This Streaming Light Concept Is Its Own Carrying Case

Streaming lights have quietly become a staple of the modern content creator’s travel kit. The compact ones clip onto a laptop screen and add professional-grade lighting without adding much bulk. That portability comes with a real catch, though. Without built-in protection, the light panel is vulnerable once it’s packed alongside cables, drives, and adapters. Few of these devices ship with any kind of case, and creators often have to improvise.

Litra Lumen is an unofficial concept, not affiliated with or made by Logitech, that takes the Litra Glow as its starting point and rethinks it for creators constantly on the move. The central idea is straightforward: instead of needing a case, what if the device simply became one? That single premise shaped almost every decision that followed, from the overall form factor down to how the light opens and deploys.

Designer: Koushik Viragani

The mechanism at the heart of the concept is a rotation. The light panel pivots inward, nestling into a hollow protective body that shields it completely during transport. The result is a compact rectangular block with a pill-shaped base, small enough to slip into a backpack side pocket without a second thought. Nothing protrudes, nothing needs wrapping, and there’s no dedicated pouch to hunt for before heading out.

Flipping the light panel 90 degrees is all it takes to go from travel mode to working mode. In mount mode, an extendable hook slides out from the base and clips onto the top edge of a monitor or laptop screen. The light can then be slid up or down the arm to find the ideal height, the same way you’d adjust any conventional monitor-mounted key light.

For setups without a screen to clip onto, a table mode turns the base into a freestanding stand. The light panel rotates up and angles toward the subject, making it just as capable on a café table or a hotel desk as it would be in a full home studio. Physical buttons on the back panel control brightness and color temperature, keeping essential adjustments simple and tactile.

The design draws from Logitech’s existing visual language, with matte surfaces, rounded proportions, and a restrained control layout that feels familiar without being derivative. Two colorways, a dark charcoal and a light off-white gray, give the concept a quiet, product-ready confidence. A complementary visual identity was also developed alongside the hardware, imagining how this kind of device might communicate its purpose as a distinct product line.

What makes Litra Lumen compelling isn’t any single feature but the discipline behind all of them. The rotational mechanism, the extendable hook, and the base that doubles as a stand, each answers the same question in a different context. For a creator moving between a studio, a café, and an overnight bag in the same week, a streaming light that packs without thought is one that actually comes along.

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Rezvani Fortress is a F-150 Raptor on steroids loaded with military-grade security equipment

Rezvani Motors is second to none when it comes to transforming already beastly 4×4 SUVs into armored vehicles fit for an apocalyptic world. The California-based automotive designer has already stamped its authority here at Yanko design with military-inspired vehicles like the Vengeance, Tank, and even the V8-powered Urus. Now, it’s the turn of the mighty Ford F-150 Raptor to get the Rezvani treatment for good.

They call it the 2027 Fortress and for good reason. The Doomsday-proof vehicle is hailed to be the “ultimate tactical off-road super truck,” making any F-150 look underwhelming. By no means is the original F-150 Raptor off-roader incapable of taking on any terrain, but this beast is a hyper-muscular version on steroids. It’s a heavily modified pickup truck inside out with a starting price tag of $285,000 to match the exploits. Like all times, this one too is a Limited-Edition creation restricted to 100 units, and booked for a refundable $500 deposit.

Designer: Rezvani Motors

According to Rezvani, the tactical off-road truck can easily handle city streets and, pretty obviously, the terrain that no other truck will ever dread going on. The beast comes in two options: the standard Raptor R with the twin-turbocharged 3.5-liter V-6 churning out 450 horsepower or the Raptor R’s supercharged 5.2-liter V-8 producing an impressive 850 horsepower. It’s not about traversing the terrain; it’s more about going there with authority as the Fortress gets the Ford’s Fox Live Valve internal bypass shocks, adaptive damping, and long-travel suspension. Just imagine it has a ground clearance of 15 inches, an approach angle of 38 degrees, and a departure angle of 29 degrees, which makes it capable of riding 45 inches of water without much fuss.

