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Curioblog: featuring unusual gifts, gadgets and curiosities

Ways of Life

From miniscule studios to urban nomadism

Everything fits on a pallet: follow the snail’s example
Everything fits on a pallet: follow the snail’s example
  Another option for those who can’t afford mortgage payments is to move into a studio built for the Three Little Pigs: those impossible apartments of laughable dimensions. Although public authorities have promoted this awful way of life, it’s designers with their ingenious proposals that have given a little dignity back to urbanites forced to turn into ants.

Two students from the Köln International School of Design have developed the revolutionary concept Casulo.

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 on 10 Nov 2008 by Natalia Latina in Art, design and architecture

Flat Light Bulbs

How is it possible no designer had ever thought of this before?

The box is flat as well
The box is flat as well
  In 1879 Edison contributed to the development of incandescent lighting by producing a practical and viable light bulb, that shone for 48 hours straight. Practical and viable? Maybe for its time it was, but a contrivance made of round glass that overheats in less than 5 minutes isn’t exactly practical. Plus the light bulb is a fairly inefficient device: 90% of the light it produces is transformed into heat and only the remaining 10% is used to give light.

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 on 10 Nov 2008 by Marta Reig in Gadgets, inventions and prototypes

Haruki Nakamura’s Paper Engineering

This Japanese artist creates complex geometrical shapes out of folded paper

Paper heart
Paper heart
  Haruki Nakamura is an expert in Origami, a Japanese art that consists of creating figures by folding pieces of paper. What’s interesting about Origami is that no glue or staples are used in order to make these figures; they are created using nothing but folds. The folds must be hidden so that the final product will be perfectly seamless, which makes this technique a veritable work of engineering.

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 on 7 Nov 2008 by Marta Reig in Japanese Culture

Unusual Plants

A tin can cactus, a flower growing out of an eggshell or a plant that moves around the house and looks for the spot that gets the most light. Which do you need?

A petunia growing out of an egg?
A petunia growing out of an egg?
  A while back we told you about EasyBloom, a flower shaped device that analyzes your ecosystem and gives you advice on what sort of plants you should grow in your home or garden. But if you’re still not ready to don stout gloves and sturdy boots and grab the hedge trimmer, that is, if you’re utterly incompetent as a gardener , we recommend you read the descriptions of these curious plants.

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 on 6 Nov 2008 by Marta Reig in Gadgets, inventions and prototypes

Lego Diary: Set It Up on Your Desk

Three giant colorful cubes indicate the day, month and year. A new invention that uses simple Lego “technology”


  Who would’ve thought that such a normal everyday action as insignificant as fitting two things together would give birth to one of the most successful and celebrated inventions in history: Lego toys.

They were invented in Denmark in 1934, in fact the word Lego is derived from the Danish “Led Godt”, which means, “Play well”. A carpenter named Ole Kira came up with the idea and began producing miniature versions of his products in order to promote his business.

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 on 5 Nov 2008 by Marta Reig in Unusual gifts

Space Invaders: The Pixilated Martians’ Urban Invasion

A Frenchman creates Martian shaped mosaics and sticks them onto street furniture in cities all over the world

A pixelated martian
A pixelated martian
  There’s a new addition to that peculiar urban art that includes graffiti, stickers, stencils and trompe l’oeil Martian mosaics created by a French urban artist. His tiles are scattered all over the world. You can see them in big cities such as Hong Kong, New York or London, and also in some smaller cities such as Bilbao, Lyon and Cologne.

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 on 5 Nov 2008 by Marta Reig in Art, design and architecture

Infinite Toys: Pointless Trinkets are All the Rage in Japan

These toys reproduce moments from everyday life such as peeling a banana or opening a vacuum-packed container

Mugen Edamame: Soybean Pinching Keychain
Mugen Edamame: Soybean Pinching Keychain
  Opening a hermetically sealed glass bottle is an everyday action from which many people derive a certain amount of pleasure, although they don’t really know why. Is it that “pop” sound the stopper makes when it opens and lets the air out? We all know the simple act of opening a bottle is itself insignificant, but, if you find a hidden and incomprehensible pleasure in it, why not repeat it over and over again anytime and anywhere? Infinite Toys reproduce those absurd moments you so enjoy with the sole aim of entertaining and pleasing you.

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 on 3 Nov 2008 by Marta Reig in Japanese Culture

Poladroid, Rediscover the Charm of Instant Snapshots

When you download this free software you’ll be able to use a Polaroid camera again

A camera like this one will generate your Polaroid snapshots
A camera like this one will generate your Polaroid snapshots
  Some months ago the Polaroid company announced a sad bit of news: they would to stop producing film for their instant cameras, thus abandoning the technology that made them famous. Polaroid has already shut down factories in the US, Mexico and Holland and the company estimates that by 2009 all existing material will have been used up.

The instant cameras’ fans and followers did not take this news very well; many had thought this cult item would survive the digital era… and, in a certain sense, it has.

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 on 31 Oct 2008 by Marta Reig in News and curiosities

Maurizio Lamponi’s Vintage Style Lamps

This Italian artist recovers antique objects to add shape and color to his lamps

Vespa Lamp, part of the Fantastic Lights series
Vespa Lamp, part of the Fantastic Lights series
  Maurizio Lamponi is an artist from Milan who makes lamps and sculptures by recycling everyday refuse and objects. The resulting pieces are implausible, extravagant and very original.

Lamponi is not the first artist to have noticed the specially beauty of everyday objects. In Berlin, for instance, there’s the Museum of Things, a space that features some of the everyday objects that have surrounded us since the start of the 20th Century.

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 on 31 Oct 2008 by Marta Reig in Unusual gifts

Window House, Muji’s Prefabricated Homes

Clients can customize these homes to their own liking and decide where to put the windows

Muji’s prefabricated Window House
Muji’s prefabricated Window House
  Muji is a multifunctional store where you’ll find items as diverse as wooden desks, house slippers, color highlighters and wood-carved replicas of the New York skyline. This is Japan’s most popular store; you might even say there’s a Muji on every corner in Japan. It’s much like Inditex in Spain, Ikea in Sweden or Starbucks in the USA. Muji has as many sections as a large department store: kitchen, furniture, storage, stationary, lighting… All its products are top-quality, created by major designers and have prices that almost anyone can afford.

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 on 30 Oct 2008 by Marta Reig in Art, design and architecture
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Latest comments
Me gusta pero no sé el precio

- Lola,
16 May 2017
saddening story of doraemon..

- prativa,
24 Jan 2017
Genial

- Luis,
21 Jan 2017
Link de vaho: www.vaho.es

- Jose Luis,
11 Jan 2017
quiero una pulsera

- madeline,
6 Dec 2016
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