John Jervis shares five design ideas you really need to know

Lego Braille Bricks

The recently released 50 Design Ideas You Really Need to Know book features essays tracking the evolution of design from the 19th century until now. Here, its author chooses five key design ideas.

The latest in a series of 50 ideas books, the 50 Design Ideas You Really Need to Know aims to cover a wide range of design concepts and make them accessible to the interested layman reader.

“Its 50 ideas could perhaps be better described as a mixture of movements, mediums, concepts, processes, management techniques and marketing ploys, all introduced in a, hopefully, insightful and enjoyable manner,” its writer, John Jervis, told Dezeen.

“My rationale for taking this on would, possibly, be along the lines that it was an opportunity to introduce some key design topics to the reader (and myself) in an accessible fashion, while also adding a bit of shade to indicate that there’s often more to design than immediately meets the eye, or confronts the Wikipedia reader.”

Here, Jervis selects five out of those 50 ideas, which he said “made me pause for a moment while writing, and change my intended script a little”.


V&A entrance London
The Victoria & Albert Museum in London. Photo by Timothy Soar

Design Museums

“Including design museums in the book was a little contrived, but these institutions have reflected – and influenced – contemporary ideas about design to an enormous degree.

“The founding of London’s Victoria & Albert Museum in 1851, skimming off some of the Great Exhibition’s profits to purchase ‘correct design’, led to an astonishing number of replicas around the world – Vienna, Buenos Aires, Prague, Sydney, Chicago, Oslo, and on and on.

“Most shared the goal of improving public taste and manufacturing outputs – Leipzig’s Museum für Kunstandwerk, for instance, announced its goal ‘to take action against the archaic ways and pathetic mediocrity of German industry’.

“Exploring the twists and turns over the ensuing years – the impact of industrial design and modernism, the influence of New York’s Museum of Modern Art, the fluctuating status of the curator and the exhibit, the arrival of ‘high design’ and (more recently) the ‘design is everything’ mindset – explains so much about how design reached its current lofty position, and definitely deserves a book of its own.”


Lego Braille Bricks
Lego braille bricks

Designing for play

“The role of an introductory text is, by and large, to be dispassionate, so this one largely retells the tale of modernist toys – colourful Bauhausian blocks and abstracted animals intended to nourish imagination and creativity with open-ended play, rather than mimick the adult world, or lock into existing stories.

“Yet the market for these perfectly crafted wooden objects has long been parents or godparents. Toys children actually play with, such as the phenomenally successful Star Wars toys mass-produced in Hong Kong from the 1970s, tend to come equipped with fully formed universes and enthralling narratives.

“The trajectory taken by the most famous modernist toy of all – Lego – proves the point. The company’s singular focus on its colourful universal blocks, introduced in the 1950s, lasted only a couple of decades. As savvy rivals flourished, it introduced ‘themes’ to compete – Space, Castle, Pirates and so on – each with specialised blocks and definitive instructions.

“Star Wars and Harry Potter followed, and eventually Lego’s own movie universe. The modernist dream of play had been replaced by boxes of joyful plastic, yet today we still venerate a bunch of dusty wooden ornaments. Sometimes design is confusing.”


Pink pussyhat
Pink pussyhat

Craftivism

“One of the most likeable ‘ideas’ in the book, with a history going back to the Suffragettes and beyond, Craftivism – a term coined by Betsy Greer in 2003 – has been called ‘protest for the introverted’. Utilising often denigrated skills such as embroidery and knitting, those who struggle with the intensity of civil disobedience and protest marches can contribute to social movements, making their voices heard.

“The most famous example, 2017’s Pussyhat Project, resulted in the emotional sight of a sea of pink in the US capital, as tens of thousands of marchers wore hats based on a downloadable pattern – some knitted by themselves, some by supporters across the country.

Donald Trump‘s political durability, despite this powerful protest against his inauguration and his language, suggests that in today’s fractured landscape turning craft into craftivism may not have the desired results. As with celebrity endorsements, the liberal elite tag can be highly destructive of even the best intentions.”


Interior of the SS Normandie
The SS Normandie. Photo via Wikimedia Commons

Art deco

“Most of the book’s entries come with a side panel – on an exemplary object, exhibition, individual, group, or even idea. For art deco, it’s the ocean liner. I hadn’t really considered them before. They don’t seem real, existing only as extravagant settings for period films, or gorgeously sleek silhouettes on airbrushed posters. But they were real, and extraordinary.

“Subsidised by the French government, the SS Normandie drew on leading artists, architects and designers for its hugely opulent art deco interiors. The glass-clad dining room by Pierre Patout, for instance, stretched even longer than its famous model at Versailles.

“Today, it seems inevitable that modernism would go on to define our world. In 1932, when the SS Normandie launched, and an ailing Bauhaus struggled to get a few chairs manufactured, this colossus expressed internationalism, travel, style, industry and modernity. It expressed the machine and the future. Perhaps, if things had taken (quite a few) different turns, we would be living in an art deco world.”


