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Design

Design is more than how it looks — it’s how it works. The Verge brings you the best of design from the web, the home, the software world, and architecture.

Sharge added a rechargeable battery to its sleek retractable charger

The power bank’s design was inspired by a Braun sound system from the ‘60s.

Andrew Liszewski
Photoshop just made it shockingly easy to edit objects and people into photos

Generative AI is rapidly eroding the photo editing skill barrier.

Jess Weatherbed

Latest In Design

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Andrew Liszewski
The FolderDrive puts your files in your pocket.

Inspired by the folder icon in macOS, David Delahunty originally teased their concept design for the FolderDrive on X a few weeks ago, but there was enough positive feedback for them to partner with Super Fantastic to make it a real thing.

Pricing isn’t known but the first run of the FolderDrive, featuring 128GB of storage and a USB-C port on the bottom, will be limited to just 100 units.

<em>There are no pricing or performance details yet for the FolderDrive, but it will feature 128GB of storage.</em>
<em>Super Fantastic is using 3D printing to manufacture the FolderDrive’s unique design.</em>
<em>The first run is being limited to just 100 units.</em>
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There are no pricing or performance details yet for the FolderDrive, but it will feature 128GB of storage.
Image: Super Fantastic
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Jess Weatherbed
We finally have an update for...PNG?

Launching 22 years after its last major update, the latest PNG spec now includes native support for HDR, APNG animations, and Exif metadata for embedding information into image files. W3C PNG Working Group chair Chris Blume says Chrome, Safari, Firefox, iOS, macOS, and Adobe Photoshop already support the new standard, and that upcoming updates will improve compression and dynamic range support.

PNG is back!

[programmax.net]

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Thomas Ricker
What’s with that RabaT4Xl logo?

When I first saw the Robotaxi wordmark, I assumed someone had already vandalized the car like a Waymo caught in a protest. The creative experts consulted by Fast Company are even more critical of the cyberdork aesthetic:

“A good logo always tries to convey the brand promise,” says type designer and Hoefler & Co. founder Jonathan Hoefler. “And this one definitely foreshadows the tragic collisions ahead.”

A vehicle Tesla is using for robotaxi testing purposes on Oltorf Street in Austin, Texas, US, on Sunday, June 22, 2025.
A vehicle Tesla is using for robotaxi testing purposes on Oltorf Street in Austin, Texas, US, on Sunday, June 22, 2025.
Photo: Tim Goessman/Bloomberg via Getty Images
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Dominic Preston
Jony Ive is pivoting to museums.

The ex-Apple designer, now working on AI hardware for OpenAI, just joined the British Museum’s board of trustees. The London museum is going through a huge redevelopment, ominously dubbed “The Masterplan,” and it sounds like Ive will give guidance on how tech could be a part of that. No word yet on who he thinks should have the Parthenon sculptures.

How to build the best keyboard in the world

Ryan Norbauer spent half a decade and several hundred thousand dollars reinventing the keyboard. It worked.

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This is what it looks like to be colorblind

Apparently, the very idea of colorblindness is hard to visualize. Take a shot at looking through my eyes.

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Andrew Liszewski
Lexon turned Jeff Koons’ Balloon Dog sculptures into functional art.

The collaboration between Koons and Lexon Design sees the artist’s most iconic creation turned into a wireless speaker with touch controls delivering 360-degree sound and a lamp that uses tubes filled with color-changing LEDs to recreate the appearance of neon lighting.

Pricing isn’t known, but both will only be available in limited quantities later this month and hopefully be much cheaper than the 10-foot Balloon Dog sculpture Koons sold in 2013 for $58 million.

<em>You can <a href="https://manage.kmail-lists.com/subscriptions/subscribe?a=TgyUTU&g=XnRJBg">sign up through the Lexon Design website</a> to be notified when the lamp and speaker are available.</em>
<em>There are 10 drivers in the Balloon Dog Speaker, and it can be controlled through a smartphone app.</em>
<em>The lamp’s color-changing LEDs can set a mood or just brighten up a space.</em>
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You can sign up through the Lexon Design website to be notified when the lamp and speaker are available.
Image: Lexon Design
Five apps that can help you arrange your new homeFive apps that can help you arrange your new home0
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The Verge’s guide to an easier move
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Victoria Song
Say Drake...

