

Syd feat. Lucky Daye: CYBAH

Syd announces her second solo album, Broken Hearts Club, with the sultry and slow-burning “CYBAH,” featuring Lucky Daye. Syd (who’s part of Odd Future and the founder of The Internet) has crafted a hypnotic beat that’s buoyed by her own featherweight voice as well as gorgeous vocals from Lucky Daye. The album, which follows 2017’s sublime Fin, will feature the previously released “Missing Out” and include cameos from Kehlani and Smino. “The album is about a relationship I had that ended in my first real broken heart,” Syd says. “It almost felt like I joined a club because all of my friends went through similar experiences. It was like a rite of passage. I started writing the album on the relationship when I was in love. You’re really getting the whole journey from the beginning to the end. I want people to find it beautiful. It’s super vulnerable, sentimental, and it’s soft. There’s touching moments and a couple of dark moments.”

Josephine Philip: Little Boy

Danish recording artist Josephine Philip debuts “Little Boy,” the slow-burning and soulful fourth single from her highly anticipated debut solo album, We Get Lost And Found. The Copenhagen-based singer-songwriter releases the powerful poetic number by way of an intimate live video, filmed by Adam Jandrup and Andreas Koefoed, which underscores the haunting beauty of the song.

Album art by LA GRAFIC DESIGN; photo by Fryd Frydendahl

Listen Up is published every Sunday and rounds up the new music we found throughout the week. Hear the year so far on our Spotify channel. Hero image courtesy of Syd

This iPhone 13 mount for PC/laptop is the must-have accessory for every desk setup

If you thought docking stations or other Magsafe compatible mounting accessories were cool, wait till you lay your hands on the Orbita iPhone mount for the PC screen or your laptop!

Magsafe has brought an expanded dimension of functioning for Apple users, creating an ecosystem of accessories and attachments. The technology debuted on the iPhone 12 lineup back in 2020, and thanks to its success, there are many third-party accessory makers like Anker, Mophie and Spigen who have created Magsafe-like functionality for Android devices too. That said, majorly the magnetic freedom to wirelessly charge smartphones, battery packs, and other cool functions is still the privilege of Apple iPhones.

Designer: Andrea Tortone

The Orbita modular system is a good example of yet another useful utility of the Magsafe technology – giving the user freedom to extend the personal working space on the desktop or laptop without any hassle. The iPhone 13 becomes the second screen according to the designer Andrea Tortone who’s developed this modular accessory for MiLi. The Apple device can be oriented in any direction – vertical, horizontal or anything in between to have a productivity-centered approach. This comes in handy for taking up Zoom calls, answering calls, or glancing over at the pop-up notifications right while you’re working on an important project.

The accessory is made out of a 3mm thick piece of aluminum for a lightweight yet robust form factor. The focus of the product is on minimalism and a clean look while being mounted on the desktop screen. Orbita’s attaches to the back of the screen and, thereafter, you can mount the Magsafe compatible phone for movement in any direction. As compared to most of the docks out there, the phone can be freely set in any orientation, and when not required it can be tucked away from sight, which is a great advantage with this intuitive accessory.

 

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Reviiv Knee+ works wonders on your aching knees with its dual-light therapy

Relieving knee pain and speeding up recovery has never been easier or more convenient with Reviiv’s Knee+. With a modular design that gets up-close and personal around the areas of discomfort and pain, the Knee+ utilizes both LED and medical-grade lasers emitted by panels right against your skin, held by strong yet comfortable straps. This tag-team of LED and laser light therapy is designed to stimulate blood flow to damaged tissues around your knee, ensuring fast relief from aching knees and improving the rehabilitation of damaged joints.

Designer: Reviiv Design Labs

Click Here to Shop Now: $269 $499 ($230 off). Hurry, only 5 left! Raised over $450,000.

40% of the world’s population suffers from chronic knee pain, either because of poor lifestyle choices or the curse of genetics, age, and location. Relieving this kind of pain doesn’t have to be a pain either, and the Reviiv Knee+ almost makes it too easy to ease that suffering and even boost recovery in the process.

The Knee+ comes in three parts that can be easily disassembled for packing and travel, using adjustable magnetic straps to secure the light panels around your knee while giving enough flexibility for different knee shapes and sizes. You place these panels directly on top of the pain zones so that they can work their dual-light magic more effectively.

