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razorshapes:

California. (by lockedcog)

razorshapes:

California. (by lockedcog)

(via urbanehood)

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monstereatsdesign:

(via Designspiration — home : the creative work of Brian Hurst)
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disposablecentury:

Too Small to Fail, by Aesthetic Apparatus

disposablecentury:

Too Small to Fail, by Aesthetic Apparatus

(via grassydesigns)

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(Source: , via grassydesigns)

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bilalcinar:

www.bilalcinar.com
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So worth the extra 40 cents.

So worth the extra 40 cents.

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I love little things like this.
unconsumption:

Public Trash Cans That Aren’t Overflowing with Empty Coffee Cups - Design - The Atlantic Cities:
Copenhagen designer So Hoj noticed, and was bothered by, piles of spent coffee cups spilling out of trash cans and onto the sidewalk around the city. 

Hoj, a self-employed designer with a background in accessories, took up the problem herself by converting tall, slender cardboard tubes from the post office into receptacles for discarded cups.
The idea is simple enough: you can hold more cups in a smaller space when they’re stacked neatly inside each other. Hoj’s theory was that this would alleviate the cup problem by giving them their own, more compact space, and leaving larger trash cans for other items.
…
She mounted her “test tube” cup collectors and put them on two trash cans along the waterfront. Quickly, her fellow Copenhageners caught on.

Here’s what the trash cans used to look like before her solution:

I love little things like this.

unconsumption:

Public Trash Cans That Aren’t Overflowing with Empty Coffee Cups - Design - The Atlantic Cities:

Copenhagen designer So Hoj noticed, and was bothered by, piles of spent coffee cups spilling out of trash cans and onto the sidewalk around the city. 

Hoj, a self-employed designer with a background in accessories, took up the problem herself by converting tall, slender cardboard tubes from the post office into receptacles for discarded cups.

The idea is simple enough: you can hold more cups in a smaller space when they’re stacked neatly inside each other. Hoj’s theory was that this would alleviate the cup problem by giving them their own, more compact space, and leaving larger trash cans for other items.

She mounted her “test tube” cup collectors and put them on two trash cans along the waterfront. Quickly, her fellow Copenhageners caught on.

Here’s what the trash cans used to look like before her solution: