Monday, December 4th, 2006
Daily Archive
News04 Dec 2006 04:30 pm by nic
Pop art so good you can eat off it – ‘Naked Lunch’ plates from Pop Ink

It’s rare that we discuss crockery around here. However, kind of like the House of Manfred ties we featured in September, these plates set themselves apart because, put simply, they have naked ladies on them.
That’s kind of how things work here at TSL.
That’s not all, naturally. Apart from the ‘Naked Lunch’ series, two of which are pictured, Pop Ink make a whole range of other impressive pop art plates that we really like, too. Complimenting these risque silhouettes, designs include camp 50’s nature imagery, pastel paisleys, imitation woodgrain and myriad other retro iconography.
$40 (for a four-piece set) is a pleasantly vintage price, and the manufacturing process has a similarly old world feel:
Saturated color images are molded into 10 inch heavy-duty Melamine plates manufactured by the same company that makes them for the US military.
We have a feeling these aren’t the actual plates used by the military, for some reason…
To maintain the dignity of the girls (and because the manufacturers advise against it) keep these suckers out of the microwave.
Pop Ink ‘Naked Lunch’ [French Paper via Boing Boing]
News04 Dec 2006 12:30 pm by nic
The one-stop stogie station

Again we’re presented by something so practical and beautiful, we wonder why it’s taken so long. It’s a self-contained, portable cigar kit.
At a tiny 5 1/2″ x 7 1/4″ x 2 5/8″, this dark-polished timber box slides out to reveal a nickel-plated butane lighter, a steel cigar cutter and a cleverly removable nickel-plated ashtray.
The manufacturers of this revelation have complemented their ingenuity with generosity. Rather than giving into the temptation to fleece the cigar-loving community by throwing a ludicrously high price onto the ‘cigar lover’s kit’, $50 is all you’ll need. Sometimes in the cigar accessory market, you feel you’d be lucky to afford ash at that price.
(On a different note, given its dimensions, how long before someone mods this into a drive-bay smoking station for their PC?)
Cigar Lover’s Kit [Red Envelope via Uncrate]
News04 Dec 2006 08:30 am by nic
Belt-drive concept sees Monaco come full circle
In a heart-warming story of homecoming, the watch immortalized by a motor racing cinema classic has returned to its roots in a revolutionary (arf) new, motorsport-inspired incarnation.
The (now TAG) Heuer Monaco, made famous by Steve McQueen’s wrist in Le Mans, has been used as the model for the mechanically-revolutionary Monaco V4 and, according to the designers at TAG Heuer, the concepts are straight out of motor racing.
We won’t attempt to explain how it works, nor the intricate similarities with a high-end racecar engine – if we understood it, we’d have designed it ourselves. We know it involves 13 belt drives, a linear oscillating weight, ball bearings, barrels and other car-esque stuff. Instead, we’ll let the designers (or, at least, the corporate guff writers) explain it in terms they, themselves, describe as ‘audacious’:
Like a car engine, the fundamental mechanical dynamics operating upon a watch are: transmission, friction, torque and power. Working from this parallel, TAG Heuer’s team of designers, watchmakers and engineers hit upon three paradigm-shifting responses to the traditional dictates of watchmaking.
Now we just need them to build a prototype, 21st Century, cyborg Steve McQueen to wear it and we’ll all be happy.
(We realize we’re about two years behind the news here but, hey, the original Monaco was released in 1969 and McQueen didn’t wear it until ‘71, so these things take time, yeah?)
TAG Heuer Monaco V4 [via Wrist Watch Review, via The Watchismo Times]