It may look or feel like magic, but the Knee+’s dual-light therapy is based on hard science. Light is an underrated medium of healing by enhancing mitochondrial functions to regenerate damaged cells faster and more effectively. This process of photobiomodulation is behind Reviiv’s miracle, using a tandem of red LED lights at 650nm deep to target surface level cells and a near-infrared laser at 808nm deep to reach deeper into tissues and joints. The device’s fast-acting relief and long-term healing benefits make it perfect for a wide range of people, from athletes resting after a tiring workout to patients recovering from injuries and sprains to just about anyone suffering from chronic joint pains due to different factors. Knee+ is also probably going to be popular with people suffering from arthritis.

Just because it has the word “therapy” in it doesn’t mean you need to drag around a large box to use the Knee+. It was designed with extreme portability in mind and can easily fit inside a gym bag or your bedside drawer. In addition to being adjustable, the modular construction lets you easily take it apart and drop the light panels into the magnetic charging dock both for charging and for safe-keeping. The Knee+ is also so easy to use that you won’t have to worry about asking help from a medical worker to get started. Everything is mostly automatic, including the dosage cycle that Knee+ calibrates for you. Portable, easy-to-use, and costs less than $300, the Reviiv Knee+ will quickly get you back on your feet and on your way to knee relief and recovery without breaking a sweat or the bank.

Click Here to Shop Now: $269 $499 ($230 off). Hurry, only 5 left! Raised over $450,000.

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Inception blueprints of Batmobile show the transformation from concept to the final design

Yes, the Batmobile in The Batman movie looks stunning and all raw, but in its conception phase, the caped crusader’s mean machine had a definitive sci-fi charm to it.

The Batman showcased the Batmobile’s capabilities in the latest flick, and there was a logical reason the ride was so low-tech. But don’t be mistaken about its ability to take on the bad blood. Conceptualized to be similar to the 1960s version which was more like a muscle car, the latest one goes back to the roots, giving up on sophistication to focus on realism and custom-built origins. That explains the use of realistic defensive weaponry and a reinforced front to ram the Penguin’s vehicle.

Designer:  Andries van Overbeeke

Already we’ve seen the initial renders of the Batmobile featured in The Batman movie, penned by digital artist Ash Thorp after being commissioned by Director Matt Reeves and production designer James Chinlund for the task. Now race designer and movie vehicle designer, Andries van Overbeeke gives us a peek into the basic concept design of the Batmobile for the movie. According to him, the very early Batmobile concept from 2019 showcases the nosebar, headlights and the tapered rear end. After kickstarting the very structural design of the Batmobile for the movie, artists like Ash Thorp took over the gauntlet, and the end result is stunning as we’ve seen in the movie.

The muscle car character of the Batmobile driven by Robert Pattinson is pretty much in the DNA right from the beginning. It’s more like a Ford Mustang on steroids ready to ram anything in its path. The final version seen in the movie goes through many subtle changes, and in the end, it evolves as a lean and mean crime-fighting machine fit for Bruce Wayne. These initial blueprints also suggest the presence of a futuristic persona which was then roughened up to go with the movie’s plot. Either way, the Batmobile looks utterly impressive right from the conception stage to the final realization phase.

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These 3D-printed hand boards are created from plastic waste for riding the waves

Wabo is a collection of hand boards that are created from plastic waste produced from 3D-printed prototyping.

Eight million pieces of plastic make their way into the ocean on a daily basis. That’s a lot of plastic. While some brands commit themselves to gimmicky sustainable practices that have more to do with marketing than carbon-neutral manufacturing, other brands learn how to make something out of the plastic waste they produce.

Designer: Uido Design Studio

The multidisciplinary design studio Uido Design is a studio known for its catalog of 3D printable product designs and its team is doing something about the waste they produce during the design process. Shredding the plastic waste produced from 3D printing into bits and pieces, Uido Design uses the waste to create hand boards for users to ride the ocean waves.

Each time Uido Design develops a new product design, tons of boxes are filled with plastic waste from 3D-printed prototypes. “Our commitment to the planet is serious,” Uido Design suggests, “and our only waste as a company is those prototypes, so we started thinking about what we can do with them and how we can transform them into a new and fun product.”

Designed by Lautaro Lucero, the hand boards are handcrafted by both him and Tadeo Lucero. After the plastic waste has been shredded up into bits and pieces, the duo forms 6mm plates, which are then cut and transformed into hand boards for paddling in the ocean waves. While the hand boards are by no means a necessary product, they represent a fun way of making something out of the waste that can and will be put to use.

Uido Design Studio shreds the plastic waste into bits and pieces before forming them into 6mm plates.

A fitted strap is then attached to the curved plates for secure hand placement. 

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Pikachu wireless mouse will send good vibes while you work

Few people know that Pikachu is actually a rodent, so this computer peripheral drives that trivia home while attempting to make you feel just as relaxed as the critter sleeping under your hand.