Bauhaus School
Photo courtesy of Shutterstock

Bauhaus School

The Bauhaus

“When writing this book, I hugely enjoyed revisiting design movements old and new, coming out of the experience with renewed admiration for their protagonists and works.

“But, most of all, it confronted me with the extraordinary achievement of the Bauhaus during its fifteen-year existence from 1919 to 1933 – just 15 years! And that’s to say nothing of its influence in education and industry as its teachers, students and disciples spread across the globe.

“The impact and importance of the Bauhaus is taken for granted, so much so that it has become almost invisible. It was salutary to be reminded of the unparalleled mixture of practical and intellectual experimentation, commitment, radicalism, productivity, rigour, freedom and joy that emerged from its workshops – elements evident in other movements, but never all together, and not captured in my text, much as I tried. So most of my advance was blown on a small black side table with tubular-steel legs.”

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Dezeen's top 10 houses of 2024

Dezeen's top 10 houses of 2024

To kick off our review of 2024, Dezeen editor Tom Ravenscroft picks the houses that drew readers’ attention this year, including a hillside home by Álvaro Siza and three residences that incorporate greenhouses.


Dezeen's top 10 houses of 2024
Photo by Richard Gaston

Caochan na Creige, Scotland, by Izat Arundell

One of the most popular houses featured on Dezeen this year was a small stone shelter in Scotland‘s Outer Hebrides by local practice Izat Arundell.

Named Caochan na Creige, which means “little quiet one by the rock”, the house has a simple, timber-frame structure and was enclosed in thick walls made from a local stone called Lewisian Gneiss.

According to the studio, the house was designed to “sit respectfully” within the dramatic landscape. Last week, it was named rural house of the year at Dezeen Awards 2024.

Find out more about Caochan na Creige ›


2024 best houses: Concrete house in Japan
Photo courtesy of Studio Cochi Architects

House in Nishizaki, Japan, by Studio Cochi Architects

Among the year’s most distinctive houses, House in Nishizaki is wrapped in thick concrete walls that create a buffer from the surrounding city and protect it from being overlooked by neighbouring buildings in the dense neighbourhood.

Designed by architecture practice Studio Cochi Architects, the monolithic house has windowless walls on all sides. It is lit by multiple skylights and a cavernous, full-height courtyard at the rear of the home that pulls daylight deep into the plan.

Find out more about House in Nishizaki ›


2024 top houses: Wooden House by Moke Architekten
Photo by Thijs Wolzak

Wooden House, the Netherlands, by Moke Architecten

Called Wooden House, this home in Muiden, the Netherlands, is topped with a greenhouse framed by a wooden pergola. Designed by local studio Moke Architecten with landscape practice LA4Sale, the house is located in a new residential area near lake IJmeer.

The rooftop greenhouse, along with a pair of terraces on either side of the home, were designed to give expansive views of the surrounding landscape while ensuring sufficient privacy.

Find out more about Wooden House ›


2024 top houses: Exterior of Peckham house by Surman Weston
Photo by Jim Stephenson

Peckham House, England, by Surman Weston

Another house that was a hit with the readers and was topped with a greenhouse was this blocky home animated by hit-and-miss brickwork in Peckham, London.

Simply named Peckham House, the self-build project was designed for and built by the directors of Surman Weston, Tom Surman and Percy Weston, and is currently occupied by Weston and his family.

“We wanted the house to be a reflection of our interests and personalities and feel like a characterful family home – full of life and not thematic or stylised,” Surman told Dezeen.

Find out more about Peckham House ›


2024 top houses: Sprout Ruben & Marjolein by Woonpioniers
Photo by Jonah Samyn

Sprout Ruben & Marjolein, the Netherlands, by Woonpioniers

Also incorporating a greenhouse, although alongside the home rather than on top, is Sprout Ruben & Marjolein in the Netherlands by Woonpioniers.

Created as a prototype for the studio’s Sprout concept, the house was constructed from partially prefabricated units and includes numerous bio-based materials, including a wooden frame structure and hemp insulation.

At one side of the house the timber frame extends to enclose a double-height, greenhouse-like space, which acts as a semi-outdoor living area.

Find out more about Sprout Ruben & Marjolein ›


Orange concrete home in Barcelona
Photo by Pedro Cardigo

Colien House, Spain, by Álvaro Siza

Designed by Portuguese architect Siza, Colien House was embedded into a hillside overlooking a beach in Barcelona.

Made from orange-tinted exposed concrete, the three-storey concrete home steps down the hill with an outdoor terrace that has wide views across the sea.

“The central purpose was to answer the programme proposal made by the client by including a careful embodiment of the landscape, complying with the specific local rules and the relation of each of the four floors’ elevation with the natural topography,” Siza told Dezeen.

Find out more about Colien House ›


Top houses of 2024
Photo by Cristóbal Palma

Casa Detif, Chiloé, Chile, by Guillermo Acuña Arquitectos Asociados

Another distinctive coastal home that captured readers’ attention was this cantilevered house wrapped in a red timber lattice and situated on a forested, cliffside site in Chile.

Named Casa Detif, the home was informed by a spinning thaumatrope toy, which has a bird on one side of a rotating panel and a cage on the other. According to the studio, the layears created by the forest, the red lattice, a walkway around the house, and then the glazing were designed to create “increasing levels of intimacy”.

Find out more about Casa Detif ›


2024 top houses: Casa 1627 by H Arquitectes
Photo by Adrià Goula

Casa 1627, Spain, by H Arquitectes

Set within the ruins of a farmhouse near the medieval town of Pals in Spain, this home was designed by local studio H Arquitectes. The studio restored the existing walls and added pale stone and concrete elements that echoed the scale of the historic fabric.

“The two stone facades that have remained almost intact, to the north and to the east, are consolidated and rehabilitated, respecting their values and new openings are added,” said H Arquitectes.

Find out more about Casa 1627 ›


Fire Island Pines house by BoND
Photo by Chris Mottalini

Fire Island Pines, USA, by BoND

Architecture studio BoND renovated this mid-century modern home on Fire Island near New York to bring “back the simplicity” of the house, which was originally purchased from the American retailer Sear’s catalogue.

“Our aim was to de-complicate the interior and bring back the simplicity of the original design, while also blurring the boundaries of the rigid modernist floor plan,” said the studio.

Find out more about Fire Island Pines ›


Melnourne house with curved roof at dusk
Photo by Tom Ross

Northcote House, Melbourne, Australia, by LLDS Architects

Built on the narrow site of a former car park, which measured 4.6 metres by 22 metres, this linear home is defined by its curved timber roof.

According to LLDS Architects, the project was designed to showcase how narrow urban plots can be developed into compact houses. It too was recognised at Dezeen Awards 2024, winning urban house of the year.

Find out more about Northcote House ›

The post Dezeen’s top 10 houses of 2024 appeared first on Dezeen.

Six architecture and design events in December from Dezeen Events Guide

Photo of Orkney island

Difficult Sites: Architecture Against the Odds and Business of Design Week are among the architecture and design events featured in Dezeen Events Guide this month.

Other events taking place in December include Miami art week, Taiwan Design Week and A Fragile Correspondence in Dundee, Scotland.

Photo of RIBA's Difficult Sites: Architecture Against the Odds exhibition
The exhibition presents projects by Carmody Groarke, Grimshaw Architects and Norman Foster. Photo by Agnese Sanvito. Above photo courtesy of Aequo Gallery

Difficult Sites: Architecture Against the Odds
11 October 2024 to 31 May 2025, UK

Difficult Sites: Architecture Against the Odds is an exhibition by the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA), showcasing models, photography, drawings and plans of projects created under challenging conditions.

The exhibition spotlights projects by Carmody Groarke, Grimshaw Architects, KnoxBhavan, Neave Brown, Norman Foster and Tonkin Liu, built between the 1990s and present day.

Each building was designed and constructed under problematic circumstances, including the terrains, shape of the site and conditions of the remodel.

The exhibition is located at RIBA’s headquarters in London.

Photo of Orkney island
A Fragile Correspondence is on display at V&A Dundee. Photo is by Simon Forsythe

A Fragile Correspondence
22 November 2024 to 25 May 2025, UK

A Fragile Correspondence is an exhibition originally created as Scotland‘s submission for the 18th edition of the Venice Architecture Biennale in 2023, and is now on display at V&A Dundee.

The exhibition responds to the biennale’s theme Laboratory of the Future, exploring the relationship between architecture and landscape, finding ways to construct in connection to the planet, rather than using its resources.

Graphic for Business of Design Week 2024
More than 50 speakers are hosting talks during the conference. Graphic courtesy of Business of Design Week

Business of Design Week
2 to 7 December, Hong Kong

More than 40 talks are taking place during the 2024 edition of Business of Design Weeks, which is located at the Hong Kong Convention and Exhibition Centre.

France has been selected as the conference’s partner nation, resulting in collaboration in both Business of Design Week and the Paris-based trade show Maison&Objet 2025, which returns in January next year.

Over 50 speakers are participating in the summit, hosting keynote speeches and panel discussions that explore challenges in the design industry.

Cartoon-like graphic representing Miami art week
Dezeen has launched its guide to Miami art week 2024. Illustration is by Justyna Green

Miami art week
2 to 8 December, USA

Annual festival Miami art week returns in 2024, with international galleries, artists and brands hosting exhibitions, fairs, markets, open showrooms and product launches throughout the week.

The festival’s largest events include Design Miami, Alcova Miami and Art Basel Miami Beach.

Dezeen has launched its annual guide to Miami art week, this year featuring a map to help navigate the festival.

