A Jewelry Artist Just Turned a 50-Cent Coin Into a World Cup Ball

The 2026 FIFA World Cup is already one of the most logistically ambitious tournaments in the sport’s history. Three host nations. Forty-eight teams. One official ball. And now, one very tiny, very gorgeous golden replica made from spare change.

Jewelry artist Soroush JWL recently released a video documenting his process of turning 50-cent Euro coins into a miniature version of the Trionda, Adidas’ official match ball for the 2026 FIFA World Cup. The result is exactly as compelling as it sounds: a palm-sized golden sphere that perfectly mirrors the Trionda’s distinctive flowing panel pattern. It shouldn’t work as well as it does, but it does.

Designer: Soroush JWL

For those not yet deep in the World Cup rabbit hole, the Trionda is a ball worth knowing. Adidas unveiled it in October 2025, and its design carries real intention behind it. The name nods to the three host nations (Canada, Mexico, and the United States), while the curving four-panel form was inspired by “la ola,” the wave. It actually holds a small record: with only four panels, it’s the fewest a FIFA World Cup ball has ever used. Each panel carries iconography tied to a host country. A maple leaf for Canada. An eagle for Mexico. A star for the United States. The craftsmanship baked into the original ball already had layers of meaning long before Soroush got near it with his tools.

Which is probably part of what makes his replica so satisfying to watch take shape. He splits the coins down the middle, hammers each half into a custom mold, solders the halves together into a sphere, and then begins the painstaking work of hand-carving the Trionda’s twisting surface pattern directly into the metal. No CNC machine. No shortcuts. Just hands, tools, and a very deliberate commitment to getting every curve right.

I have a lot of appreciation for this kind of project because it does two things at once. It is a genuine craft exercise, the kind that demands patience and precision without any automated assist. And it is also a design exercise in disguise. To carve a pattern convincingly, you first have to understand it completely. Soroush had to deconstruct the Trionda’s geometry before he could reconstruct it at a fraction of its size. That level of attention to an object most people only interact with as background detail during a broadcast is, by itself, a kind of tribute.

Soroush JWL has built a following on exactly this kind of work. Previous projects have included a ring engineered to unfold into a bracelet through a series of interconnected scissor mechanisms, a miniature Aladdin’s lamp, and a bolt transformed into a sword. The common thread across all of it is a delight in transformation and an insistence on doing it by hand. His YouTube channel has grown to over 123,000 subscribers, and it is easy to understand why. Watching raw metal become something recognizable, even beautiful, hits a very specific satisfaction center in the brain that almost nothing else does.

More than the craftsmanship, though, it is the timing that makes this feel significant. The World Cup is one of those rare events that genuinely pauses the world for a few weeks and creates objects that carry collective memory. Jerseys. Stickers. Posters. The balls themselves. Soroush took one of those objects and translated it into something permanent and personal, a keepsake that will outlast the tournament by decades.

There is also something quietly ironic about the material choice. The Trionda is engineered for elite play, designed to perform under the highest standards of precision and durability on the world’s biggest stage. Soroush’s version will never see a pitch. It will sit in someone’s hand, catch the light, and make whoever holds it think about what it represents. In some ways, that is its own kind of performance. The World Cup is a design event as much as it is a sporting one. Soroush JWL just made a tiny, golden argument for that point.

The post A Jewelry Artist Just Turned a 50-Cent Coin Into a World Cup Ball first appeared on Yanko Design.

8 Camping Gadgets So Beautifully Designed, You’ll Wonder Why Every Campsite Doesn’t Come With Them

The gap between what camping gear looks like in product photos and what it actually does at a campsite used to be wide enough to drive a truck through. That gap has quietly closed. The category has produced a generation of objects built around a single idea: that equipment you trust with your weekend shouldn’t look like it was designed by someone who has never spent a night outdoors.

This list covers everything a serious campsite demands — shelter, fire, cooking, light, power, water, and the tools that keep everything running between them. Eight products, each with a specific design argument behind it. Some are from the YD Shop. Others earned their place through the blog. All of them pass the test that matters most: you pack them once and never pull them back out of the kit bag.

1. Retrowave 7-in-1 Radio

The Retrowave earns its place in a camping kit through an argument that has nothing to do with aesthetics, even if the aesthetics are genuinely good. A tactile tuning dial, compact body, and warm visual language borrowed from classic Japanese radio design make it an object worth displaying on a shelf. What it’s actually doing is more pragmatic: running AM, FM, and shortwave without an app, streaming via Bluetooth when connectivity holds, and charging via solar panel and hand-crank when it doesn’t.

The SOS alarm and built-in flashlight sit quietly in the background, present without demanding attention on a trip where everything goes smoothly, decisive when it doesn’t. Smart speakers go silent when Wi-Fi drops. Earbuds die at the wrong moment. Phones drain precisely when you need them most. The Retrowave doesn’t ping you or demand perfect conditions. It plays, charges, and illuminates across seven functions without asking for seven different charging cables.

Click Here to Buy Now: $89.00

What we like

  • Seven functions in a single body remove the need to carry and manage multiple separate items
  • Solar and hand-crank charging keep it fully functional off-grid with no outlets required

What we dislike

  • The retro aesthetic may read as decorative to buyers who haven’t yet used it in an actual off-grid context
  • Shortwave reception quality varies depending on geographic location and surrounding terrain

2. Haven Spectre Ultralight Hammock Tent

Every experienced hammock camper knows the problem but rarely admits it out loud: traditional hammocks fold your body into a shape that doesn’t encourage real sleep. The Haven Spectre addresses this with a flat-lay design that keeps your spine aligned and your night predictable. For anyone who has tried and quietly abandoned hammock camping after a single uncomfortable night, this is the version worth revisiting. Featherlight without feeling compromised, built from years of field-tested feedback, and light enough to disappear into a pack you’re already carrying.

What separates the Spectre from its predecessors is the thinking behind how a person actually sleeps in the field. The integrated structure holds its form without demanding constant readjustment through the night. String it up, get in, and it works. For long-distance hikers and weekend backpackers alike, that reliability reduces the cognitive load of a night outdoors. Less time fussing with rigging means more energy for the trail ahead, which is exactly the trade-off a well-designed piece of kit should make for you.

What we like

  • Flat-lay sleeping position solves the banana-curve problem that makes traditional hammocks genuinely uncomfortable for full nights
  • Years of customer-driven refinement make this Haven’s most polished and advanced version to date

What we dislike

  • Requires trees at the right spacing and height, which limits viable campsite choices in open terrain
  • Premium price point puts it out of reach for casual campers who might only use it a handful of times a year

3. Portable Fire Pit Stand

The fire pit category is full of oversized objects that need a truck bed and a second person. The Portable Fire Pit Stand sidesteps this entirely. Prototype sheet metal technology precision-cuts black steel plates that resist warping and distortion under sustained heat. It assembles without tools, folds flat when packed, and holds the kind of campfire that earns its place as both a functional heat source and the visual anchor of any campsite worth sitting around for more than ten minutes.

What separates this from a standard fire ring is the stand’s insistence on being a proper object rather than functional hardware. The black steel finish works against any outdoor backdrop, and the construction doesn’t bow or deform the way cheaper alternatives do after their third use. It elevates the fire off the ground, making it workable on sensitive surfaces and at campgrounds where ground fires are restricted. The kind of gear that moves from situational purchase to permanent kit after the first night out.

Click Here to Buy Now: $119.00

What we like

  • Heat-resistant sheet metal resists warping through repeated use across multiple camping seasons
  • Elevates fire off the ground for sensitive surfaces and sites where open ground fires are restricted

What we dislike

  • Steel construction adds more weight than ultralight fire alternatives for backpackers counting grams
  • No integrated grill grate included, which requires a separate purchase

4. Camprit TiStove

Five flat pieces of Grade 5 titanium. Two foldable legs and three interchangeable cooking panels that pack completely flat and come in under 1.5 pounds. Camprit’s insight was direct: most camp stoves lock you into a single cooking method. The TiStove gives you three, with panels that reconfigure for boiling, grilling, or open-fire cooking. The extra panels double as a windshield. As heat is applied over time, titanium changes color naturally, marking each stove with its own accumulated cooking history.

The beauty of the TiStove is in what it removes. There’s no ignition system to fail at altitude, no gas canister threading to seize in the cold, no assembly logic that requires a manual at a campsite in the dark. The pieces lock together mechanically without fasteners and disassemble in seconds. Compatible with any fuel source — wood, gas burner, alcohol — it stays genuinely adaptable to wherever the trip leads. For anyone who has stood over a failed stove in the cold, this addresses the problem at its root.

What we like

  • Packs completely flat at under 1.5 lbs with three interchangeable cooking panel configurations
  • Compatible with any fuel source including wood, gas, and alcohol with no dependency on a single system

What we dislike

  • Requires a separate burner or fuel source, as nothing is self-contained out of the box
  • Titanium panels need careful packing to avoid scratching against each other in transit

5. Blavor Power Station + Camping Lantern

Most portable power stations look like they were designed by someone who has never spent a night outdoors. The Blavor sidesteps that problem by building a camping lantern into the form factor from the start. The result is a device barely bigger than a tall water bottle that functions as both a light source and a five-pathway charging hub, covering solar, AC, car adapter, USB-C, and micro USB, with a digital display that keeps battery status visible without any guesswork in the field.

The real value here is how naturally the two functions coexist. When the lantern is on, the power bank is right there. When you’re charging your phone overnight, the ambient glow does quiet work inside the tent without needing a separate light source. It doesn’t ask you to choose between illuminating your site and keeping your devices alive. For campers who have always carried a separate lantern and a separate battery pack, the consolidation alone justifies the purchase before the first trip is even planned.