The fact that the computer mouse is called a mouse is almost an accident of history. Its creator, Douglas Engelbart, simply likened it to the rodent because of the cable that ran out of its blocky body. There were no signs of ears or even a nose, but that name stuck for lack of a better alternative. Not everyone likes a computer mouse, and even fewer probably like the biological kind, but many will probably dig this mouse in the shape of one of the most iconic Pokemon in history, whether you’re a fan of the franchise or not.

Designer: Brando

With its long ears and lightning-shaped tail, it’s really hard to believe that Pikachu is a mouse. We won’t argue with its creators, of course, but it’s clear that they took liberties on what defines a mouse, almost like the same liberties Engelbart took when he named the computing input device. It’s probably for the best that the yellow fuzzball known as Pikachu doesn’t look like a mouse at all since it has made the fictional critter a beloved mascot the world over.

This wireless mouse tries to capture the cuteness of the Pokemon in a way that makes most people go “ooooh” and “aaaaaw” in delight. To more closely resemble the shape of a computer mouse, Pikachu lies prone its stomach, with its legs splayed out in a carefree and relaxing manner. The creature’s face displays happy contentment in its sleep as if trying to invite you to let go of the stress of work in a similar fashion.

Pikachu’s ears are pulled back in order to form the shape of mouse buttons, with a more traditional scroll wheel in the middle. Placing your fingers on top of these buttons almost make you feel like you’re petting the cute rodent, an action that is believed to induce feelings of relaxation and calm in humans. What better way to spend your working hours than by balancing stress and peace in the same hand.

The mouse is described to be a comfortable fit in your hand, though the raised portion for Pikachu’s tail could be a problem for your palm. Fortunately, the mouse’s design is so symmetrical that it can be used in either left or right hand. That relieves interested buyers another source of stress when they realize they won’t be left out from this cute accessory just because they’re left-handed.

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This rugged AirTag case keeps your tracker protected from inevitable scratches and damage

Got an AirTag to secure all those important tangible things in your life? Then why not consider a rugged case for this Apple accessory to make it last for years to come.

Apple has given people who lead a versatile lifestyle, good reason to leave some of their worries on them. Yes, I’m talking about the reliable AirTag tracker that’s quite popular in their line-up of accessories. It can be used for keeping a tab of any number of important things like keychains, wallets, bags, bicycles and even cars. Mostly it is to secure any such items from accidental loss or even theft. People who are already deep-rooted in the Apple ecosystem, most likely already have the smart tracker too.

Designer: Dango

The thin tile-like accessory made from 6061 aerospace aluminum is ready to take on the wrath of the most extreme usage. Times when you tag it onto your keychain with a number of keys which can induce scratches. Now that isn’t cool for long-term usage, is it? That’s why you need this Urban Armor case of the AirTag world to safeguard the Apple tracker from any unintended damage or ugly scratches. To be precise, the Dango AirTag Capsule provides premium protection from the elements for years to come.

The $18 accessory for the AirTag tracker elevates the aesthetics of the Apple device for any torture you put it through. Yes, I’m talking about tagging it along for the roughest of adventures in the whole wide world. Dango is known for its robust products, and the AirTag Capsule is no different. You can be rest assured, the AirTag will last ten folds more than it would otherwise without this accessory’s protection. Coming in the anodized finish in two color options – jet black and satin silver – the accessory secures the AirTag, and is also very easy to remove.

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This at-home spin bike combines an industrial-grade build with warm interior design cues 

In collaboration with Kettle Sport, forthepeople designed a new at-home spin bike for users to ride along with Kettler Sport’s home fitness app.

Through the decades, technological advancements have completely redefined the home fitness industry. The 90s gave us prerecorded VHS tapes stocked with workouts to follow along on our televisions. Then, infomercials in the early 2000s had store shelves stocked with products like Six-Minute Abs! and Bowflex that we bought on the whim that we could really get a six-pack in just six minutes.

Designers: Kettler Sport x forthepeople

Since 1949, Kettler Sport has moved with the trends to help shape home fitness into the interactive, AI-operated industry that it is today. In collaboration with forthepeople, Kettler Sport unveiled their line of at-home spin bikes that users can ride while using Kettler Sport’s accompanying app.

Recent global events have pushed us deeper into our home spaces, prompting many of us to bring the industrial-grade workout equipment we’re used to in the gym into our homes. While having access to high-tech machinery is luxe, not all of us are cool with having a bionic two-wheeler in the living room. Designing Kettler Sport’s line of spin bikes meant that forthepeople had to merge the technical build of a reliable spin bike with the refinement of modern interior design cues.

