
Billboard allows bats to communicate about their needs
This awesome collaboration between Chris Woebken and Natalie Jeremijenko is an interactive billboard that facilitates ‘social interactions between bats and humans’. The billboard uses voice recognition software to translate the audible clicks that bats make into more human-like conversations. In this way, the billboard serves the dual function of allowing bats to communicate about their needs, whilst also raising awareness of their plight in the urban surrounds they inhabitat. Brilliant!



Tagged: Chris Woebken, MOMA Talk To Me exhiition, Natalie Jeremijenko
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One of the pieces generating a lot of buzz at the design exhibition Talk to Me up now until November at MOMA is this awesome Rubiks Cube for blind people. It has braille instead of colors.
Animal Superpowers: experience real animal senses
Now, this is remarkable: ‘Animal Superpowers is a set of three toys created by Kenichi Okada and Chris Woebken, allowing users to experience animal senses and thus understand a little more about the diversity of animal umwelten. One of the toys, for example, creates the sensation of being fifty times smaller’. Respect.
Also by ZOLTON

Incredible animal sculptures made from shattered CDs
Sean Avery has found a novel use for a (near) obsolete media form. Instead of selling his old CDs for $1 a pop at the local pawn shop, the artist creates stunning sculptures of animals in motion using just shattered shards and a healthy imagination. Read more
Montreal man spends 382 days living on his bike
We could write something pithy here about how much artist and copyeditor Guillaume BlanchetI must love the sensation of, erm, perpetual motion, but we won’t. Instead we’ll let him tell you what motivated his recent feat of endurance: ‘I love being on a bike. It helps me feel free. After 382 days spent riding through the streets of Montreal, being sometimes quite cold, sometimes quite hot, and sometimes quite scared, I dedicate this movie to you, Yves Blanchet’.

Awesome David Bowie Movie Poster Mash-Ups
Our friends over at Buzzfeed have compiled a selection of killer poster designs that feature the Thin White Duke in the lead role in, erm, everything. Saving Major Tom? Why the hell not. Read more
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If the zombie apocalypse looks anything like Max Kauffman’s artwork, we have nothing to fear because there will be cute zombie birds. Also, zombies in Kauffman’s universe prefer Eskimo kisses to brains. Read more
Buying a brand new pair of kicks is already a jizzworthy experience, but customizing your own? Well, that’s just a little bit too exciting. At Pimp My Kicks you can deck out sneakers from dunks to chucks with whatever your heart desires. Fill out an order form with your ideas and images and in no time at all you’ll be the sneaker envy of all your mates.
I spent the formative first six years of my life in Wellington, New Zealand, a beautiful windswept city framed by a magnificent harbour in one direction and a stunning collection of green, rolling hills in the other. It was here, on a return visit many years later and deep amongst the clipped accents and ruddy faces of the weather-beaten locals, that I stumbled upon the vast catalogue of the then Dunedin based record label Flying Nun. And what a roster of acts they housed — The Chills, The Bats, The Clean, Tall Dwarfs, The Verlaines, and my favourite guitar-pop band, Straitjacket Fits. Read more
There’s a shop on Smith Street in Melbourne where all young designers go to live. In.cube8r supports all things craft and handmade in Melbourne, running like a long-term market, with the gallery divided into different areas that the artists lease for a tiny cost. There are more than 75 of Melbourne’s top crafters on show and the gallery is always looking for new designers.
Whenever I begin to take life too seriously, I head over to Indexed for a little humor treat. Never have math, formulas and graphs been so clever and witty. The creator of the site started it as a way to make fun of some things, sense of others. Somehow her little formula worked. She is now listed in TIME Magazine’s Top Blogs of 2008. And now Jessica Hagy is a published author. Enjoy exploring the inner-workings of her mind. It is simply delightful.
These very sweet folks from Seattle supported Broken Social Scene on our last American dates of the Spirit IF tour. Although they haven’t quite hit their stride as a live outfit, the tunes from songwriter Grant Olsen have some very lovely moments that fall somewhere between Velvet Underground and The Everly Brothers. I think Arthur and Yu could take over from where Grandaddy left off, though with better songs. No offense to Grandaddy.
Romanian fashion designer Alina Ene creates light painting dresses, which have a real visual impact in darkened spaces when using UV lights.
WE'RE POSTING / SOME OF THE BEST

It’s refreshing to see artists like Joe Kievitt who are contented to explore the beauty in simple forms and asymmetrical patterns. Read more

The return of the Brionvega rr226
Italian brand Brionvega has resurrected the classy Radiofonografio piece first created in 1965. The updated version is just like the original turntable/radio unit, but also has a CD/DVD player.

Mathematics? Leave me out. Fashematics? Now you’re talking! This gem of a site is a runway equation that adds up to a whole lot of wonderful.

Nerd-attack! Man, this TARDIS zipper robe is so much cooler than any Star Wars crap people are hawking this days. This is for the true gangsta nerd.

Pitched as ‘Ulterior Motives in Contemporary Art’, Disorder Disorder is running until November 14 at Penrith Regional Gallery. It’ll be well worth the trip out west of Sydney: the Australian, Japanese, American and European cast reads like a warriors of street art roundup and includes Mike Giant, Ed Templeton, Anthony Lister [artwork above], Ozzie Wright, and Jonathan Zawada. Read more
Our friends at Aussie stationary shop Notemaker have given us 10 Moleskine Lego Notebooks to give away: an assorted mix of 5 large and 5 pocket ones with mixed covers. To enter, tell us the first thing you’d write in your new notebook, along with the city you live in. Read more
New York-based artist Suzuki Mariko has made this handmade felt doll set of a mom and happy baby bear sitting on a sofa. At just three inches wide and two inches high, it’s perfect for your side table. It can even watch TV with you. Aw! We have it for sale in the Lost At E Minor store. Read more
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