Balloonatomy
We Make Money Not Art posted this photo on Flickr of Christopher Brach’s inflatable guts, “Second Nature.” It is always cool to see what you can make with simple supplies. [via] Link.
Continue ReadingWe Make Money Not Art posted this photo on Flickr of Christopher Brach’s inflatable guts, “Second Nature.” It is always cool to see what you can make with simple supplies. [via] Link.
Continue ReadingMarceline writes in – Hi, I’m posting up a Tokyo guide on my blog for crafts supplies and general kawaii. I’m including full directions, prices and lovely photos of my purchases. Should be useful for anyone planning a visit. Tokyo guide (for crafty people) – Link. Speaking of Japan, MAKE will be visiting Japan in […]
Continue ReadingBring the woods into your home with this great wood-patterned fabric. Of course fabric this cool comes from Japan. [via] Link.
Continue ReadingWith this t-shirt, a project by German media artist Aram Bartholl, you can proclaim your social networking cache by checking off all of the web 2.0 allegiances you are a member of. Then just wear the shirt, walk around your hometown and mingle with the electronic elite. Pretty swanky. Are You Social? Project page – […]
Continue ReadingTRATTI by artists Laura Beloff and Martin Pichlmair is a mobile, wearable noise instrument for kids that records sounds, remixes them with ambient noise recorded from the surrounding area and from outer space, and plays them back on a modified speaker-megaphone connected to the device’s outer shell. The project is built from a modified cell […]
Continue ReadingRadioShack has a new campaign I spotted in the latest wired called “Do Stuff” – it might be their new branding (not bad!) – the project is a deer catcher, it “uses a camera and television monitor to look through your camera’s lens from afar, snapping pictures by remote control to avoid scaring the wildlife” […]
Continue ReadingFun looking $14 to launch paper airplanes – This is a fun educational aid product designed to demonstrate scientific concepts taught in school curriculum. Ready for take off! Kit contains everything you need to learn how spinning motors and plastic discs are used to launch a paper plane at up to 31 mph (50km/h). An […]
Continue Reading