It is a top-tier military grade vehicle with reinforced steel bumpers, hood heat extractors, wide body fender extensions, roof-mounted auxiliary lighting and 20inch beadlock capable wheels topped up with oversize 40-inch all-terrain tires. You can go a step further, as the rugged SUV can be optioned with extra military-certified equipment, including electrified door handles, smokescreen, on-board thermal night-vision system, and electromagnetic pulse protection. If that doesn’t impress you much, then getting the full ballistic armor, bullet-resistant glass, blast-resistant underbody protection, run-flat military tires, and reinforced suspension system to manage all this weight is also an option.

Things don’t stop here as the truck can be beefed up with off-grid options like sports solar panels, auxiliary fuel systems, satellite internet connectivity, portable power station, and a dedicated water storage system if the world turns out into a Mad Max-like battleground. Those perks, however, come at an extra cost of around $150,000, which I’m sure a billionaire tycoon won’t mind sparing. On the inside, things get as cozy as they could, cocooning the riders in luxury. The thing is done in full-leather upholstery, with moody ambient lighting and an infotainment system that can be upgraded to Focal speakers paired with a JL subwoofer to make you go crazy.

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A Designer Just Gave the Sandwich Maker the Concept It Deserved

Small appliances are the forgotten middle children of industrial design. We obsess over espresso machines and standing mixers, but the humble sandwich maker? It usually gets whatever plastic shell a product team could push through engineering fast enough to hit a price point. That’s exactly why Dogac Can Sagirosmanoglu’s sandwich maker concept caught my attention, and I suspect it’s catching a lot more than mine.

Sagirosmanoglu is a Lead Industrial Designer based in Istanbul, and he posted this concept project on Behance, where the numbers speak for themselves: over 560,000 views and more than 4,000 appreciations. For a sandwich maker concept. That response says less about novelty and more about something the design community rarely applies to small countertop appliances: genuine intention.

Designer: Dogac Can Sagirosmanoglu

The concept is presented under the Beko name, though it exists as a portfolio project rather than an officially announced product. That distinction matters, but it doesn’t make the design any less compelling. If anything, it makes it more interesting. A designer working within the constraints of a real brand’s visual language, applying that kind of care to a product category that nobody asked him to elevate, is a different kind of creative statement than a fully unconstrained concept. It says something about what he thinks good design actually owes the everyday object.

The design itself carries the kind of restraint that only looks effortless after a lot of work. Clean lines, a minimal form language, and a clear understanding that this object will live on someone’s kitchen counter, which means it has to look right whether it’s in use or not. Most sandwich makers are things you hide in a cabinet. This one looks like it was designed to stay out. That shift in thinking, from kitchen tool you tolerate to one you actually want to see, is a more significant design decision than it sounds.

There’s also something honest about the proportions. This isn’t a concept that drifts into fantasy, all floating surfaces and materials that will never survive a production line. It feels buildable. Considered. The kind of design where you can tell the person behind it was asking whether every decision was earning its place, rather than simply asking whether it looked good in a render.

I’ll admit I’m personally drawn to small appliance design right now. We’ve reached a moment where the home, and specifically the kitchen, has become a genuine expression of identity for a lot of people. Social media has made countertops aspirational real estate. The appliances sitting on them aren’t invisible anymore, and the industry is only just beginning to catch up to that shift. Concepts like this one feel like someone who understands that change and is designing accordingly, even before the brief exists to demand it.

It’s also worth noting that this kind of work, a concept developed with real brand context and real production sensibility, is increasingly how design culture moves forward. The conversation doesn’t only happen at Milan or in the pages of Wallpaper. It happens on Behance, where a designer in Istanbul can rack up half a million views on a sandwich maker concept and start a conversation that ripples through the industry. That’s genuinely exciting, and more democratizing than most design institutions would like to admit.

The bigger question this concept raises is why we settled for so long. Kitchen appliances are touched multiple times a day. They shape the experience of a space we spend real, meaningful time in. A sandwich maker that someone put thoughtful effort into isn’t a luxury, it’s just respect for the user. And once you see a design that gets it right, the ones that don’t become very difficult to look at.

Sagirosmanoglu’s sandwich maker concept doesn’t solve every problem with small appliance design. But it makes a compelling argument that someone should be trying. Whether or not it ever gets made, that argument is already winning.

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Samsung Just Solved the Biggest Problem with the Galaxy Z Fold 8

Samsung Just Solved the Biggest Problem with the Galaxy Z Fold 8 Close up of the near-invisible crease on the new Samsung foldable phone.

The Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 8 is poised to make a significant impact on the foldable smartphone market, introducing a new feature: a near-invisible crease. This long-anticipated improvement addresses one of the most persistent criticisms of foldable devices, positioning Samsung to compete more effectively with rivals such as the Oppo Find N6. Alongside this innovation, […]

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How One Loop of Bent Wood Became a Complete Chair

Every so often, a piece of furniture stops you the way a good sentence does. You read it once, then go back and read it again just to understand how it works. The Sori Chair by Portugal’s Teixeira Design Studio is exactly that kind of piece. It started, as the best ideas often do, from a daily ritual of sketching. Not a brief, not a client request, just the quiet, intuitive kind of drawing you do before the day gets loud. And somewhere in that process, a loop took shape that became something worth talking about.

What came out of that ritual is a chair that feels completely resolved. A single, continuous ribbon of bent wood loops upward from the seat to form the double-ply backrest, open at the center like a hollow frame, and the contrast it creates against the chair’s firmly geometric base is fully intentional. Below that fluid loop, the structure is all right angles and clean planes, held together by a cross-shaped base that looks as if it was drawn with a ruler and a very steady hand. That tension between the organic and the architectural is where the Sori Chair lives, and it’s a genuinely compelling place to be.

Designer: Teixeira Design Studio

The technical side of this piece deserves more attention than it usually gets in design coverage. That backrest loop doesn’t just sit on top of the seat. It rises through it, emerging from a precise cutout with the kind of considered joinery that takes real craft to execute. The layered plywood edges are fully exposed throughout, and rather than hiding them, the design leans into them. You can see the pale strata of wood at every bend, every curve, every corner. It reads as an honest material and an honest process, and that matters more now than it perhaps ever has. In an era where furniture is increasingly flat-packed and finish-wrapped, a chair that shows you exactly how it was made feels almost countercultural.

The name is worth pausing on. Sori is a Japanese word for the natural curvature or warp of wood, the subtle bow that timber develops over time or when shaped under heat and pressure. Whether the studio intended that specific reference or landed on it instinctively, naming the chair after that particular quality of the material says something about how this work is approached: not as a battle against the material’s limits, but as a genuine conversation with them.

Teixeira Design Studio, based in Viana do Castelo in northern Portugal, has built a portfolio that consistently returns to this idea of using plywood and bent wood to find new formal possibilities. Earlier pieces like the Void Chair explored how a single sheet of plywood could fold into a form that contained seating and hidden storage simultaneously. With Sori, the focus narrows considerably. No secondary function, no added utility. Just the pursuit of one fluid, structural gesture, executed as cleanly as it possibly can be.

That restraint is what gives the chair its real weight. Designers who know how to do more but choose to do less are often the most interesting ones to follow, and Sori feels like a quiet, confident declaration of that philosophy. Every angle you approach it from reveals something new. From the front, it reads almost architectural, like a small building with an open courtyard. From the side, the loop of the backrest curls inward like a wave at the moment before it breaks. From above, the cutout in the seat and the twin arcs of the backrest create a composition that could hold its own as a flat drawing.

Good design holds up under scrutiny. It doesn’t just photograph well and vanish once you look too closely. The Sori Chair gets richer the longer you sit with it, and that, more than anything else, is the standard worth measuring any piece of furniture against.

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Why Creators Are Switching to Google Omni for AI Video Editing

Why Creators Are Switching to Google Omni for AI Video Editing A multi-scene video generated using the Google Omni Flash model.

Google Omni is a platform developed by Google to streamline video creation by integrating text, images, audio and video into a unified workflow. According to AI Grid, one notable feature is the Omni Flash model, which enables automatic camera angle adjustments across multiple scenes. This feature reduces the need for manual editing, making it a […]

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Early iPhone 18 Leaks Point to One Major Design Flaw

Early iPhone 18 Leaks Point to One Major Design Flaw iPhone 18

Apple is making a significant shift in its product strategy by delaying the release of the standard iPhone 18 until 2027. Instead, the company is focusing on its premium models, including the iPhone 18 Pro and its first-ever foldable device, the iPhone Ultra. This strategic pivot signals a departure from Apple’s traditional approach, presenting both […]

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