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Liquid Death x Spotify Eternal Playlist Urn, because afterlife deserves good vibes

Spotify is undoubtedly one of the most used streaming audio services worldwide, with a library of over 100 million tracks, 7 million podcasts, and 500,000 audiobooks. Their upgrade to lossless audio will only edge the 751 million-user base further, as the battle with Apple Music, YouTube Music, and Tidal heats up.

Their estimated market share of 31 percent is not eroding anytime soon, so why not experiment with out-of-the-box product designs that attract more users? The Scandinavian music giant has collaborated with beverage company Liquid Death to create one of the most unique products you’ll see all year long. This is the Eternal Playlist Urn, a Bluetooth speaker shaped like an urn (no prizes for guessing). According to Spotify, this is the world’s first music streaming ceremonial jar that makes death “a lot less boring” and keeps hauntings at a minimum, as music tends to calm down the deceased, presumably!

Designer: Spotify and Liquid Death

The idea here is to create music vibes somewhere that has never been done before. A belief that the dearly departed souls should have the freedom to jive to their favorite tunes down 6 feet under. That too for eternity, as Spotify jokingly exclaimed. As most of us would believe, the keepsake pot houses the wireless speaker unit. That’s not the case, as the big urn doesn’t conceal the big speaker; it is a small driver unit in the lid of the urn. When you get this speaker urn, the first thing you do is create the Eternal Playlist on Spotify. There are a few questions that you need to answer, like “What’s your eternal vibe?” or “What’s your go-to ghost noise?”, and then the custom playlist is generated considering these replies and the listening history.

The playlist generating tool Spotify calls the Eternal Playlist is synced to the urn right away, and you can share the last rights with your friends and family. Of course, you can then play the music directly on your newly purchased urn speaker on the living room shelf. The urn, measuring 7 x 7 x 11 inches and weighing 2.4 pounds, is intended to be minimal in white color and respectful of other décor elements it sits beside. It has the Spotify and Liquid Death logos engraved upfront, which keeps the musical vibe apparent, if you don’t fancy urns in your peripheral vision.

While this speaker urn will not be the best thing to hold the ashes of your dear dead, the thing is definitely going to be a collector’s item. Only 150 will be available for purchase in the United States for a fat $495, so you’d better be on your toes to grab this one. For those who still prefer contemporary audio accessories, that amount of money can buy you a decent speaker system. I just hope this isn’t an early April Fool’s joke.

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A 400-Year-Old Japanese Candleholder, Upgraded Again

There’s something quietly satisfying about a design that doesn’t try to reinvent the wheel. Dai Furuwatari’s Pendulum Candleholder isn’t trying to be radical. It’s not minimalist for minimalism’s sake, and it doesn’t come loaded with a big brand story about disruption. It’s just a very thoughtful update to something that was already good, and that, to me, is the most interesting kind of design work there is.

The backstory matters here. The piece is rooted in a traditional Japanese portable candleholder called a teshoku. Back in the 1600s, the teshoku was a luxury item, the kind of thing you’d find in the homes of the wealthy or inside temple halls. Candles were expensive, and the ability to carry light from room to room was a privilege. At some point, an unknown craftsman solved a simple but obvious problem: the teshoku got a long, horizontal leg that doubled as a handle, making it easier to pick up and carry without getting too close to the flame. It was a small addition that changed the whole experience of using it.

Designer: Dai Furuwatari

By the 1800s, paraffin candles made the whole thing more affordable, and the teshoku eventually found its way into everyday life. The design stayed more or less the same for centuries, which says something, because designs that stick around that long usually earn it.

Furuwatari, a product designer who transitioned into ironwork, picked up the teshoku and asked what could still be better. His answer came in the form of two specific, considered improvements that feel less like features and more like realizations.

The first is that the long horizontal leg, that original carrying handle, now doubles as a hanging hook. It’s such an obvious extension of what was already there that you almost wonder why no one thought of it sooner. Being able to mount the candleholder on a wall opens up a completely different use case. Suddenly it’s not just portable, it’s also fixed lighting when you want it to be, which makes it far more versatile in how and where it can live.

The second improvement is a pivot mechanism built into the piece. This allows the candle mount to be held at different angles depending on how you’re carrying it, which is genuinely useful. Carrying a lit candle without wax dripping everywhere is its own small skill, and a pivot that lets you adjust the angle takes a lot of the anxiety out of it. The candle mount is also removable, which makes cleaning it much easier.