Graphic for Taiwan Design Week 2024
The second edition of Taiwan Design Week takes place in 2024. Graphic courtesy of Taiwan Design Week

Taiwan Design Week
7 to 15 December, Taiwan

Taiwan Design Week hosts its second edition this year, focusing on the use of artificial intelligence (AI) in the industry through the theme The Gateway.

The nine-day event takes place across Taipei, with an awards programme, talks, exhibitions and networking events running throughout the duration.

About Dezeen Events Guide

Dezeen Events Guide is our guide to the best architecture and design events taking place across the world each year. The guide is updated weekly and includes virtual events, conferences, trade fairs, major exhibitions and design weeks.

Inclusion in the guide is free for basic listings, with events selected at Dezeen’s discretion. Organisers can get standard, enhanced or featured listings for their events, including images, additional text and links, by paying a modest fee.

In addition, events can ensure inclusion by partnering with Dezeen. For more details on inclusion in Dezeen Events Guide and media partnerships with Dezeen, email eventsguide@dezeen.com.

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Stone rug by Arturel among 11 new products on Dezeen Showroom

Stone rug by Arturel

Dezeen Showroom: a rug woven from New Zealand wool that features a blocky pattern informed by Stonehenge in the UK is among 11 new products featured on Dezeen Showroom.

Stone rug by Arturel

Stone rug by Arturel

Danish design brand Arturel looked to the famous British prehistoric landmark Stonehenge to inform the boxy, rectilinear pattern of its woollen Stone rug.

It is available in various primary colours and neutral tones, each providing a background colour for off-white shapes reminiscent of the ancient structure’s components.

The rug was recently featured on Dezeen Showroom alongside a wooden sideboard with a rhythmic frontage featuring vertical batons and a cabinet lined with dramatically backlit granite stone.

Read on to see more of the latest products:


Ceramic flush-mount ceiling lights by Naaya Studio

Ceramic flush-mount ceiling lights by Naaya Studio

Natural clays are the primary material used for the lights in Indian lighting company Naaya Studio‘s catalogue.

Ceramic flush-mount ceiling lights share the rest of the brand’s smooth surfaces, but are mounted close to the ceiling to ensure their usefulness in spaces with low ceilings or otherwise limited spatial capacities.

Find out more about Ceramic flush-mount ceiling lights ›


Antao mixer taps by KaschKasch for Villeroy & Boch

Antao mixer taps by KaschKasch for Villeroy & Boch

German brand Villeroy & Boch worked with design studio KaschKasch on a range of mixer taps for bathroom use characterised by elegant, tapered lines.

Antao mixer taps come in various styles, all of which are made from durable components that are made in Europe.

Find out more about Antao ›


Container sideboard by E-ggs for Miniforms

Container sideboard by E-ggs for Miniforms

Italian furniture brand Miniforms worked with design studio E-ggs on a sideboard with a distinctively fluted frontage.

The Container sideboard comes in solid block colourways as well as natural wooden finishes, all of which have ribbed doors to the front.

Find out more about Container ›


Infinity showers by Villeroy & Boch

Infinity showers by Villeroy & Boch

Villeroy & Boch’s Infinity showers aim to instil a luxurious, spa-like feel in domestic bathrooms by facilitating a range of spray options.

They come in matt black or chrome and comprise a control panel combined with handheld and overhead showers.

Find out more about Infinity ›


Wall lights and sconces by Naaya

Wall lights and sconces by Naaya Studio

Naaya studio’s catalogue also includes wall-mounted sconce lighting, which share the natural clay materiality of its other products.

These lights come in diverse shapes, from round and biomorphic shapes to a characterful rounded rectangle fixture with a slash in the front of it.

Find out more about wall lights and sconces ›


Conum taps by Villeroy & Boch

Conum taps by Villeroy & Boch

Tapered shapes define Villeroy & Boch’s Conum taps, which come in metallic and matte black finishes.

The tap comes in a choice of 13 models, including wall-mounted and counter top variations.

Find out more about Conum ›


Alden laptop table by Union Design for KFI Studios

Alden laptop table by Union Design for KFI Studios

Union Design has created a compact table for KFI Studios that comprises an oval base and matching tabletop, connected by an upright with a cut-out handle.

The Alden laptop table‘s C-shaped design allows it to fit neatly around breakout seating, facilitating informal meetings and solo work.

Find out more about Alden ›


Penedo cabinet by Greenapple

Penedo cabinet by Greenapple

Knotted oak, brass and densely-veined Patagonia granite combine in this display cabinet by furniture brand Greenapple.

The Penedo cabinet is set apart by its backlighting, which illuminates the stone in a striking way.

Find out more about Penedo ›


Floor and table lamps by Naaya Studio

Floor and table lamps by Naaya Studio

Three shapes of standing lamps and two table lamp styles are offered by Naaya Studio.