I hear you like your Nokias... blung? Listen, it’s early and I’m not Kendrick. However, behold this iced-out Nokia phone and wallet chain that jeweler Alex Moss made for Drake’s Some Sexy Songs 4 U album. Hypebeast has the details but apparently this project took four months to complete and has over 150 carats of diamonds.

I think this counts as a wearable.

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Andrew Webster
Go deep down the Animal Well.

One of 2024’s best — and most cryptic — games, is getting a big ol’ design book courtesy Lost in Cult. It’s not releasing until next summer, but the publisher promises that the tome will be “a deep dive into the intricate world of Animal Well.” Pre-orders open later today.

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Andrew Webster
When 10 billion pixels isn’t enough.

How about 108 billion instead? Following up the previous 10 gigapixel scan of Johannes Vermeer’s Girl with a Pearl Earring painting is a new version that ups the resolution significantly, while also letting you explore the art in 3D. It’s so big there’s even a minimap to help you navigate.

A closeup of the painting Girl With a Pearl Earring.
That is a pearl earring.
Image: Hirox
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Andrew Liszewski
This brutalist machined aluminum keyboard is still beautiful.

Serene Industries is following up on its massive wedge-shaped Icebreaker keyboard with a smaller, lighter alternative called the Cleaver. Available for preorder now for $850 it’s also cheaper, but by no means cheap.

Machined from a single block of aluminum, the Cleaver features Hall effect switches and swappable aluminum keycaps perforated with holes to allow LED backlighting to shine through. It’s USB-C only, and available with Windows or Mac layouts and clear or black anodized finishes.

<em>The Cleaver is available for preorder and will go into production a few weeks after launch.</em>
<em>You can order the Cleaver without the matching aluminum keycaps if you want to use your own, dropping the preorder price to $650.</em>
<em>The Cleaver offers no wireless connectivity, but the lack of an internal battery helps keep its design slim.</em>
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The Cleaver is available for preorder and will go into production a few weeks after launch.
Image: Serene Industries
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Andrew Liszewski
This $395 mirror turns your reflection into a Microsoft Paint masterpiece.

Depending on your age, there’s a good chance Microsoft Paint was your first introduction to creating digital art. The app’s capabilities have improved over the years, but Drought’s new MS Paint Mirror captures the charm of the limited toolset included in the Windows 95 version — just supersized and a lot easier to use.

A person holds a mirror in a dry, desert-like area in two different side-by-side images.
Drought’s MS Paint Mirror is made from wood, glass, MDF, and features a “full-color printed design.”
Image: Drought
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Andrew Liszewski
A long time ago, in a toy bin far, far away…

Available for preorder today for $59.99 and shipping on May 1st, 2025, Lego has announced a 700-piece buildable version of the iconic Star Wars logo created by graphic designer Suzy Rice.

The black support structure supporting the yellow lettering is covered in detailed Lego greebling, while inside the letter T you’ll find a tiny hidden Star Destroyer pursuing the Tantive IV.

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Marina Galperina
Dalí-inspired “hot garbage.”

Google recently showed off “a cinematic vision so surreal, so ahead of its time, that it proved impossible to produce.” Giraffes on Horseback Salad was originally conceived by Salvador Dalí for the Marx Brothers, but was too weird (and not funny enough) to be actually made. Using Veo 2 and Imagen 3, an ad agency and a museum were “finally capable of transforming surrealism into film.” (Unlike... Luis Buñuel? David Lynch?)

The result, so far, is just this trailer. It’s an eye-searing, sloppy montage of what this ArtNet breakdown by critic Ben Davis calls “chintzy sub-sub-Surrealist imagery has little to do with Dali’s original vision.”