What I appreciate most about this piece is that both changes are extensions of the original logic of the teshoku. They don’t override the design or force it to become something it isn’t. They follow the same thinking that shaped the object centuries ago: what is this person actually doing with this thing, and how can we make that experience a little less complicated? That’s user experience design at its most sincere, and it shows up in objects just as much as in apps or interfaces.

The Pendulum Candleholder is made to order by Furuwatari’s iron products company, To-Tetsu, and retails for $158. Each piece is handmade by a craftsman, which means delivery can take one to two months depending on order status. Iron is the material, and it will develop rust over time, which can be maintained and even enriched with periodic applications of linseed oil or beeswax. That aging process is part of the appeal if you’re into objects that change with use.

Is it practical in 2026? Not in the way a smart lamp is practical. But there’s a different kind of value in objects that connect you to a longer timeline of human ingenuity. Lighting a candle and carrying it across a room is a small act that people have been doing for centuries. Furuwatari’s version just makes it a little more graceful, and a little more considered, which is more than enough.

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5 Best Gadgets Gen Z Uses to Touch Grass Instead of Doom-Scrolling

There’s a version of your day that doesn’t start with your phone face inches from your eyes. Gen Z is slowly remembering it exists. Doom-scrolling sounds like a boss level you keep losing. The fix isn’t a screen time limit you’ll override in two days or a wellness app that wants your data. It’s gadgets that give your hands something real to do, something that clicks, twists, and responds without asking for your attention span.

These five picks are not nostalgia for nostalgia’s sake. They are considered objects built around single purposes, each doing exactly one thing well and nothing else. A camera that shoots. A phone that calls. A tablet that writes. A clock that tells time. A CD player that plays music. In a world designed to keep you hooked, choosing a device that doesn’t compete for your attention is its own kind of resistance.

1. Camera (1)

Photography moved inside phones and got buried under notifications. Camera (1) imagines what it looks like when shooting becomes a thing you do with your hands again. Camera (1) is a concept design with a compact, metal body sized to slip into a pocket but solid enough to fill the hand. All the main controls live on one edge: a shutter, a circular mode dial with a glyph display, and a D-pad your thumb can reach without shifting your grip or touching a screen. The design draws from Nothing’s hardware-forward language, with circuit-like relief on the front panel, small red accents, and a bead-blasted metal shell that feels considered across every surface.

A curved light strip around the lens pulses for a self-timer, confirms focus, or signals that video is rolling. The engraved lens ring invites you to twist rather than pinch. Taking this camera to a dinner or a show means twisting to frame, feeling the click of the shutter, and glancing at the glyph to confirm your mode. That is it. The rear display stays out of the way, and so does every instinct to start scrolling.

What We Like

Physical controls replace every touchscreen interaction, keeping your attention on the moment in front of you.
The glyph dial and LED strip communicate everything the camera needs to say without waking a rear display.

What We Dislike

Camera (1) is a student concept and not currently in production, with no confirmed release date.
No direct sharing path to your phone means adjusting to reviewing images later on a separate device.

2. Portable CD Cover Player

Most listening devices treat album art as a thumbnail. The Portable CD Cover Player treats it as the whole point of sitting down to listen. Slide a CD into the front pocket, and the jacket art faces outward while the music plays through the built-in speaker. A rechargeable battery means you can carry it from room to room or out the door, and a wall-mount bracket option lets it hang like a small piece of art between sessions. It is a device designed to involve your eyes as much as your ears, and that one decision changes how the experience of listening actually feels from the first time you press play.

Streaming made music invisible. Open an app, hit shuffle, and album art scrolls past as a thumbnail nobody really looks at. The CD Cover Player reverses that entirely. The physical disc becomes a reason to engage with the full artwork, the liner notes, and the sequence of tracks someone arranged with intention. That kind of listening has more in common with reading a book than with background audio. It makes music feel like something worth sitting with, not just filling silence while you check your phone.

Click Here to Buy Now: $199.00

What We Like

Displaying the CD jacket while music plays turns listening into a visual ritual rather than ambient noise.
Functions as a portable speaker, a shelf object, and a wall-mounted display all at once.

What We Dislike

Built-in speaker quality will not satisfy anyone used to a dedicated Hi-Fi setup or a good pair of headphones.
Building a physical CD collection takes time and shelf space if your library currently lives inside a streaming app.