Its floor and table lamps are also made from clay, allowing them to be mixed and matched with its pendant and wall lights to create cohesive lighting design schemes across interiors.

Find out more about floor and table lamps ›


Skopos Studio fabrics by Skopos Fabrics

Skopos Studio fabrics by Skopos Fabrics

British materials brand Skopos Fabrics has compiled its best past and present patterns into a single colletion.

Skopos Studio fabrics comprise a wide array of textures, colours and motifs, all of which can be combined with a range of practical and tactile finishes.

Find out more about Skopos Studio ›

Dezeen Showroom

Dezeen Showroom offers an affordable space for brands to launch new products and showcase their designers and projects to Dezeen’s huge global audience. For more details email showroom@dezeen.com.

Dezeen Showroom is an example of partnership content on Dezeen. Find out more about partnership content here.

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Two Hundred Tons deconstructs steel tubes to create Unroll furniture collection

Unroll furniture collection by Two Hundred Tons

Czech design brand Two Hundred Tons has developed a furniture collection made from standard steel tubes that are laser-cut and unfolded to create lightweight structural components.

The Unroll collection comprises a shelving unit, coffee tables and coat hooks, all produced by designers Adam and Monika Štok using deconstructed steel tubes.

The objects are made by cutting slots along the length of the pipes, which allows the metal to be bent into alternative shapes whilst retaining its structural integrity.

Designers of Unroll furniture collection by Two Hundred Tons
Two Hundred Tons has created the Unroll collection using laser-cut steel tubes

“We wanted to test just how many pieces we could create with the least amount of material,” the designers explained. “One tube, 120 millimetres in diameter, produces a 350 millimetre-wide panel that we then use for the entire side of a shelving unit.”

The Unroll collection is a departure from the previous objects produced by Two Hundred Tons, which comprise steel tubes that have been compressed in places using 200 tonnes of hydraulic pressure.

The couple’s first experiments with laser profiling technology utilised offcuts from a pool table that Monika created during her studies at the Academy of Arts, Architecture and Design in Prague.

Close-up of Unroll furniture collection by Two Hundred Tons
The laser-cut steel tubes are unfolded to create a wave-like corrugated surface

The production of Unroll uses rotary lasers that are able to rotate and cut through metal profiles simultaneously. This allows for precise cuts so the metal can subsequently be folded into the desired shape.

The accuracy of the cutting process and the way the parts align precisely once they are pressed into position ensures no waste is produced during the process.

Each of the side panels required for the shelving system was made by cutting a single tube lengthwise and unfolding it to create a sheet with a wave-like corrugated surface.

“It was incredible to see how a tube could transform into such a strong, flat panel,” said the designers, who used similar techniques to create the coat racks and coffee tables.

The wall-mounted coat racks are made by cutting and bending shorter lengths of pipe, while the legs for the coffee tables are each constructed by unfolding half of a 30-centimetre tube.

Display of Unroll furniture collection by Two Hundred Tons
The metal is finished with a powder lacquer to ensure durability

Sustainability was a key concern when developing the products, which require just one operation on a single machine to generate their flattened forms. The process produces no waste and the pieces can be flat-packed to ensure efficient transportation.

The metal is finished with a durable powder lacquer to ensure long-term resistance to rust and wear. This simple process combined with the use of standard metal profiles contributes to the affordability of the products.

Adam and Monika Štok founded their Prague-based studio in 2020 with the aim of developing high-quality, original products that utilise experimental technologies.

The couple specialises in creating metal furniture using processes that explore the material’s unique properties. The products combine technological processes with hand craftsmanship and finishing to enhance their functionality and longevity.

Launch of Unroll furniture collection by Two Hundred Tons
The collection was launched during Designblok

“What attracts us to metal are its fantastic, often overlooked qualities,” the designers told Dezeen. “It’s durable, recyclable, and therefore sustainable. Additionally, if you make a wrong cut, it can be seamlessly welded or repaired, which is a quality many materials lack.”

“Combining durability with high-quality craftsmanship, we can create unique products designed to last generations,” they added. “We are committed to making our products fulfil their function for as long as possible, whether it’s a chair or a ping-pong table.”

The Unroll collection launched during the Designblok festival held in Prague from 2-6 October 2024. The collection was named Best Product Launched by a Designer at the event’s awards ceremony.

Other recent furniture designs that utilise metal include a solid aluminium bench with seating plates that move on a plane of steel bearing balls and a cone-shaped steel stool held up by pointed legs.

The photography is by Ondrej Holub.

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From Wildlife to Tactical Use: The Night Storm X1 Offers Ultimate 4K Night-Vision up to 1200 Meters

Most of us think of night as a time to wind down, but for the natural world, it’s when things truly come alive. Owls take flight, foxes skulk through forests, and the stars stretch endlessly across an inky sky. Yet for all its magic, the night keeps its secrets hidden in the shadows, leaving us to imagine what’s out there—unless we’re equipped to see it for ourselves.

