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Product Design

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Why, these animal knickers have quite the (butt) cheek. Faux octopus taxidermy makes for cool home fixtures. Gravity-defying shower shoots up from the ground. This breakfast sandwich maker is ridiculously cool. The Nail Cloud Lamp is a Cumulus of Sharp Nails Suspended by a Magnetic Field Elias Ernst's Nail Cloud lamp - Gallery Page 2. Beautiful Shade umbrella by Fumito Kogure and Shinya Kaneko. Geometric clothing racks by Tongtong. A chandelier that turns a room into a forest. Floating cloud couch levitates with magnetic force. Download this fabulous FM Radio for free. Bizarre glasses design by Masaki Komoto. Adam Wallacavage's Octopus-inspired chandeliers. Convertible napping desk. Beautiful jellyfish lamps by Roxy Russell. Renaissance architecture do double duty as tableware. Bird In Hand: a compostable shadow playing light.

Now you can inhale your favorite food and drink. A desk made from giant sheets of paper. Heat-sensitive business cards. Tablecloth that gets better with spill stains. $9 cardboard bicycle holds up to 24 times its own weight. Fresh Food without a Fridge. Korean designer Jihyum Ryou has created a series of stylish and eco-friendly shelves for storing food freshly outside of the fridge.

Fresh Food without a Fridge

The project was dubbed Save Food From The Fridge and is a bit of a statement on the overuse of energy and waste of food in the western world. Returning to simple science and age-old techniques, the shelves act as a vehicle for implementing a little bit of the past into our modern lives while being environmentally friendly. Acrobatic toaster can catapult toast onto your plate.

London-based product designer Ivo Vos knows how important brunch is, enough to want to measure it.

Acrobatic toaster can catapult toast onto your plate

The Brunch is ‘a series of consumer products that celebrates the mundane’, of which the star item has to be the toaster that catapults your toast onto your plate, or at your brunch companion if you so wish. We are also rather fond of the cutlery pieces that appear to disappear when you align them perfectly against the placemat, as well as the teapot that can measure the height from which tea is poured from. Warning: if you are naturally groggy in the morning, you might want to pass on these. Wooden daybed designed by Elisa Strozyk. Young designer Elisa Strozyk has created a daybed using wood as material for the fabric.

Wooden daybed designed by Elisa Strozyk

The quilted wood that she uses shows a process using a paper-thin wood veneer which she turns into a hybrid of hybrid of marquetry and traditionally quilted textiles. The furniture object, based on a found piece from the 1950s, was designed for The Thread That Binds Us exhibition curated by Barbara Brondi and Marco Rainò at Plusdesign Gallery during Milan Design Week 2012.

Koji Shiraya. Giant table accessories for an absurdist dinner party. Welcome - Hoxton Street Monster Supplies.