3. reMarkable Paper Pro

Writing moved onto phones and tablets and gradually stopped feeling like thinking. The reMarkable Paper Pro brings friction back to the process, and it turns out friction was doing most of the work all along. The reMarkable Paper Pro is an 11.8-inch writing tablet with a textured surface built to feel like paper under the pen. The Canvas Color display uses millions of color ink particles rather than a backlit panel, delivering depth and natural tones without glare or eye strain during long sessions. Responsiveness is near-instant, with a pen-to-ink distance of under one millimeter. An adjustable reading light means you can write comfortably in the dark without turning on a screen that floods the room with blue light at midnight.

Writing on the reMarkable Paper Pro does not feel like typing a text or filling in a form. The surface friction slows you down in a way that is genuinely worth something. Notes become more considered. Ideas take longer to arrive, which means they tend to stick around. Color adds another layer of possibility: use it to organize thoughts, mark priorities, or simply make a page feel like yours. Carrying it feels closer to carrying a notebook than carrying a device, and that distinction matters more than it sounds once you’ve spent a week with it.

What We Like

Canvas Color display delivers full color without a backlit panel, so long writing sessions never leave your eyes sore.
Paper-like surface friction makes every note feel deliberate, consistently producing better thinking than a keyboard does.

What We Dislike

Premium pricing is a real barrier to knowing whether a dedicated writing tablet fits your daily routine.
The 11.8-inch size does not slip into a jacket pocket, which changes when and where it realistically comes with you.

4. Light Phone 3

The Light Phone 3 is not a worse version of your phone. It is a different one, built around the idea that doing less on purpose is more valuable than doing everything by reflex. The Light Phone 3 is built by New York-based Light Phone and does far less than your current device on purpose. This third-generation minimalist phone restricts usage to calls and texts, with no access to social media, email, or internet browsing. The 3.92-inch OLED display runs in black and white, and a 50MP rear camera with a dedicated two-step hardware shutter button handles every moment worth capturing. A brightness scroll wheel on the right side replaces every on-screen slider you never actually enjoyed using.

Switching to a phone that cannot open Instagram does not mean going offline. It means being reachable for what matters and unreachable for everything else competing for your attention. The Light Phone 3 arrived five years after its predecessor, and that time shows in the hardware quality, the metal frame, and the more refined interface. Using it for a weekend resets something in how you relate to a screen. By Monday, returning to your smartphone feels like a choice rather than the only available setting.

What We Like

A 50MP camera with a dedicated two-step hardware shutter means you never lose moments worth keeping, even without social media to post them on.
Restricting the device to calls and texts removes ambient distraction without requiring willpower each time you pick it up.

What We Dislike

No maps, ride-share apps, or mobile browsers means planning in a way most people have quietly stopped doing.
The black-and-white display is intentional, but the adjustment period is real enough to factor in before committing.

5. Rolling World Clock

A clock that tells time by being rolled, with no screen, no charging port, and no app to pair it with, turns out to be one of the more quietly satisfying objects you can put on a desk in 2026. The Rolling World Clock is a 12-sided object that tells time by being rolled. Each face corresponds to a major timezone city: London, Paris, Cape Town, Moscow, Los Angeles, Karachi, Mexico City, New York, Shanghai, Tokyo, Sydney, and New Caledonia. Roll it to the city you need, and the single hand reads the correct local time. No charging, no syncing, no setup required. It handles one task and nothing else, and that simplicity is precisely the point of placing it on a desk at all.

Most people check the time on their phones and put the phone down thirty seconds later than they planned to. The Rolling World Clock short-circuits that loop completely. Available in black or white, it sits on a desk or shelf with the quiet presence of something that earns its place as both a functioning clock and a piece of considered design. The physical act of rolling it to a different city does something a world clock widget never could: it makes checking the time feel like a deliberate act rather than a gateway to something else.

Click Here to Buy Now: $49

What We Like

Twelve faces covering every major timezone make it genuinely useful for anyone with friends or collaborators spread across the world.
Works as well as a desk sculpture as it does as a functioning clock, earning its place in a room even when nobody is actively using it.

What We Dislike

The single hand and minimal face markings take a moment to read accurately if you’re used to relying on digital displays.
Twelve flat sides mean the clock can rock when bumped, so placement on a hard desk surface matters more than expected.

The Best Gadgets Don’t Ask Anything Back

None of these five objects needs you. They do not send notifications, hold streaks, refresh feeds, or run recommendation engines quietly in the background. That indifference is the point. Gadgets that do one thing well leave you with more room to decide what to do with the rest of your time, and that turns out to feel like a significant amount of room once you actually notice it.

Touching grass is not really about being outside. It is about choosing where your attention goes before something else makes that choice for you. A camera that makes you look up. A phone that stays quiet. A tablet that brings friction back to thinking. A clock you roll with your hands. A CD player that makes you sit with an album from beginning to end. All of it adds up to a different relationship with your own time, and that is worth more than any app that promises the same thing.

