A great poster with (almost) every muscle car from 1960 to 1974 by german Amilcar-Art.
Via materialicious

nifty things selected by STUDIO L5
A great poster with (almost) every muscle car from 1960 to 1974 by german Amilcar-Art.
Via materialicious

Great work. Stop motion skateboard movie from Tilles Singer. “A ton of digital photos, a ton of real life magazines, an hour of recording music.” Found on Kraftfuttermischwerk
Skateboardanimation from Tilles Singer on Vimeo.
If you yearn for the 80’s and all the synthesizer effects that were in popular music at the time Korg has a new analog synthesizer called the monotron that is right up your alley. The synthesizer was unveiled at the Musikmesse show in Germany this week and is very small.
Via SlashGear – you can watch the video…
Vibrations can go a long way, especially for the transmission of sound through material. Now you can harness that power for a creative and useful purpose. The Yorozu Audio kit lets you use just about anything as a speaker! Starting with the included paper milk carton “speaker”, all you do is place the vibrating extension onto a surface with the included adhesive sheets, plug in your audio source, and have an instant audio speaker. Perfect for having portable audio when you need it.
Create instant speakers out of paper, posters, boxes, white boards, suitcases…you name it!
Found on Japan Trend Shop
A great poster with (almost) every muscle car from 1960 to 1974 by german Amilcar-Art.
Via materialicious
Milan designers Gabriele and Oscar Buratti have collaborated with bathroom brand Roca to create a combined toilet and wash basin, where waste water from the sink is used to fill the toilet cistern.
Via Dezeen
Called W+W, the design filters and stores waste water from the basin and uses it to fill the cistern of the toilet.
If the reservoir is empty, the toilet cistern can be filled from mains water.
San Francisco architect Stanley Saitowitz has completed a museum in Florida, USA, which is wrapped in a perforated metal skin and cantilevers out from its glazed base. Called Tampa Museum of Art, the building is divided into two volumes, each organised around a courtyard.
The first contains public areas of the museum and the other is for offices and curatorial facilities.
A cafe and bookstore are located on the ground floor overlooking the water.
Found on Dezeen
Modern dwellings for design-conscious birds designed by Paul Dax, Michelle Geiger and others…
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