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Andrew Liszewski
This mechanical watch was inspired by a transforming ‘80s wearable toy.

One of the more obscure toys of the ‘80s was a line of digital watches from Japan’s Takara called the Kronoform that could transform into vehicles, creatures, and even a robot. Hautlence’s modern take trades digital timekeeping for a self-winding mechanical movement featuring a tourbillon to improve accuracy.

The Retrovision ‘85 is also made from 3D-printed titanium instead of plastic, and since just eight are being made, you can expect a steep price tag.

<em>The Hautlence Retrovision ‘85 watch can be removed from its strap and transformed into a tiny robot.</em>
<em>The timepiece is made from 3D-printed titanium and has a power reserve of 72 hours, but also features a self-winding mechanism extending its run time while it’s worn.</em>
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The Hautlence Retrovision ‘85 watch can be removed from its strap and transformed into a tiny robot.
Image: Hautlence
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Andrew Liszewski
The clever engineering and design of two-liter plastic soda bottles.

Doing what he does best, Bill Hammack, AKA The Engineer Guy, spends an enlightening 13 minutes explaining not only how two-liter plastic soda bottles are made, but also how their seemingly simple design incorporates some ingenious engineering.

From the manufacturing process where bottles are inflated like balloons to eliminate seams that could split under pressure, to the hemispherical curves on the top and bottom of each bottle that increase its strength.

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Andrew Liszewski
Audio-Technica is making just 10 of these $6,800 Darth Vader headphones.

If you’re headed to Star Wars Celebration in Japan later this month, Audio-Technica has announced a pricey souvenir for you, as spotted by Notebookcheck. Unlike its Star Wars-themed wireless earbuds, only 10 of these ATH-AWSW DV headphones, featuring wooden ear cups adorned with images of Darth Vader made using traditional Japanese crafting techniques, will be available.

Each pair is priced at 990,000 yen, or around $6,817.

<em>The headphones feature 53-millimeter drivers and are compatible with hi-res audio sources, but feature no wireless capabilities.</em>
<em>The left ear cup features Darth Vader’s helmet.</em>
<em>The right ear cup features a silhouette of Darth Vader with his glowing lightsaber.</em>
<em>The ATH-AWSW DV come packaged in a wooden storage box featuring Star Wars design elements, and include an aluminum headphone stand.</em>
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The headphones feature 53-millimeter drivers and are compatible with hi-res audio sources, but feature no wireless capabilities.
Image: Audio-Technica
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Jess Weatherbed
Tariffs send Versace to the sale rack.

Prada is reportedly set to acquire Versace from Capri Holdings for $1.38 billion, scoring a $200 million discount on the previous valuation of the deal due to global trade uncertainties.

Capri, which is grappling with debts and weak market demand, was previously blocked by the FTC from selling itself to Coach owner Tapestry for $8.5 billion in 2023. Offloading Versace, albeit without Donatella Versace at the helm, could help Capri turn things around.

Color is a mathematical nightmareColor is a mathematical nightmare
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Andrew Liszewski
Bang & Olufsen is putting its Beosound Balance smart speaker on a marble pedestal.

The smart speaker was already available with an optional marble base that boosted its price tag from $3,300 (for a solid oak base) to $3,900, but Bang & Olufsen has now partnered with Italian marble company Antolini for an even fancier version, as spotted by Engadget.

The Beosound Balance Natura speaker sits atop a tall pedestal made of materials like marble, quartz, or petrified wood. There’s no pricing details, which probably means it’s jaw-dropping expensive.

<em>Bang & Olufsen says it created a limited collection of 16 unique speakers to celebrate the partnership with Antolini, which are all made to order.</em>
<em>The Beosound Balance Natura will be available with a pedestal made from materials like marble, quartz, fossilized wood, and petrified wood.</em>
<em>Bang & Olufsen says the pedestal elevates the speaker to its optimal height for improved sound performance.</em>
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Bang & Olufsen says it created a limited collection of 16 unique speakers to celebrate the partnership with Antolini, which are all made to order.
Image: Bang & Olufsen