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The Furniture That Looks Like It’s About to Walk Away

There’s a particular kind of design that stops you mid-scroll and makes you think: wait, what exactly am I looking at? That’s exactly what happened when I first came across the Barefoot Collection by Jorge Suárez Kilzi. At first, you register dark, richly grained wood. Beautiful, but expected. Then your eyes drift downward to the legs, and something shifts. They’re not straight. They’re not tapered. They’re curved, splayed, mid-stride, like a large foot caught in the quiet moment between lifting and landing. It’s subtle enough to feel elegant. It’s strange enough to feel unforgettable. That, to me, is the sweet spot.

Jorge Suárez Kilzi, who signs his work under his mother’s Syrian surname as a personal tribute, is a Barcelona-based architect and designer whose story is inseparable from what he makes. Born in Venezuela to a Spanish father and Syrian mother, he spent his childhood in constant movement, crossing cultures and countries, learning early on that the objects you carry with you carry meaning far beyond their function. That nomadic upbringing, he has said, taught him to see life from more than one angle, and that perspective filters directly into the furniture he creates. He also spent time in Japan working with SANAA and architect Junya Ishigami, and you can feel that influence in how restrained and quietly deliberate his work is.

Designer: Jorge Suárez Kilzi

The Barefoot Collection grew out of a single idea: a coffee table designed to look like it was walking. The legs, built from solid wood and shaped to simulate the arc and flex of a bare foot mid-step, give the piece an uncanny sense of momentum. The top surface stays completely calm and rectilinear. That contrast is the whole point. Stillness above. Motion below. It’s a tension that shouldn’t work as well as it does, and yet here we are.

What I find genuinely compelling about this collection is that it resists the urge to explain itself too loudly. A lot of conceptual furniture falls into the trap of being more interesting to talk about than to actually live with. Barefoot doesn’t do that. You could sit a cup of coffee on it and forget it was ever supposed to mean something. Then a guest walks in, does a double-take, and suddenly you’re having a conversation about impermanence and what it means for a home to change over time. The piece earns that conversation by earning its place in the room first.

The collection has since expanded beyond the original coffee table to include a dining table and a bench, each carrying the same foot-like base into a different scale and context. The dining table version, in particular, has a presence that borders on sculptural. Placed beneath a colorful, painterly work, it holds its own without competing. The bench, spotted in one campaign image walking alongside a tree-lined street in what looks like Tokyo, has a lightness to it that almost reads as humor. Almost. The craft is too careful for it to be purely a joke, and Kilzi clearly intends both readings to coexist.

There’s also something worth noting about how the collection is built to adapt. The design can be reinterpreted across dimensions and formats to suit different interior projects, which is a practical flexibility that a lot of collectible furniture doesn’t bother offering. It acknowledges that real spaces have real constraints, and that a beautiful object with no room to negotiate isn’t as beautiful as it could be.

Kilzi has described his studio as one driven by the desire to create honest objects that coexist naturally with the body and space, not as decorative gestures but as presences that remain. The Barefoot Collection feels like the clearest expression of that to date. It doesn’t demand your attention. It just stays, quietly, on its four walking feet, reminding you that the room you’ve always lived in is still capable of surprising you. That’s a rare thing for a table to pull off.

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What Happens When a Bag’s Inside Becomes Its Outside

The first thing you notice about MAQL is how deliberately sculptural it looks. The handbag sits with an almost architectural presence, its curved body and rolled edges creating a form that feels more like a ceramic vessel than a typical leather accessory. That impression isn’t accidental. This is a bag designed to be looked at as much as it’s meant to be used.

Created through a collaboration between Tokyo-based design studio Nendo and leather artisans Bag Makers Tokyo, MAQL is constructed from a single laminated piece of leather with grain leather on one side and suede on the other. The entire structure emerges from a process of strategic folding and peeling, where the rim is turned back on itself to gradually reveal what becomes the exterior surface and handles. It’s a bit like watching origami in reverse, where the final form contains evidence of every fold that brought it into being.

Designers: Nendo and Bag Makers Tokyo

The name comes from makuru, meaning “to peel, to reveal” in Japanese, and that action is visible in every part of the bag’s construction. Where the leather rolls back, you see both textures at once: the smooth, structured grain leather meeting the softer suede underneath. The handles aren’t attached separately. They’re continuous with the body, formed by the same peeling motion that creates the bag’s opening. There are no hidden seams trying to disguise how this was made. The stitching is exposed where it needs to be, marking the transitions between surfaces.

