Clever – one of our favorite podcasts – is celebrating 200 episodes of sharing creative visionaries who shape our world + culture. We spoke with host Amy Devers to learn more about what's to come!
This hand assembled Bluetooth portable turntable is so small, you can carry it everywhere in a backpack with room to spare.
Email is Dead leads us through the history of email, from its beginnings in the 1970s to what the experience might look like in 2070, prompting a conversation about the future of communication.
The Danish soundsmiths have integrated some of the brand's most premier features and added them into the Beolab line's smallest model yet.
The ultra-short throw 4K picture, Dolby Atmos sound, and Bauhaus styling makes the $9,000 Leica Cine 1 an eye-catching home theater design.
Stockholm-based Aarke's stainless steel electric kettle is a one-button affair engineered to bring water to a boil with a satisfying silence.
The Coperni CD-PLAYER Swipe Bag is a fully functional USB-C powered compact disc player that puts a literal spin on the Y2K resurgence.
BMW’s retro-futuristic sports sedan concept showcases what the German automaker's future line of EVs may soon resemble.
Like the convenience but not the single serving waste of pod-based coffee makers? Bruvi has developed their pods to deteriorate significantly faster with plastic eating enzymes integrated into each of their pods.
Say goodbye to roughing it and hello to eco-luxury camping with the MINK-E, the world's first fully electric teardrop camper!
Tree.ONE by ecoLogicstudio imagines a future when cities integrate carbon-neutralizing urban 3D-printed trees to cleanse the air.
Vibia's Plusminus bespoke lighting system features a fabric belt + various light fittings to lend individual style through contemporary design + technology.
Patricia Moore joins the Vignelli Center for Design Studies Design Conversation series to reflect on her pioneering journey in design breaking barriers as one of the few women.
Korean studio BOUD purposely backed themselves into a corner to conceptualize objects of utility shaped to snugly fit into angled areas.
Instead of waiting for someone else to design the perfect keyboard to improve his workflow, 3D artist and motion designer Ben Fryc designed his own featuring two dials and a small 100 x 310 pixel customizable LCD screen.