Muse: How Mark Lloyd Designs Objects Derived From Sound

You could say it started with a song. But more accurately, it began with Mark Lloyd, a British-born, award-winning automobile designer, who says, “I wanted to find a way to translate the beauty of sound into my domain. So I learned to write algorithms into space.” Three years ago, he met the team of artisans…

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Maker Monday: An aspire Exclusive Interview With Sullivan Owen

Sullivan Owen is a Philadelphia-based floral designer and ceramic artist whose work sits at the intersection of floristry, sculpture, and functional design. Known for her intuitive approach to both flowers and form, she creates a tightly edited collection of handmade vessels designed specifically for arranging, with each piece informed by how flowers naturally move, gather,…

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diesel living x iris ceramica | fuorisalone 2026

A decade of creative tension between Diesel Living and Iris Ceramica culminates in a takeover of Fuorisalone 2026, swapping out the expected for a heavy dose of pop distortion. This decennial anniversary builds on a relationship that began in 2015, moving past earlier industrial-heavy hits like Concrete and Hard Leather into something far more hallucinatory. Under the direction of Glenn Martens…

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‘1000 Ways to Hold’: Erika Chong Shuch creates community through ceramics at the Anderson

A new exhibition at the Anderson Collection transforms hundreds of ceramic bowls into a living archive of memory and connection.

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Experimental Ceramicist emmanuel boos Makes His U.S. Debut at New York Gallery Raisonné

Wielding his mastery of the "unpredictable, living" material, the award-winning French talent harnesses porcelain in deceptively invariable furnishings Courtesy of Zach Pontz An emmanuel boos coffee table or vase might seem orderly at first. Composed from repeated elements resembling the crystalline cubes and parallelepipeds often employed by the 20th-century Minimalist artists he's long…

World's tiniest QR code is 'smaller than most bacteria'

For those of us who weren't paying attention, over the last few years, scientists around the world have been one-upping each other in a bid to create the smallest QR code that can be reliably read. Now, Austria-based researchers have set the bar real high with a QR code so tiny, you'll need an electron microscope to see it.

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Category: Technology

Tags: QR code, TU Wien,…

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