What makes the design compelling is how it plays with the idea of inside versus outside. Traditionally, a bag’s interior is something you only see when you open it, a hidden space with different materials and construction than what’s visible to the world. MAQL eliminates that boundary. The suede that would typically be tucked away as lining becomes part of the exterior surface. The grain leather that forms the outer body curves inward to create the interior walls. You’re constantly seeing both sides at once, which changes how you relate to the object.

This isn’t just conceptual posturing. There’s a practical elegance to the construction. Because the bag is formed from a continuous piece of material rather than multiple panels stitched together, it has a structural integrity that feels substantial in your hands. The rounded bottom gives it stability when set down. The rolled edges create a soft, almost cushioned grip. And because both leather surfaces are visible, you’re touching different textures depending on how you hold it, smooth grain on one side, soft suede on the other.

Nendo, the studio founded by Oki Sato in 2002, has built its reputation on creating these kinds of quiet surprises, designs that reveal themselves through use rather than immediate visual impact. MAQL fits that approach perfectly. It’s minimalist without being stark, sculptural without being impractical.

The design also taps into something deeper in Japanese aesthetics, this long-standing appreciation for craftsmanship that doesn’t need to announce itself. Think of the way a kimono’s lining might be more elaborate than its exterior, seen only in glimpses, valued by those who know to look. MAQL takes that same philosophy but inverts it, bringing hidden construction to the surface where it becomes part of the design language.

The bag comes in a muted palette, mostly earth tones and soft neutrals that let the form and texture do the talking. There’s a larger version that works as a proper handbag and smaller iterations that function almost like pouches. Each size maintains the same folded construction, the same interplay between grain and suede, the same sense of a form that emerged organically from the material itself rather than being imposed upon it.

In a market saturated with bags that compete on logos and brand recognition, MAQL stands out by offering something different: visible craftsmanship, thoughtful construction, and a form that asks you to pay attention to how things are made. It’s not trying to signal anything beyond its own careful execution. For people who care about design, that’s more than enough.

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Forget Smart Pens. This Titanium Fidget Pen Writes, Clicks, Spins, and Delights.

Your hands are restless by design. Even when you’re sitting still and supposedly focused, they want to press something, rotate something, click something into place. This tendency has been pathologized and productized in equal measure, first by disapproving teachers, then by the fidget spinner industry. But before any of that, there was just the pen. The clicking ballpoint. The cap you’d snap and unsnap. The barrel you’d roll between your knuckles during a long phone call. Pens have always had a secondary life as objects of physical preoccupation, and most people who’ve ever worked at a desk know exactly what that feels like.

SPINNX takes that secondary life and makes it the whole point. Built by WEIWIN out of aerospace-grade titanium and held together by magnets, the pen separates into three modules that each deliver a distinct tactile sensation. Snap them together and there’s a crisp magnetic click. Press the spring-loaded ball in the middle and it gives you another one. Spin the dice top and it rotates through a series of rhythmic mechanical detents. The pen tip deploys with a twist rather than a click, because even the functional part of the experience has been thought through. Three years of development, ten design revisions, and one very specific goal: a pen that writes and delights.

Designer: WEIWIN

Click Here to Buy Now: $59 $102 (42% off). Hurry, only 168/200! Raised over $46,000.

The three-part system allows you to reconfigure the pen’s entire sensory output. You can flip the middle module to put the spring-loaded ball on top for a different kind of thumb-actuated click. Each combination changes the weight distribution and the way the pen feels in motion, which creates a surprisingly deep rabbit hole of tactile experiences. The team claims over fifty different ways to spin and fidget with the thing, and that number feels plausible once you start playing with it. The design provides a whole palette of physical feedback, letting you find the specific sensation your brain needs at that moment to stay locked in.

The snap of two modules connecting sounds like a well-tuned mechanical keyboard switch, something the designers obsessed over to ensure the end-product has a strong audio-visual-tactile experience. WEIWIN engineered the acoustic and tactile response of each magnetic separation and reconnection as an intentional product feature, treating the sound with the same design attention as the geometry… sort of like how luxury car designers obsess over how the doors sound when they close. Most clicking pens produce their click as a mechanical consequence, with nobody sitting in a room deciding whether it needs to be crisper or more controlled. With SPINNX, somebody clearly did sit in that room, and the result is a snap that feels sound-designed for sheer satisfaction.

