TUCANO
It's called “A Sequence of Lines Traced by Five Hundred Individuals” and proves with absolute certainty that human kind is inaccurate by Nature and that there will never be such a thing as a perfect copy of no matter what kind of original, even the simplest.
It also proves that the slightes changes can lead to the most fascinating mutations. Repetitiveness + randomness = creativity
The first time you'll see it you won't get it. The second, you'll say to yourself there must be an explanation. The third, you'll start feeling like an explanation may not exist. We are talking about the video posted on YouTube by a Charlie Chaplin fan where you can see a woman walking while talking on a cellphone. Apparenty.
Maybe it's the influence of the celebration for the 25th anniversary of Back to the Future, but, once surfaced, the doubt won't disappear anytime soon.
And although probably the woman was just sheltering from the sun and talking with the Director - no problem, she was probably thinking, it's a silent movie - some of us will keep cherishing the idea that sooner or later someone will invent a time machine.
It's time for the first Tucano's contest on Facebook! Participating in easy: first, become a fan of Tucano's page on Facebook; second, take a picture featuring one of Tucano's products in a typical vacation situation; third, post it on the wall.
The best three shots published on Facebook no later than September 5th, will be awarded with a Carico backpack (first placed), a Finatex bag (secondo placed) and a Colore camera bag (third placed). You have all summer to show your creativity.
Now, take your camera and run.
While we are waiting for iPad to find its proper vocation and after the love affair between a velcro strip and an iPad (in the video below), the web sees the arrival of another pearl of wisdom worthy of the best MacGyver: the step-by-step instructions to transform a cardboard box into an iPad support.
Necessary materials: a cutter (or alternatively a Swiss knife for the most virtuous among you), a cardboard box and the assembly instructions published on BoingBoing.
To be used exclusively while waiting for the arrival on the market of the new "made in Tucano" support folders.
iPad + Velcro from Jesse Rosten on Vimeo.