Creative 36 Days of Type submission cleverly transforms popular car headlights into alphabets!

Every year starting around March, designers collectively participate in a 36-day endeavor called the ’36 Days of Type’, where each day, designers express their creativity by redesigning letters and numbers from the alphabet (A-Z followed by 0-9). The challenge primarily sees participation from visual designers, illustrators, and 3D modelers, although this unusual entry from Yash Mathur beautifully transcends design disciplines by creating an automotive-design-inspired typeface! Mathur looks to car brands and models for his inspiration, and cleverly reinterprets their headlights, turning them into letters and numbers. If there’s one thing worth commending here, it’s undoubtedly Mathur’s ingenuity, but along with it, one can’t help but appreciate how far headlights and taillights have come since the advent of LEDs. Thanks to halogens, LEDs, and edge-lit plastics, you can now virtually make a headlight or a taillight in any shape you choose. The only constraint here is brightness – since a headlight/taillight also serves a purpose, it needs to be bright enough. Although these light designs are purely conceptual, I do wish companies would embrace their headlights as a form of their branding (just like this Mercedes concept did!)

Mathur’s project features virtually every brand you can think of, from the well-known Audi, Porsche, Tesla, Ford, and Lamborghini, to even a few lesser-known brands like Donkervoort, Oldsmobile, and W Motors. Mathur worked on this series during the first lockdown in 2020, and it only made sense to showcase it during this year’s 36 Days of Type! You can view the entire series chronologically by scrolling down. I’ll let Yash’s work do the talking.

P.S. Don’t forget to scroll down to the end to see the entire project in a collage!

Designer: Yash Mathur

The post Creative 36 Days of Type submission cleverly transforms popular car headlights into alphabets! first appeared on Yanko Design.

Boslla’s headlights come with the world’s brightest LEDs that even have RGB features

Designed to help you switch things up, Boslla’s LED headlights are the most powerful in their class (even outshining Halogen and Xenon bulbs) and are designed to work under extreme conditions, be it scorching summers, frigid winters, or powerful rainstorms… but their most unusual feature is that they pack a set of RGB LEDs too, allowing you to switch things up and light the space up with any color you choose.

Boslla’s LEDs are industry-leading, with a brightness up to 40W that’s thrice as powerful as the brightest halogen light and twice as bright as xenon lights. The LED’s patented assembly comes with a liquid-cooled heat pipe to keep the lights running for longer hours, while the LEDs themselves boast of a 50,000-hour lifespan. The super-bright headlights help you see much better on roads in low-light settings, and to help make driving safer even for on-coming traffic, Boslla’s innovative low-beam mode features a unique beam design that avoids creating glare for other drivers. In the daytime, you can easily switch to a less-bright DRL setting, but with Boslla’s lights, you can do much more than just having ambient white light. Its RGB DRL mode lets you choose from a wide variety of colored lights!

Boslla’s RGB LEDs exist as a separate feature, to be used aside from the regular headlights of the car. Designed to work at parties, outdoor events, or just as one of those little impressive features like giving your car an underlight or LED strips on the interiors, the LED’s RGB mode is a neat differentiator, allowing you to set your car apart. In 2011, the EU passed a bill stating that all cars must have daytime running lights as a safety measure. Boslla’s RGB LEDs follow standard EU regulations while bringing an element of fun to the driving experience, allowing you to customize the color of your lights as you drive around in the day. Alternating between the LED’s powerful headlight and fun RGB mode is as simple as switching the lights off and then back on. The LEDs are up for grabs on Kickstarter, and you can easily find which size works best for you by using the handy Bulb Size Guide on the Boslla website.

Designer: Boslla

Click Here to Buy Now: $69 $199 (65% off). Hurry, only 27/200 left and less than 72 hours to go!

Boslla RGB – Brightest LED Headlight Bulb with Gradient RGB Function

The up-to-40W high-brightness illumination guarantees a super clear vision and your safety at night.

Standard Beam Pattern

RGB Mode

DRL Mode in Different Weather Conditions

How to Change Modes

Just need to switch OFF and ON to change between Headlight Mode and DRL mode.

Intelligent Control Unit

High-quality electronic components of EU standards make BOSLLA RGB smarter and steadier.

Boslla vs Xenon vs Halogen Bulb

Whether it’s traditional halogen bulb, xenon bulb or Philips LED headlight, they are headlights only. BOSLLA RGB has both headlight and DRL functionality.

Brightness Comparison

Boslla RGB is 3 times brighter than the halogen bulb and twice than the Xenon bulb.

Standard Beam Pattern

Never dazzle oncoming cars and blind other drivers.

Extreme Durability Testing

Fire Testing

Water-Proof

Freezing

Bottle-Opener

Hammering Nails

Step-on

Plug & Play Installation

Features

Click Here to Buy Now: $69 $199 (65% off). Hurry, only 27/200 left and less than 72 hours to go!

BioLite’s HeadLamp 330 is listed at its lowest price yet, $40

It isn't just laptops and phones that are getting marked down for Black Friday. Some of our favorite outdoor gear will be discounted, too.

Mercedes is building smarter headlights for its cars of the future

In a dark garage at the Mercedes-Benz headquarters in Stuttgart, Germany, a flat gray S-Class illuminates a white screen at the end of long hall. The headlights blast on and while the light is bright, it's not that impressive. Then Stefan Toepfer, el...

Eye of the Wagen!

The first ever engine-powered car was born as a direct successor to the horse-carriage. That’s why most cars back in the day had horse-carriage inspired designs. However, when cars evolved further, they began getting humanized. The horse carriage features started disappearing and the car began looking more and more ‘human’. The headlights started being interpreted as eyes while the grill became the mouth. Family cars looked happy, regular cars looked more serious, and racing cars looked aggressive. Headlamps that were interpreted as eyes then began taking that interpretation more seriously. Angel ring headlamps pretty much looked like the car was staring directly at you. Today, we’re looking at the next step for car headlamp designs. Probably the most eye-resembling headlight of them all, the Volkswagen ID Crozz is made up of tiny LEDs that light up to not just light up the road, but form a more pronounced eye-design.

With its outer eyelash and inner eyeball design, it’s no mistake that the car headlamps were designed to be the eyes of the car. The conceptual car’s headlamps light up in a way that looks like eyes opening. The headlights are also designed to follow you, looking at and interacting with objects as well as pedestrians. Other than the surreal headlamp design that we definitely feel is the the next step for automobiles (especially when they become autonomous and start integrating with voice assistants, becoming even more human than ever), the VW ID Crozz is said to mark the company’s foray into the all-electric market, in a bid to challenge Tesla. Currently in its conceptual stage, the ID Crozz was debuted at the Shanghai Motor Show this year as a part of VW’s ID range of self-driving zero-emission cars. VW has plans however, to bring the ID Crozz on the roads by the year 2020… so expect to see a lot of eyes (or eye-inspired headlights) on the road three years from now!

Designer: Volkswagen

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EcoXPower charges a smartphone, bicycle headlight and tail light with pedal power

EcoXPower charges a smartphone, bicycle headlight and tail light with pedal power

Bicycle rigs for charging cellphones have lit up our radar before, but now the EcoXPower is being billed as the first device of its kind that can simultaneously juice up LED lights and a smartphone with the power of your pedaling. Packing a headlamp, a red tail light and a lithium-ion rechargeable battery, the contraption attaches to a bike's front wheel hub with the help of a universal mount. When clamped on, the apparatus' clutch engages between the velocipede's spokes so it can generate electricity. A USB adapter cable runs up the two-wheeler's fork to a water-resistant, touchscreen-friendly case that can house iPhones, Android handsets and "all major GPS devices" perched atop the handlebars. Cyclists yearning to charge their electronics with the dynamo can pick one up for $99.99. Roll past the break for the full press release.

Continue reading EcoXPower charges a smartphone, bicycle headlight and tail light with pedal power

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EcoXPower charges a smartphone, bicycle headlight and tail light with pedal power originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 23 Aug 2012 01:40:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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