Though I would not describe myself as a dedicated and studied numismatist—albeit perhaps somewhat more reasoned the collectors of com- memorative coin sets, which is exactly for whom they’re issued but I do admit to having a cigar box heavy with a small fortune, at face-value at least, of the special national series of the euro-zone members, the Bundeslรคnder, and various defunct currencies. I was never before given in change a Cypriot coin, however, and it did take a moment to register, remembering that only Greece had formerly been accorded with using something aside from Latin script but that was before Cyprus joined the Union, the name of the island displayed in Greek and Turkish. The totem depicted on the obverse, nearly worn away since 2008, the idol of Pomos, is a prehistoric talisman of fertility and the seven thousand year old figure is wearing a charm of herself around her neck—the portable versions being popular in the day. Given the events of that year, I hope Cyprus picked an auspicious time to adopt the euro.
Tuesday, 7 April 2015
much coin, much care
five-by-five
inside voice: dogs in Japan taught to soft-bark
staring-contest: crystal lattice whose patterns appear when one blinks
PET-project: plastic bottles beautifully repurposed as artificial plants
playland: restaurant in Italy has an amusement park that’s powered by the momentum of thrill-seekers
depalletised oder unverpackt
The roving reporters of Quartz Magazine send word that a new market has opened in Berlin called Unverpackt that’s been designed to showcase how we can manage our grocery shopping without sleek and resource intensive packaging.
It’s not exactly as if we shopped in some old timey general store when I was little, but I do remember that the concept of buying in bulk, which seems now only retained for candies and nuts, was more common—at least for generic brands and maybe that’s why it went away. I hope that this movement takes hold elsewhere, since even if for the sake of vanity and brand-loyalty and in an ideal world where nothing goes to waste and is properly recycled, a lot of thoughtless cost goes into something just tossed away. Besides I think it would be fun to come up with creative storage solutions or revive quality tins worth saving.
five-by-five
forest primeval: amazing Biaลowieลผa National Park of Poland with the vestiges of the ancient, once pan-European wood
bees and bombs: more lovely minimalist animation from Dave Whyte
^^: iconography and shorthand are encouraging though in how we communicate and what we adopt
sympathetic design: organic Aspen dwelling from the 1970s