The dice module functions like a high-quality EDC spinner, rotating with a series of crisp, audible clicks that feel like running your thumb over the crown of a well-made watch. Its ceramic bearing ensures the rotation is smooth and completely unaffected by the precision-engineered magnets holding the pen together. Choosing a non-metallic bearing is the kind of small, deliberate decision that separates a durable tool from a simple toy. Beyond the satisfying spin, it serves as a simple decision-making device. When you’re stuck between two choices, a quick roll gives you an answer, which is a surprisingly effective way to get past minor mental roadblocks.

Choosing aerospace-grade titanium for the body does more than just add a premium feel. The material provides a specific heft and durability that aluminum or steel can’t quite match, giving the pen a reassuring presence in the hand without being overly heavy. This balance is critical for an object designed for constant manipulation. The pen tip itself deploys with a smooth twist mechanism, which feels more deliberate and controlled than a standard clicker. WEIWIN also engineered its own proprietary “Super Refill,” which they claim has up to six times the writing life of a standard refill. Sure, it won’t work with standard refills, but standard refills only last 1/6th as long as the one that comes with the SPINNX.

There’s an optional Maglev Pen Stand that completes the package for anyone who spends most of their day at a desk. The stand uses magnetic levitation to balance the pen perfectly upright, letting it float and glide with a gentle touch. It turns the pen into a kinetic sculpture when you’re not using it, a piece of interactive art that settles back to its center with precision. This stand isn’t just for storage; it’s an extension of the pen’s core philosophy. It’s another way to engage your hands and mind with a simple, satisfying physical interaction, turning a moment of pause into something quietly delightful.

The standard SPINNX comes in four finishes. The base model is a silver-colored aluminum for $59, while the premium versions are offered in natural titanium, matte black titanium, and a striking brass-colored titanium for $69. For those who want the complete experience, a $99 Professional Kit bundles the pen with a leather pouch and other accessories. There are also several add-ons available separately, including extra refills, a calfskin leather pouch for protection, a spiral module to swap with the dice cap for a different visual flow, and the magnetic fidget sticks for more desk-based play. The Maglev Pen Stand is also available as a standalone $35 purchase. All SPINNX variants ship worldwide starting April 2026.

Click Here to Buy Now: $59 $102 (42% off). Hurry, only 168/200! Raised over $46,000.

The post Forget Smart Pens. This Titanium Fidget Pen Writes, Clicks, Spins, and Delights. first appeared on Yanko Design.

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This $98,900 Tiny House Is How Australians Are Ditching Rent and Finally Owning Something

The housing crisis is not a headline anymore; it is a lived reality. Soaring property prices, relentless rent increases, and the quiet exhaustion of never quite owning anything have pushed a whole generation to question what a home genuinely needs to be. The answer, for many, is less. Less debt, less space, less compromise on quality of life. The Artista by Australian tiny house builder Tiny Tect is exactly that kind of answer — compact in footprint, but completely uncompromising in how it lives.

Sitting at 7 metres long, 2.4 metres wide, and 4.25 metres tall, the Artista is built on a certified triple-axle trailer with a 4.5-tonne weight capacity and full road registration capability. On paper, those numbers sound modest. In person, the experience is entirely different. The layout is deliberate from the moment you walk in; a storage-integrated staircase sits at the entrance, turning what is usually dead space into something useful before you have even settled in.

Designer: Tiny Tect Tiny Houses

The loft bedroom is where the Artista earns its name. Positioned centrally rather than pushed to one end, it opens up views from both sides of the home — a move that feels more architectural than practical, and intentionally so. The space fits a double bed and a walk-in wardrobe, and for those who need the ground floor to work harder, a flexible lower-level room can serve as a second sleeping area, a home office, or a guest space. For a home this size, sleeping up to four adults is not a workaround…it is part of the plan.

The kitchen does not shrink away from the challenge either. A four-burner cooktop, full oven, sink, and fridge-freezer sit together in a layout that functions like a proper kitchen should. Besides it, the living area holds a sofa and a compact work desk — a quiet acknowledgment that home now means office too, for a lot of people. The ensuite bathroom and a built-in planter box round out the interior with the kind of details that make a small space feel considered rather than crammed.

What the Artista ultimately solves is bigger than square footage. It hands people back financial breathing room. Starting from $98,900 and available from roughly $243 per week in repayments, it sits well below the cost of traditional homeownership in most Australian cities. Optional solar panels, battery storage, and water tanks take it further toward genuine off-grid independence — lowering ongoing costs and loosening the ties to utility bills and landlords alike. The Artista is not a consolation prize for people who cannot afford a real home. It is a deliberate choice for people who have decided that freedom, quality, and intention matter more than floor area. Small in size, yes, but not in any way that actually counts.

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This Resin Chair Has a Real iMac, Magic Keyboard, and Mouse Sealed Inside It… Because ‘Art’

There’s a common saying that beauty hurts. Pretty shoes that blister your heels by noon. A dress cut so perfectly that breathing becomes a optional. The needle of a tattoo tracing something meaningful into your skin. Or even a surgical knife, for the dream of a better face or physique. People have always been willing to trade comfort for something that looks or feels transcendent, and the logic has always made a strange kind of sense. What I never anticipated was applying that same sentiment to sitting on an iMac.

Dip1, a chair by Korean designer Lim Wootek, takes that idea literally. The backrest is a real iMac monitor, its slim aluminum frame pressed against your spine as you settle in. It sounds wrong. It feels wrong. And somehow, that wrongness is exactly what makes it so addictive to look at. The keyboard, mouse, and storage bins are encased beneath the seat in a glowing block of cyan resin, visible through the haze like memories you recognize but can no longer touch. I guarantee you, you’ll grimace at the thought of sitting on the chair, as you lean back against what might be the most expensive and engineered backrest known to mankind.

Designer: Lim Wootek

The resin block is where the craft gets interesting. Lim sealed a full Apple Magic Keyboard, a Magic Mouse, and a set of colored desktop storage bins inside the body of the chair. The bins are the kind that live on studio shelves holding batteries, USB cables, and every small object that never quite found a permanent home. Through the semi-translucent resin, their shapes read clearly near the seat surface and dissolve into soft blur toward the base. That gradient from legible to ghosted is the whole thesis of the piece made physical, and it required real material control to pull off at this scale.

The iMac is a 27-inch model, the flat-chinned aluminum design that Apple ran from 2012 through 2022, with the display sitting at 68.6cm diagonally and the full unit standing around 65cm tall. These are not small numbers, and the chair has the presence to match. The monitor backrest positions the screen at exactly the height you would have once made eye contact with it, which means the sitter has literally turned their back on it. The screen now faces outward, away from the person in the chair, and that single spatial decision carries more conceptual weight than most designers manage in an entire project.

Standard seat height on the resin block sits at around 45cm, which is ergonomically normal, and that normality is part of what makes the piece so disorienting. You could actually sit in this. People do sit in this, as the campaign photos show. A figure in all black, hooded, leaning back against the aluminum monitor stand with the posture of someone who has fully accepted the situation. The chair functions, and that functionality makes the statement sharper rather than softer.

Lim Wootek’s studio works across industrial design, digital design, mold design, and CMF, and Dip1 has all four disciplines firing together. The resin body has soft radii on the seat edges and a gently tapered base that stops it from reading as a plain block. The cyan is specific, close to shallow tropical water, which is why the submerged objects feel genuinely drowned rather than just encased. Getting optical clarity, structural load capacity, and color depth to coexist in a resin cast this large is a serious material engineering problem, and the fact that it reads as effortless is the tell of someone who actually knows what they’re doing.

The post This Resin Chair Has a Real iMac, Magic Keyboard, and Mouse Sealed Inside It… Because ‘Art’ first appeared on Yanko Design.

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The Boop Chair Looks Inflated But It’s Completely Solid

There’s something about a really good design idea that makes you wonder why nobody thought of it sooner. The Boop Chair by Bored Eye Design is one of those things. It’s hot pink, it looks like it was inflated rather than built, and the entire concept was born at a child’s birthday party. Of all the places great furniture design could originate, that might be my favorite origin story yet.

The designer describes Boop as a chair “inspired by the balloons at my daughter’s birthday party, exploring ideas of inflation and softness through a solid design form.” That one sentence is doing a lot of heavy lifting, because what it really describes is a fundamental design paradox: something that looks soft but is rigid, something that evokes weightlessness but is undeniably structural. That contradiction is exactly where the Boop Chair earns its place in a conversation about serious design.

Designer: Bored Eye Design

Looking at the photos, the first thing that hits you is the color. That specific shade of hot pink, somewhere between magenta and neon, has a glossy finish that reads almost wet. It’s the kind of color that demands attention and refuses to apologize for it. But once you get past the color, the form starts to do its own talking. The legs are thick, rounded cylinders with perfectly domed ends, like oversized capsule pills or, yes, tied-off latex balloons. The seat and backrest are thin, curved planes that flow into each other, creating that familiar seat-to-back transition in a way that looks draped rather than engineered. The contrast between the chunky, inflated legs and the almost paper-thin seat is where this chair gets genuinely interesting.