The Night Storm X1 night vision binoculars transform this guessing game into a vivid reality, revealing the night in stunning detail. Its industry-first 1200-meter range, paired with 850nm infrared sensitivity, reveals what the naked eye cannot, giving you the unique superpower of 4K, crystal clear night-sight as far as roughly 0.7 miles… That’s longer than the Golden Gate Bridge and higher than the Burj Khalifa. Whether you’re spotting wildlife, navigating the darkest trails, or even performing a recon mission or security detail, these goggles turn the cloak of darkness into a stage, with the world performing just for you.

Designer: DVX Night Vision

Click Here to Buy Now: $139 $299 (54% off). Hurry, only 3/1023 left! Raised over $349,000.

Clarity at this level is no accident. The military-grade Sony Starvis 2 CMOS sensor sits at the heart of the X1, delivering visuals with precision and depth. Even in the dimmest settings, this sensor captures stunningly sharp images. Whether focusing on intricate natural patterns or expansive moonlit landscapes, the X1 consistently exceeds expectations, making every frame feel like a window into a different world.

Details Captured by Night Storm X1

Observing Mouflon in Total Darkness

Capturing motion or stillness is a matter of choice. The X1’s 4K video recording offers ultra-definition at a resolution of 9600×5400 pixels, ideal for creating cinematic visuals or collecting precise observational data. Unlike other night vision binoculars that achieve 4K quality through image processing, the Night Storm X1 shoots in true 4K, capturing raw, unaltered footage for the most authentic and detailed visuals possible.

Night Storm X1 vs Other Night Vision

Meanwhile, its 52-megapixel still photography capability ensures that even the smallest details—like the texture of fur or the veins in a leaf—are preserved with exceptional clarity. Four infrared sensitivity levels allow you to record in any degree of darkness, whether under the faintest glow of twilight or the pitch-black of a starless night.

That doesn’t limit the X1 to strictly night-time use. It can be used during the day too, to film, observe, and view subjects from afar. That 1200-meter range comes in super handy here, making the X1 perfect for observing wildlife or even security work. The goggles capture in immaculate color during the day as well as at night, unless switching to the IR-enabled mode, which gives you black-and-white vision.

The X1’s award-winning design ditches eyepieces for a close-to-eye viewfinder that provides an accurate representation of what the device sees. The screen shows you crisp detail, allowing you to observe over long sessions without getting tired. A control panel of buttons on the top allows your fingers to intuitively navigate and operate the X1, cycling through features, toggling modes, and recording footage. Meanwhile, the base of the goggles sports a threaded mount for tripods or stands, giving your binoculars stability and reducing jitter during observation or recording.

Media stored on the X1 can either be accessed through a MicroSD card fitted into the X1’s memory card slot, or directly over Wi-Fi and Night Storm’s companion smartphone app. This means there’s less time spent shifting between devices and swapping memory cards and more time recording and reviewing footage. The app also doubles as a remote viewfinder, allowing you to place the binoculars strategically while you record from a safe distance – a game-changer for wildlife observation.

On the inside, a 5000mAh battery ensures 18 hours of uninterrupted use, more than enough for a full night of exploration. When you’re ready to recharge, USB-C fast charging minimizes downtime, bringing the device back to 80% capacity in just 45 minutes. Meanwhile, everything’s packed within a rugged, resilient, IP65 enclosure, which means your X1 can easily shrug off bad weather, whether it’s a rainstorm or a dust storm.

The DVX Night Storm X1 proudly holds both the prestigious Red Dot Award (an international symbol of design excellence since 1955) and the Muse Gold Award – honors that recognize its exceptional design and innovation. With tech specs to die for (and with global shipping), the X1 is perfect for anyone who’s a friend of the night, whether it’s for tactical use, game hunting, security, camping, or even nighttime photography. With a very affordable discounted price of $139 (on discount for a limited time only), it’s perfect for gifting yourself too, if you have vigilante ambitions!

Click Here to Buy Now: $139 $299 (54% off). Hurry, only 3/1023 left! Raised over $349,000.

The post From Wildlife to Tactical Use: The Night Storm X1 Offers Ultimate 4K Night-Vision up to 1200 Meters first appeared on Yanko Design.

Step into the Gundam universe with CASETiFY’s collection of accessories for your Apple gadgets

CASETiFY has announced the Gundam-themed collection of gadget accessories just in time for Black Friday. The collaboration between the brand and Mobile Suit Gundam celebrates the hit anime mecha franchise from the late 1970s.

The timing for the collection could not have been better as the holiday season is approaching and interested fans can sign up for the waitlist on the brand’s Co-Lab website starting today. CASETiFY’s Gundam Collection will go on sale from December 9, and presumably sell faster than you can imagine. The collection will be offered in a limited edition run, so you better keep your calendars marked.

Designer: CASETiFY

This durable and aesthetically pleasing collection is centered around the two legendary machines of the Japanese sci-fi anime series – Amuro Ray’s RX-78-2 Gundam piloted by Amuro Ray and Char Aznable’s MS-06S Char’s Zaku II. So, fans will be able to choose from products representing the two factions at war in the epic saga – Earth Federation and Principality of Zeon. It makes logical sense to have hard-shell phone cases, wireless chargers, power banks, grip stands and protective covers for MacBooks and iPads themed on these two suits as they’ve carried the anime’s legacy forward with a consistent level of engagement. The range of accessories possible with these suits is another logical reason for the choice.

All these military-grade protection accessories let you showcase your love for the anime. The showstopper ones are the robot head-shaped AirPods Pro case that resembles the RX-78-2 Gundam, and the smaller RX-78-2 Gundam Hard Shell Case. The case designs themed on the Red Comet and MS-06S Char’s Zaku II are also impressive. Of course, you can go for the whole collection for your Apple ecosystem if you are deep-rooted in the Gundam anime universe!

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Sleek, Stylish, and Smart: The M1 Watch Is a Collector’s Dream

Swiss watches are famed for their precision and intricate mastery. Watches made in Switzerland are considered the gold standard given their sheer commitment to the craft of precise horology, but a designer and timepiece enthusiast is now reinventing the wheel… or rather, the watch. Meet the M1 Timepiece, the brainchild of Zach Raven’s design outfit, RVNDSGN (pronounced Raven-Design) – a watch that looks like a standard wristwatch from afar, but upon closer inspection, it’s nothing like the average wrist-worn timepiece.

The M1 is a strange little objet d’art, with a design that’s simultaneously minimal as well as curiosity-invoking. The watch ditches the standard hour/minute/second hands for something a little more dramatic, relying on moving color markers underneath a printed graphic with multiple holes/open-slots. Almost working like a zoetrope would, the watch tells the time by filling in gaps in the cutout with the marker – but in an unexpected way. It makes you rethink how you read the time, while still allowing you to cherish the simplicity of the entire experience. Meanwhile, the M1 tells you the date too, doing so in a way that’s very refreshing, especially in this era of uninspired smartwatches.

Designer: Zach Raven

Click Here to Buy Now: $949 $1999 ($1050 off). Hurry, only 4/50 left!

The M1 follows the archetype of the radial watch, but doesn’t tell time the way you expect it would. The watch is divided into multiple segments, for hours, minutes, and days. The inner segment reveals the hours, while the middlemost counts the minutes. The date gets highlighted on the last segment of the watch, sort of like a date window, but instead of being at a fixed position, it moves around the watch’s periphery.

Time moves in a linear fashion on the M1, not in a cyclical hourly fashion like on most watches. To tell the time, you read the hour first, then count the minute line from thereon after. Instead of dividing the hour into 60 minutes, the M1 divides it into four 15-minute chunks. Read the hour, then read the minute chunk after the hour. For example, if the clock reads 7:00, you’re looking at the first minute line, at 7:15, you’re looking at the second minute line, the third at 7:30. and the fourth at 7:45. It’s a bit of a learning curve, but takes barely any time once you get the hang of it. In doing so, the minute hand moves at the same pace as the hour hand, creating a watch that’s a pleasure to look at and read.

It feels a lot like reading measurements on a scale or ruler. You look at the unit, then the sub-unit. That’s how you read 7.5 inches, by seeing the halfway mark after the 7th inch. Pretty different from your standard watch, I assure you. Meanwhile, the outer segment lets you see the date, giving you a complete view of the date and time at a single glance… maybe not down to the accurate minute or second, but then again, this watch wasn’t built to highlight Swiss precision, it was to reinvent watches through a modern lens.

Speaking of modern lenses, the entire watch sits under an aggressively domed edge-to-edge sapphire crystal. The watch’s face is printed on the inner surface of the domed crystal, creating the effect of time melting off the side of the watch rather than being a flat disc. The center is left absolutely bare, unlike your standard watch, which has the hands branching out from the very middle. The result is a watch that’s effortlessly minimal, yet has enough detail to grab your eye and keep your curiosity piqued.

The watch comes with a gorgeous 316L stainless steel body with a flushed crown. You see the watch ‘dial’ and the domed crystal on the front – flip the watch over and you get a glance at the timepiece’s Sellita SW200-1 automatic movement underneath a small sapphire exhibition window. The watch is water resistant up to 5 ATM, although the numerals/lines don’t glow in the dark the way you’d expect from a waterproof dive watch.

The 44mm lugless body has an almost UFO-like quality to it, with both leather or steel straps that branch out from inside the watch itself. The watch’s body comes in a combination of black, white, or grey colorways, with a limited edition black with volt green accents for a very sporty look. The different color schemes have their own individual appeal, blending in or standing out depending on your style. The leather and steel straps come in a variety of colors too, bringing a nice contrast to the watch.

