Yanko Design - Latest Posts | |
- Measure This
- No Scratch Watch
- Cooking Made Efficient
- Musical Deja Vu All Over Again
- Warming Tea with Sticks
- Be Your Own Lighter
- Cuttin’ Up Y-Waves
- Where Is My Seat? Oh, Now I See It
Posted: 06 May 2010 09:04 AM PDT The Shell is a sleek digital scale sexified with good modern looks. Lift off the Stainless Steel measuring bowl to reveal a large LCD display and simple controls. Rest the upturned bowl on the unit and it's ready to weigh both liquids and dry foods. A convenient 'add and weigh' function also allows multiple ingredients to be weighed in the same bowl during recipe preparation and an auto power-off feature maximizes battery life. Love it! Doesn’t look like medical or industrial equipment. So perfect for all my crazy crafting needs, like changing base metals into gold. Hehehe, hahaha, AHAHAHAHA! Designer: Morph Design for Joseph Joseph |
Posted: 06 May 2010 04:29 AM PDT The Swatch concept watch by designer Allan George is basically aimed at the youth who like to wear trendy fashion, but maybe rough with it. Although latest scratch-proof glass materials are used in Omega, Rolex and ilk, but not all brands use this for their entire collection. And a watch with scratches on its glass looks so lame! Allan's concept simple does away with the glass face and replaces it with a plastic-rubber finish. The colored hands peep out, behind a transparent rim, giving the watch a trendy and easy look! Designer: Allan George |
Posted: 06 May 2010 02:22 AM PDT The Catalyst is a all-in-one cooking solution designed for the Indian market consisting of a hood, microwave oven, fryer, and cook top. The induction cooking plated slide apart to reveal a fryer for all those delicious Indian foods. All the vapors are captured by the hood above which also happens to be the oven. Quite the efficient design no? I LOVE me some Indian food too but find the fragrant spices to be so strong, my eyes water. That hood better be damn near a vacuum of air. Designer: Vasundhara Parakh |
Musical Deja Vu All Over Again Posted: 06 May 2010 01:56 AM PDT Way back in history, humans used to stretch magnetized strips of a petroleum derivative and electronically infuse them with audio recordings. The original audio recording playback machine was at least the length of a football field. Until someone noticed that you could spool the “tapes” of recordings into easily potable “compact cassettes.” And it was good. In the 90s, after two failed attempts, audio recordings were being stored in Magical Playbacker 3 boxes or “MP3 Players”. And it was better. But if you are the type that loves to wear day-glo colors and drink wine coolers, then you just might love this latest hybrid format that is sure to take you Back to the Future. From London’s dadahack, comes the latest in retro chic audio playback devices. The “TAP3″ is essentially an digital audio player in the form factor of the classic compact cassette. Yes yes, we know, you’ve seen this before. Ah, but wait! There is more. This handy little device also allows playback in your father’s old cassette player, boom box or any other tape player you find at garage sales. With audio stored on a 2GB SD card and transferring done via mini USB, these limited edition players are sure to make you feel like a virgin all over again. Designer: Dadahack Studio |
Posted: 06 May 2010 12:15 AM PDT Or ON sticks I should say, as that’s what you’re about to do once you’ve got your hand grabbers on this fabulous invention right here. This is the “Teapot Warmer” designed by Christoph Matthias specifically for you tea lovers and tea enthusiasts out there looking for a new way to heat tea. It is like a campfire, it is said, and reminds one of the warming glow and loving environment of the outdoors, roughing it without roughing it. Truly you will feel the loving tenderness of heating your tea in this unique way. Open up your pile of wooden planks and place the fire inside. Then on top the tea goes plop, and you shall have a fancy sip! Made of strips of oiled European walnut wood and a spirally cut stainless steel tealight holder. Designer: Christoph Matthias [ Buy it Here, Teapot Warmer is available for $79.00 @ YD Store ] Teapot Warmer is available for $79.00 @ YD Store |
Posted: 06 May 2010 12:04 AM PDT Are you one of the enlightened few that can play music with an instrument well? If you are, or if you think you are, thank you! I love when people release fabulously constructed strings of notes into the atmosphere for all to hear. Really really! How about you who can stand behind a photo camera and take truly well-crafted pictures? How would you like to employ one of the oft-forgotten most important weapons in the music-players arsenal? The music stand. How would you like to have a light upon it? This project right here is called “Lichtnote” or light note- music stand for light composition. It being as light and easy to transport as your average music stand upon which only bits of paper are meant to stand, you’d never expect it to do more duty. Buy hay! Here’s a piece of equipment, one that’s usually very heavy, the light stand, that you can now whisk lightly! And it’s got a light fitment that filters and directs the light in such a way that you can’t help but desire to use it in every shot. Designer: Tobias Juretzek for DUA |
Posted: 06 May 2010 12:02 AM PDT No math involved. Just cruzin on a boat. Y stands for yacht. And this yacht goes by the name “CUT.” It’s not only made for rippin up waves, it’s green. So green they even say it’s green in the description! That’s green. It’s electric, made from moso bamboo plywood, and has not one, but TWO hulls under its loving deck. Measuring in at 20 meters long, this yacht has room for 8 full-grown humans. Humans who’ve got a taste for solar panels! The front features rotating solar panels that can be used as a sun deck. Under the hood you’ve got two high-powered electric engines. And that wood? It’s moso bamboo, one of the fastest growing natural resources in the world. Designer Christian Peetz aims to shoot this everloving stealthy-looking wood machine out on the waves in the name of renewable resources everywhere! Designer: Christian Peetz |
Where Is My Seat? Oh, Now I See It Posted: 06 May 2010 12:00 AM PDT These days we can choose our own seats over the internet for airplanes and train travel, thus we know exactly where our seat is going to be. At least for that moment we do know. However in a practical scenario, many people don't check-in online or our memories fail us on the date of travel. Where Is My Seat? is a concept where a pictograph of your seat location is printed onto the boarding pass. All I can say that it's more helpful than just printing seat 34A, Economy Class. Designer: Yong-jin Kim |
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