These are beautiful :) Not sure how practical mind – they’d keep getting tangled up in your fingers… but still… form over function etc. All based on the golden mean… The designer’s site has more details of the design-process etc. Beautifully photographed as well: Which is (I suppose) what comes of having classically trained designers on your staff. I’ve been trying to take my own photographs for years – there’s more to it than meets the eye. Anyway – amazing scissors. I should probably try to buy some – to add to my shiny-thing jackdaw-geek collection of things related to the golden mean.

So I was down the wood-shop the yesterday, and the wood-shop guy said “I thought we’d seen the last of this, but they’re now pulling old logs out of the bush helicopters”. Rimu. They’ve stopped making it – which is to say, New Zealand only allows sustainably logged timber – which means “plant one; fell one”. And Rimu isn’t exactly a cash-crop (unlike fast-growers like pine), so the price is going to about $300 a sheet. Rimu laminate was what I was making the boxes out of. And business is good – business is so good in fact, that I’m finding myself spending all day, every day doing NOTHING except sand-papering wooden boxes. It’s incredibly time-consuming, and it’s driving me insane, so I’ve figured that: a) I need a new case design and b) I kindof needed it anyway, because my packaging is a bit transitional at the mo and…

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Which has nothing to do with the Golden Ratio (I suspect), although the two resonators look as though they could be close. Sounds amazing though – like Led Zepplin crossed with one of those pan-flute bands, and dialled forward a couple of centuries. Sounds like it’s got all sorts of digital effects on it. (but apparently hasn’t – all acoustic) (via) Double Bonus points for looking like it’s located inside a wooden UFO Triple Bonus points for being Turkish – at least partly because the Zildjian cymbal company was created by a Turkish Alchemist about 400 years ago. That is so cool I can hardly stand it. So there you go – a conglomeration of things I’m really into :) … Closer to here… I’m still waiting for a laser-tube to turn up. My entire business has been tipped on its side for the last month or so because a…

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Have started making protractors. Specifically for use by cosmetic surgeons, but they could be used for lots of different angle-measuring purposes. They can measure internal and external angles (acute and obtuse)… which is useful for measuring the angle between nose and face for example. I haven’t seen designs quite like this before – protractors are usually used for measuring things on paper, rather than in the real world – so most of them tend to be flat, eg: or But none of those are particularly good for measuring faces or small obtuse angles. So… can do those now. I think the “official” ones will be the top ones with the circular measuring-bit. If anyone’s interested, get in touch – I’ll probably put them up on the new website… when I get around to finishing the new website, about 500 years from now.

Amazing swivelly sculpture thing, made by John Edmark. Spin it one way and it makes a nice neat shell/leaf-like shape, spin it the other and it falls into the Fibonnaci configuration that plants use to maximise sunlight hitting their leaves. He also does lots of other Fibonnaci-based sculptures: He has quite a lot of other inventions – some of which are of tangential practicality… There are quite a lot more amazing kinetic sculptures on his site. Brilliant.

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