





Not so long ago we’ve featured 25 Creative and Original Mugs. This time we want to show you another interesting collection of salt and pepper sets. Kitchen in every home has such sets and this post will help to find the proper one. These creative, innovatie and definetely very stylish salt-and-pepper sets will expand your imagination.
We know that most new parents don't have the time to get hung up on aesthetics; they want easy-to-assemble, inexpensive and safe products for their new prize. But take a look at the Baby Cot Pod, and try to tell us that this little spacecraft isn't the sickest cradle you've ever seen.
Aras Kazar Designs studio has recently unveiled a 67 metre superyacht design concept entitled Blue Dream II. Featuring all-round large glass windows, this design has been fashioned in such a way that it provides a 360° view of the ocean. The large curved windows also double as sliding doors that open out to the foredeck allowing the option for either a covered or open-air experience.
Hydrogen vehicles are the future and provide one of the ways to stop using fossil fuels. This therefore cuts down on greenhouse gases that produce global warming. These 20 futuristic hydrogen vehicle concept designs are some the coolest concept designs that we’d like to see rolling down the highway soon.

Emmy Award-Winning show in it's 5th season!
Everybody has a great idea that could change the way we work, the way we live or the way we play. Sometimes these ideas never make it past a sketch on a napkin. From thousands of hopefuls screened through online casting calls on www.EdisonNation.com, ten ideas were selected for the fourth season of Everyday Edisons. Tune in as we take you from idea to store shelf and show how extraordinary ideas can come from ordinary people.
http://www.everydayedisons.com/
Posted by Melissa LeMieux






It's nice to see even mainstream news organizations paying attention to the chronically underexposed design departments of major corporations. These days guys like Ralph Gilles and of course, Jonathan Ive get a lot more ink than we'd have seen a decade ago. Most recently Reuters got inside the design department at Samsung Electronics to talk shop with Lee Minhyouk, Samsung Mobile's design veep.
While the meaty article looks at the expected areas of business differences between Samsung and chief rival Apple (the former manufactures their own components, the latter must outsource, etc.) and examines the mutual sue-fest the companies have recently engaged in, what most caught our eye was this analogy about product design:
To become a truly innovative company, Samsung needs to explore the art, as well as the science, of what it does, critics say."Samsung is like a fantastic soap maker," said Christian Lindholm, chief innovation officer of service design consultancy Fjord based in Finland. "Their products get you clean, lathers well. However, they do not know how to make perfumes, an industry where margins are significantly higher. Perfume is an experience. Perfume is meant to seduce, make you attractive and feel good. You love your perfume, but you like your soap."
One point hinted at in the article seems to be that Samsung is viewing design as a science that can be learned, but that they have not managed to harness capital-A Art. That's a thorny problem that every design university Dean has grappled with, and Apple's mastery of this issue creates as much profit as it does envy.
That doesn't mean Samsung doesn't understand the problem; it just means they're not there yet. But at least one fun fact in the article shows they are trying to get there: Samsung's designers get sent on inspirational trips to places like Iguazu Falls in Brazil and the Incan city of Cuzco in Peru! Now that's a sweet gig, and for the sake of overworked ID'ers everywhere, I hope that becomes recognized as a recipe for design success!
Posted by Rachel Briggs













"The focal point of the laser beam is guided through the resin by movable mirrors and leaves behind a polymerized line of solid polymer, just a few hundred nanometers wide. This high resolution enables the creation of intricately structured sculptures as tiny as a grain of sand."


