Cool Hunting

Moo Flickr MiniCards by Letizia Rossi

mooooooo.jpg

Moo, "a new kind of printing business," understands that though the web is amazing "you can't touch it, write on it, hang it on the wall or pass it to the cute guy on the bus." They aim to help people "take their virtual lives offline" by creating tangible products based on online images. Their new Flickr minicards are a perfect way to show off all those digital photos that are gathering virtual dust on your hard drive. For $20 you can get 100 unique cards, each printed with four-color images from your Flickr pool and with your personal information on the other side.

via Notcot

Tools
Print
Email
Save / Bookmark
fShare Share
Permanent link
Sphere It
This entry posted on 29 September 2006 at 2:20 PM
Related Entries
Mounds [Placemats]
Placemats - something kids need to keep from staining the table cloth? Perhaps. But these ones aren't exactly age-appropriate. Introducing avant-garde Brazilian-New Yorker Vik Muniz' special edition placemat set, featuring appetizing photographs of mounds of, well... cat hair, aspirin, headless army men, poison scorpions, rat poison, and even... granola. Shudder. Printed and packaged by the folks at Printed Matter, Inc. in Manhattan, VM has...
Chuck Anderson: First Breath
This new print from the enterprising Chuck Anderson looks like a dreamy California apocalypse. Anderson composites photos of buildings, trees, and fire, layering photoshop light tricks to tie it all together. $30 from NP and Co. Related entries: Chuck Anderson, Chuck Anderson: Godlike, and Chuck Anderson, 6 Questions....
Colette Fisheye
Viennese purveyors of photo-artistry, Lomo, have teamed up with Parisian concept shop pioneers, Colette, to make a black version of Lomo's Fisheye camera featuring Colette's doggy mascots, Caperino and Peperone, on the back. The convex lens means a 170-degree field of view that creates distorted pictures using standard 35mm film. The Colette version, available for $65 exclusively from Colette and Lomo, comes with the...
The Single Cookie Jar by Emilie Baltz
Emilie Baltz is a Brooklyn-based photographer and designer. She started designing objects that were inspired by her work as a photographer to "reflect surrounding cultural needs." The Single Cookie Jar is both a cookie cutter and a chic cookie storage container. The "dinner for one" and the pre-portioned snacks craze are possible influences for this clever design. It's handcast in ceramic and available in...
Recent Cool Hunting Videosview all Cool Hunting Videos
Advertisement
Advertisement
Recent Entries

Nuun Hydrations Tablets


The Spaceman Watches of 1972-77


Fergus Brown


New York: Magnum Edition


The Invisible: Monster's Waltz


Daze: South Bronx to Naples


Pivot


Alfred Kubin: Graphic Works 1897-1910


Claire Beckett