Cool Hunting c/o Quarterly Co.

Our “store” with the new subscription service puts physical gifts in your mail box

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You might have already read about how impressed we were with Quarterly Co., a new subscription service offering gifts hand-selected by a unique roster of influential contributors. Well, now it’s our turn—opening today at 12 p.m. PST, the Cool Hunting c/o Quarterly Co. “store” will be live for 48 hours, during which time users may buy subscriptions to receive CH-curated packages—called “issues”—every three months.

Subscriptions start at $25 per quarter for a selection handpicked by Cool Hunting co-founders Josh Rubin and Evan Orensten. Items included in each issue will reflect their interest in design based on clever combinations of form and function. “Think Transformers, but with a utilitarian angle” says Rubin. Subscribe within the next 48 hours to receive Cool Hunting c/o Quarterly Co. mailings.


Curisma

A new sale site for community-curated tech products
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The excitement of curated flash sale sites combines with community sourcing on Curisma, a new site for tech junkies and online shoppers alike. With a name that’s a mash-up of the words curiosity, curated and charisma, the MIT start-up applies the same principles to its business model. Twice a week, the website features an item chosen by Curisma community members. Carefully chosen to match users’ tastes, products span virtual keyboards to fingerprint-protected wallets. Curisma members hand-select the products, which means that you can potentially choose your own sale item. Several Cool Hunting picks have gone up for sale on Curisma in recent days and weeks, including Barnacle and Rev–>Table.

With a sharp eye for new and under-the-radar products, the site helps users stay ahead of the tech game, as it tracks activity with the Curisma-meter, which traces products added to the site. While Curisma remains in beta, it definitely shows promise and is an example of clever ingenuity in a digital setting. For more proof, check out the video above.


Quarterly Co.

Subscription service marries the novelty of receiving mail with the power of online communities

by Miranda Ward

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Founded by Zach Frechette, Cofounder and Editor of Good magazine, Quarterly Co. is a new subscription service delivering a batch of gifts handpicked by a cast of creative contributors. Like the four-year-old “object based publication” The Thing Quarterly, the upstart means to delight in an era of constant communication but physical detachment.

“Quarterly wants to recapture the romance and impact of a well-crafted package,” explains Frechette in a blog post, but its goal is also to “tie it into existing online communities in an organic way.” Quarterly subscribers will receive a new “issue” every three months from the contributor to which they subscribed. Contents might include anything from notebooks to cold remedies—the point is for each object to have a story, a reason or some other way of enhancing the relationship between contributor and subscriber.

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Current contributors include Mike Monteiro, Cofounder of Mule Design, who will send items that “contain an uplifting story about someone else’s pain” and Swissmiss Studio Founder Tina Roth Eisenberg chose items that she herself would display in her minimalist workspace. Geoff Manaugh, the brains behind BldgBlog, looked to help recipients explore “the built—and unbuilt—environment,” while The Atlantic’s Senior Editor Alexis Madrigal wants to help subscribers understand technology. Bobby Solomon, Editor of The Fox is Black, will share things that inspire him—bringing his site in to the real world.

Quarterly is in public beta and adding new contributors regularly. All subscriptions on the site are currently sold out, but new contributors and site features are announced toward the end of each week, “at which time Quarterly will be open for business for a period of roughly 48 hours.”

Subscriptions start at $25 per quarter and are now open to international subscribers for an additional shipping charge of $10-15. To find out when subscriptions are open and get other news, follow Quarterly on Twitter, Facebook or Tumblr.