The M1 comes from the mind of Zach Raven (might be one of the all-time coolest names I’ve heard after Tony Hawk), whose fascination for watches dated all the way back to design school. The M1 is a celebration of some of Zach’s favorite iconoclastic watch brands, like Urwerk, MB&F, and Ikepod. With five prestigious design awards (including the iconic Red Dot Award), the M1 enters the same hallowed territory as the watches that inspired it, albeit at a fraction of the cost, but with the same stellar Swiss-made quality.

Click Here to Buy Now: $949 $1999 ($1050 off). Hurry, only 4/50 left!

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Yamaha Y/AI concept designed for Netflix Sci-Fi anime series imagines bikes in Tokyo city 100 years from now

For good reason, Katsuhiro Otomo’s Akira has set the precedence for sci-fi bike concepts and prototypes. Now Yamaha has collaborated with Netflix to create a limited anime series, Tokyo Override, to take the limelight away. Yes, a Yamaha concept bike is going to be the center stage of this series set in a world 100 years from now.

Yamaha’s design team had a challenge set up for them to create a racing motorbike as the protagonist, and something that would be cooler than Akira. The design team envisioned what a dystopian world would be like in Tokyo a century from now. It all had to weave around the character’s personalities and the world order as presumed at that time.

Designer: Yamaha

Thus came into existence the Y/AI bike which is an AI-assisted ride that embodies the brand’s philosophy of Jin-Ki- Kanno; that is the oneness of the rider with the machine. Something here reminds me of the movie Avatar and the bond between the natives and their mystical animals. The machine has a strong influence with the AI elements to make the Y/AI concept supersmart. The Design team was tasked with pleasing motorbike and anime fans with a cohesive design. The Aerodynamics of the ride are optimized for high-speed racing, and so are the suspension systems that can take on the stress of long jumps.

The color of the bike has a layered effect to it which creates a sense of dynamism when it swerves around the turns or navigates the city streets of Tokyo in a future time. The heads-up display of the bike is positioned on the sides in a V-shape rather than in the front. Holographic displays are going to be common by that time, so the bike will keep the peripheral vision clear of any blind spots, showing all the vital telemetric data in the field of view. The wheels also seem to be made from some advanced tech that is see-through and doesn’t have any traces of being made out of rubber.

The bike looks insane in the official press release photos and is truly futuristic. We can’t wait to see the full-scale concept model of the Y/AI bike at the Moto Expo 2024 in Bangkok, Thailand slated to take place from 29 November to December 10.

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AEG China announces the “Challenge the Expected” design competition powered by Yanko Design

Founded in 1887, AEG has long been a pioneer in design and innovation, deeply influencing modern appliances with its commitment to form, function, and quality. Now focusing on the Chinese market, AEG aligns its legacy with the rich cultural tapestry of China, drawing inspiration from the Bauhaus movement’s enduring impact on design philosophy. With its principles rooted in harmony, simplicity, and practicality, AEG invites a new generation of Chinese creatives to redefine these values through its products.

Presenting AEG Challenge The Expected by Yanko Design – an online challenge that invites creatives to visualize the company’s legacy (and its future) through the medium of an advert. The stars of this advert will be AEG’s flagship appliances – from the award-winning innovative scratch-resistant technology in their SaphirMatt induction hob, to the pure lines and finish of the Matt Black multi-function oven that honors the company’s Bauhaus heritage.

The AEG Challenge The Expected competition offers an exciting platform for participants in China to showcase their creative flair. Designers are encouraged to craft compelling adverts that blend AEG’s Visual Brand Identity with the sleek sophistication of its product range. Whether through digital banners or bold posters, this challenge invites individuals to push the boundaries of advertising by featuring at least one of AEG’s state-of-the-art appliances (or even all three).

The challenge, hosted across 5 design institutes in China, invites the students to create an advert for the brand, honoring its heritage as well as celebrating its innovative appliances. The adverts should adhere to AEG’s visual brand identity (VBI), and can exist in the form of a poster, a banner, or a video. Starting on November 29th, 2024, and going all the way till January 3rd, 2025, the contest will be judged by an esteemed jury panel of 7 design luminaries led by Jie Sun (Associate Dean of the Shanghai International Design Innovation Academy, Tongji University), Tian Xie (VP, Design Branch of China Building Decoration Association & Founder of Yizhi Architectural Design Firm), Mingjie Yang (Founder of YANG Design), Wei Ding (Director of the Art and Design Research Institute, East China University of Science and Technology & Vice President of Shanghai Industrial Design Association & Founder of Muma Design), Haibo Zhu (Architect and Interior Designer & Founder of A+S Zhu Haibo Architectural Design Firm & Member of the Royal Australian Institute of Architects), Xueqing Zhang (Associate Professor at the College of Design and Innovation, Tongji University), and Qianman Wu (Senior Partner, Sina Zhongju Culture Co.,Ltd.). Winners will receive AEG and Electrolux appliances valued at a total of RMB 35,800 (approx $5000)!

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