“We helped Kettler rethink the fitness category through a brand and product language that brings equipment into the heart of the home–” the designers from forthepeople describe, “by combining performance cues with the warmth of living spaces.”

The resulting spin bike takes on a glossy, yet matte steel finish combined with curved elements that give the bike an approachable appeal. The bulk of the bike’s inner components is concealed within a black plastic encasement located in the center of the bike’s minimalist frame.

Describing the intersection between the fitness industry and interior design, forthepeople explain, “The bikes reference classic cycling frames and mix them with subtle furniture details, each in a set of colorways inspired by objects from around the home.” Finding the center of the intersection, Kettler Sport’s new line of spin bikes finds universal appeal through minimal framing and concealed components.

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Link About It: This Week’s Picks

Neuroscience breakthrough, next-level watch news, a celebration of Mexican craft and more from around the web

Neuroscientists Observe The Formation of a Memory in a Living Brain

A team of scientists from the University of Southern California watched zebra fish forming “fearful” brain memories, an observation that revealed a complex system of synaptic rewiring. The neuroscientists witnessed this overhaul of connections through imaging under a microscope, where memories blossomed in a fluorescent green color. This breakthrough, which, according to Wired, supports the idea that a “type of memory may be critical to how the brain chooses to encode it,” was outlined in a recent study published in the scientific journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Read more about the processing of memories as reported in the study at Wired.

Image of the brain of a zebra fish larva courtesy of Andrey Andreev/Thai Truong/Scott Fraser; Translation Imaging Center/USG

V&A’s “Fashioning Masculinities: The Art of Menswear” Exhibit Confronts Gender Constructs

On view now until 6 November in London, Fashioning Masculinities: The Art of Menswear is the V&A’s first major menswear exhibition. From a Victorian codpiece and Vivienne Westwood’s 1980s fig leaf-printed underwear to Kim Jones’ 2021 Fendi 3D flower dress inspired by Virginia Woolf’s Orlando and Christian Siriano’s tuxedo gown worn by Billy Porter, the show traces the history of men’s apparel and highlights how femininity and gender fluidity have always existed within the masculine. The exhibit comprises three parts: Undress, which focuses on the West’s idolization of the male body; Overdress, a study on the role of flamboyance in menswear; and Redress, a look at 19th century menswear that marked the rise of dark, somber suits. These outfits (from the Edwardian era to the present day) show that “the sinister power of this highly segregated gendered style must have arrived with the might of capitalism and the industrial revolution,” writes Sarah Mower. At a time when ideals of masculinity still champion violence and toxicity, the exhibit is a critical examination that undermines common stereotypes. Read more about the thought-provoking exhibit—that helps to prove how “gender has always been a construct”—at Vogue.

Image by Peter Kelleher, courtesy of V&A

Bulgari’s Octo Finissimo Ultra Sets Record for World’s Thinnest Watch

Since its debut in 2014, Bulgari’s Octo Finissimo collection has been a leader in ultra-thin watchmaking, setting records with the “world’s thinnest tourbillon, minute repeater, self-winding watch, self-winding tourbillon, chronograph (which was also self-winding with second time zone), tourbillon chronograph and perpetual calendar,” according to Hodinkee’s Jack Forster. Now, they have unveiled a wristwatch that takes the title of the world’s thinnest watch altogether. Bulgari’s new 40mm sandblasted titanium Octo Finissimo Ultra measures only 1.80mm thick—and it does so by compressing most components onto the same plane in a staggering feat of engineering (with eight patents pending). Further, the Bulgari team laser-etched a decorative QR code onto the mainspring barrel’s ratchet wheel; scanning the code brings one to a video about the watch, as well as to an attached NFT. Read more about this milestone timepiece and the decisions behind it at Hodinkee.

Image courtesy of Bulgari

The Link Between Nostalgia and Pain Relief

Scientists behind research outlined in a new paper published in the Journal of Neuroscience believe there’s a connection between nostalgia and pain relief. The study (helmed by a team at University of the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Beijing and titled Thalamocortical mechanisms for nostalgia-induced analgesia) involved an experiment in which participants had slight heat applied to their skin, they then rated their pain levels, which changed depending on if they were simultaneously shown images from their past. These “nostalgia-inducing images, such as candy, cartoons, and toys from the era of their childhood… seemed to change activity levels in regions of the brain that scientists think are important to pain perception.” While this alludes to nostalgia as a means to offset pain, “the brain mechanism underlying the analgesic effect of nostalgia remains elusive,” says the researcher team. Find out more about the study and their use of the MRI headsets at INVERSE.