What Bored Eye Design is tapping into here is a visual language that our brains have spent decades associating with joy, celebration, and the unself-conscious fun of childhood. Balloons don’t carry weight, at least not literally. They float, they bounce, they squeak under your fingers. Translating that feeling into something you can actually sit on takes a certain kind of design confidence. The chair doesn’t just reference balloons aesthetically. It commits to the bit entirely, and because of that commitment, it actually works.

It also fits into a broader cultural moment that design has been circling for a few years now. The puffy, inflated aesthetic has been showing up everywhere from high fashion to tech product design, a pushback against the years of ultra-minimal, razor-edged everything. There’s something genuinely appealing about rounded forms right now, forms that feel approachable and almost tactile even before you touch them. Boop lands squarely in that conversation, but with a personal story underneath it that gives the piece more grounding than a trend exercise would.

The disassembled shot is worth mentioning too. Seeing the chair broken down into its parts, the curved body laid flat and the capsule legs scattered around it alongside small metal pins, makes the whole thing feel even more considered. Those legs could be balloon animals. That seat could be a folded ribbon. It’s playful but precise, which is a genuinely hard combination to pull off.

I’ll admit my first reaction was something close to delight, which isn’t always my first reaction to furniture. Usually there’s more evaluation, more asking whether I’d actually want it in my home. With Boop, I found myself skipping past that entirely and just enjoying the thing. Whether or not it’s comfortable (and given the rigid seat, that’s a reasonable question), it functions as a piece of design that communicates something specific and does it with total conviction. Not every chair needs to be practical. Sometimes a chair just needs to make you feel something.

That this started because someone was watching balloons at a kid’s birthday party and let that moment become a full design concept is the part that sticks with me most. The best creative ideas often come from paying attention to ordinary moments. Bored Eye Design clearly paid attention.

The post The Boop Chair Looks Inflated But It’s Completely Solid first appeared on Yanko Design.

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Functional LEGO Sewing Machine actually moves a needle up and down when cranked

There’s nothing from stopping this LEGO machine from actually sewing clothes, apart from the fact that attaching a real needle to it would make it an ‘illegal’ build. Illegal builds in LEGO are when you use bricks in unauthorized ways (wedging them, gluing them, using them upside down), or using non-brick parts in a LEGO build. Sadly, this rather outdated law is the only thing preventing BrickStability’s Sewing Machine from letting you stitch clothes, kerchiefs, and quilts together.

What I love about LEGO MOCs (My Own Creations) is that some people try to achieve aesthetic perfection, while others try to actually make LEGO builds functional. There’s a LEGO lawnmower that cuts grass, a LEGO Typewriter that types, and even a functional LEGO Turing Machine that ‘computes’. Add this sewing machine to that list because it isn’t just a visual masterpiece, it’s complicated, intricate, and to a great extent, functional.

Designer: BrickStability

It’s true that nobody can agree who first invented the ‘sewing machine’. Elias Howe is credited with the version we popularly use today, although Thomas Saint, Barthelemy Thimonnier, and Isaac Singer are all also attributed as key figures in helping create some version of the modern-day sewing machine. This particular version, the lockstitch sewing machine, was patented in 1846 by Elias Howe, and while the LEGO MOC isn’t exactly Howe’s patented design, it’s an antique machine that takes that lockstitch technology and packages it into a form factor a lot of us recognize even today.

There are multiple YouTube shorts and GIFs on how these machines actually ‘stitch’ clothes, but the simple explanation is that a rotating element (powered by a crank on the side or a foot-pedal at the bottom) moves a special needle up and down, while a spool feeds continuous thread directly to the needle. As you stitch, the machine creates that rhythmic noise associated with tailoring shops, while the spool gradually rotates too, feeding thread into the ever-hungry machine.

BrickStability’s version is gorgeously accurate. Not only is it functional (the crank rotates and the needle element moves up and down), it also comes with LEGO spools of colored thread, along with a tailoring scissor made from LEGO bricks too. The machine is black, just like almost every machine in that time (funnily enough I only remember the motorized ones as being white in color), and comes with some ornate gold brickwork, reminiscent of the detailing seen on vintage machines.

This MOC is different from the usual ones we feature on the website. It wasn’t created for LEGO Ideas the way we know it, but rather, was designed as a submission for a challenge hosted by LEGO on its Ideas website. Needless to say, it took home the grand prize, and one can only hope LEGO actually turns this build into a real retail box set!

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