People, I have found what may be the perfect popject: The farfalle pasta bowtie designed by Microworks in Japan. As a refresher: “The trademark of a successful popject
Maison Martin Margiela sells this candelabra made of wax. When you use it to light your candles, it becomes a melting, morphing artwork. Did someone just say ‘blah
The Hypolux Chandelier is made up of commercial syringes, plexiglass plates and ballchain suspension. It comes from Bughouse, the same folks who brought us cameras made of concrete.
Art? Check. Popjects? Check. Resin? Check. Coffee? Check. Local? Check. Ice cream? Check. Really, with that kind of pedigree, what’s left to say about Kristen Gentilucci‘s “Off the
Next month, The Simpsons celebrates its 500th episode over 35 years, and Kidrobot honors the show’s creator with a 6-inch vinyl toy effigy. What a cool tribute. (The
Other Criteria has released a “new” panoply of polka dotted popjects from everyone’s favorite art villain, Damien Hirst. The collection includes Damien Hirst spot paintings taking the form
Clearly we’ve evolved toward being a culture in which there’s zero justification to commit acts of violence with “blunt objects”. No, we’re more refined–more designed–and so similarly should
My most popular post of 2011 was Practically Impractical Japanese T-shirts, so I thought I’d kick off 2012 with something from that same camp (emphasis on camp): everyday
Haroshi turns old skateboards into beautiful popjects. His skill is epic, and yet, he’s had no formal art training. His education comes from skating. If there are tricks