Image courtesy of SayaPhotos/Pixabay

The Tarot Reader and Activist Who Created DC Comics’ First Transgender Superhero

Created in the 1960s by DC Comics, Doom Patrol is an eccentric superhero team comprised of complex characters like Danny the Street, a sentient neighborhood that identifies as genderqueer. It’s fitting then, that this team would also boast DC Comics’ first transgender superhero, Kate Godwin, written by their first out trans writer: Rachel Pollack. Hailing from Brooklyn, Pollack led a stereotypical straight cisgender male life until she turned 26, when she came out to the world as a trans woman and lesbian (and also became immersed in tarot). Pollack continued studying tarot (and would eventually become one of the foremost authorities on the practice) while becoming an activist for the UK Gay Liberation Front, where she faced discrimination from cis members. These frustrations eventually culminated in Kate Godwin, a trans woman (who debuted in 1993’s Doom Patrol #70) with the powers of coagulation and dissolution. “Kate Godwin uses the power of her own transgender lived experience to save the world from immolation,” writes Samantha Riedel for Them. “For Pollack, this was the ultimate expression of the true spirituality of trans identity.” Learn more about this historic character and an upcoming Doom Patrol omnibus edition at Them.

Image courtesy of PM Press/Rachel Pollack

40 Artists Illustrate The Concept of Anxiety for EYEYAH! Kids’ Magazine

For its sixth issue, Singapore-based kids’ magazine EYEYAH! asked an international array of digital artists and designers to illustrate what they believe the word “anxiety” looks and feels like, as well as ways to overcome it. The resulting 40 images offer numerous perspectives: some hopeful, others overwhelming, all colorful. EYEYAH! co-founders Tanya Wilson and Steve Lawler created the award-winning publication to help children cope with the demands of the present day, and to grow into socially and environmentally conscious adults. “The topic of anxiety could not be more relevant and there is a need to approach it from a new perspective,” they say in a statement. “Visuals speak directly to the sub-consciousness and trigger readers to slow down, observe, analyze and interpret each image to see how it might relate to their own lives.” See more of the powerful artworks at designboom.

Image courtesy of EYEYAH!

Swatch’s $260 MoonSwatch Omega Speedmaster Moonwatch Collaboration

Omega’s Speedmaster (which retails for around $6,400) has long been a watch design icon and a highly coveted timepiece. On 26 March, Swatch will debut an official collaboration with Omega called the MoonSwatch (for only $260), which replicates the design of the Speedmaster’s legendary Moonwatch model in its exact proportions. An automatic movement has been swapped for quartz—and the case will be composed of Bioceramic. The collection will include 11 different models, each based on a cosmic component to our solar system (including one inspired by Mars, that’s based on an Omega prototype produced for NASA in 1972). Read more about the details of the compelling collaboration at Gear Patrol.

Image courtesy of Swatch

The Organic Source of Spring’s Distinct Scent

The unmistakable (and hopeful) scent that emerges around springtime has long been traced to an organic source: the soil-based compound geosmin. Scientists from the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, the John Innes Centre and Lund University have attributed the familiar yet often unplaceable smell—much like a rainy day or freshly turned earth—to a “symbiotic relationship between a six-legged worm, known as the springtail, and Streptomyces, a type of bacteria commonly found in soil,” according to Popular Mechanics. Moreover, the earthy odor of geosmin acts as a chemical signal guiding springtails toward Streptomyces, which is its necessary food source. Read more about the much appreciated annual scent and the process behind it at Popular Mechanics.

Image courtesy of The Spruce

Residencia PATRÓN Invites Guests To Celebrate Mexican Craft Culture

Curated by Fabiola Zamora and Danaé Salazar, founders of the Mexico City-based independent fashion magazine Revista 192, Residencia PATRÓN is a two-day immersive pop-up in NYC that celebrates the convergence of Mexican craft culture and modern luxury. Within the enchanting ticketed event, five installations—from the likes of ceramics designer Perla Valtierra to handcrafted accessory brand Aurelia’s founders, Andrea, Paula and Magdalena de la Torre Suárez—epitomize artisanal elegance today. All of this comes paired with signature PATRÓN cocktails. Read more about the event and the talent involved on PATRÓN’s site now, where anyone interested can sign up for the waitlist to attend.

Image courtesy of PATRÓN

Link About It is our filtered look at the web, shared daily in Link and on social media, and rounded up every Saturday morning. Hero image courtesy of EYEYAH!