What we like

  • Five charging pathways give it a flexibility that most single-use power banks simply can’t match across different environments
  • Lantern and power station coexist without compromising each other — the dual function feels designed in, not bolted on

What we dislike

  • Battery capacity may leave multi-day off-grid users reaching for supplemental charging sooner than expected
  • The cylindrical form can be slightly awkward to pack flush alongside flat gear in a structured bag

6. NoxTi Tritium Keychain

A 45mm CNC-machined Grade 5 titanium cylinder weighing 10.7 grams. The NoxTi carries a tritium vial inside a precision quartz tube with 92% light transmission and glows continuously for 25 years through pure radioactive decay. No switch. No battery. No charging. Tritium is a hydrogen isotope whose beta particle decay strikes a phosphor coating and produces light as a straightforward byproduct of existing. The process requires nothing from you and stops for nothing around you.

At a campsite, the NoxTi earns its keep in the dark. It marks your keys at the bottom of a bag, identifies your tent entrance without hunting for a torch, and stays visible at the bedside through a full night without being asked to. The ceramic-tipped glass breaker at the tail end adds genuine emergency utility. The titanium body is fully serviceable — when the vial dims after two decades, you press the old tube out and slide a new one in. Six glow colors are available, including Apple Green for maximum visibility and Red for night-vision preservation.

What we like

  • 25-year continuous glow powered entirely by physics with no battery, no charging, and no failure point
  • Fully user-serviceable titanium body becomes a platform you keep and swap cores into indefinitely

What we dislike

  • Glow output is intentionally faint — it marks and locates but does not illuminate
  • The tritium light source requires some buyer education before the value proposition fully lands

7. 8-in-1 EDC Scissors

Eight functions in a scissors form that actually makes sense. The 8-in-1 EDC Scissors consolidate camp tools that typically spread across multiple pouches — cutting, wire stripping, can opening, bottle opening, and more — into one compact unit that clears airport security and sits naturally in any carry configuration. The design avoids the bulk penalty that multi-tools typically impose by keeping the scissors form as the organizing principle, with everything else radiating from a familiar object rather than a complex folding mechanism.

The camp use case is straightforward: fewer items in the kit bag, one tool that covers the practical range for a full day at a site. The EDC angle matters here too. These leave the campsite and go into a jacket pocket, daypack, or carry-on without demanding special consideration or a conversation at security. For minimalist packers, replacing scissors, a knife, a bottle opener, and a wire stripper with one object that weighs almost nothing is the kind of design math that earns permanent shelf space well past the camping season.

Click Here to Buy Now: $59.00

What we like

  • Eight functions in a scissors form that passes airport security without issue
  • Small enough for jacket pocket carry well beyond the campsite context

What we dislike

  • The scissors mechanism is not a substitute for a dedicated camp or survival knife
  • Individual tool sizes are necessarily smaller than their standalone counterparts

8. GoSun Flow

Water is camping’s most basic constraint, and the GoSun Flow addresses it at the source. The solar-powered purifier eliminates 99.99% of waterborne pathogens while pumping one liter of clean water per minute from virtually any freshwater source. The system compresses into a backpack, and the flexible faucet clamps to branches, tables, or tailgates, turning any access point into a functional sink. It’s the difference between rationing bottled water and treating the nearest stream as infrastructure worth designing around.

The GoSun Flow doubles as a portable handwashing station and solar-heated shower. The vacuum-insulated solar heater delivers a warm five-minute shower after 30 minutes of sun exposure, which reframes what clean means on a multi-day trip. It runs on USB power when solar isn’t available, and the filter handles up to 1,000 liters before replacement. For anyone who has ever compromised on hygiene to protect pack weight, this removes that trade-off without replacing it with a heavier one.

What we like

  • Purifies 99.99% of pathogens and delivers a solar-heated shower from a single portable system
  • 1,000-litre filter life with USB power backup when solar isn’t available

What we dislike

  • Cannot process saltwater, which limits utility at coastal campsites
  • Multiple components increase the number of parts to manage and potentially misplace in the field

The Gear Caught Up. Now the Excuses Haven’t.

Camping used to ask a simple question: how much discomfort are you willing to trade for time outside? The gear on this list makes that question harder to answer. Not because the outdoors have gone soft, but because the design has finally caught up to what the experience actually demands. A hammock that keeps your spine aligned. A stove that packs flatter than a magazine. A keychain that glows for a quarter century without a single battery.

The consistent thread across all eight is that none require specialist knowledge, a lengthy setup window, or conditions that only exist on a perfect summer evening. Each removes a specific friction point that camping used to accept as part of the deal. Pack these, and the question embedded in this headline becomes something you’ll need a quiet moment actually to think through.

The post 8 Camping Gadgets So Beautifully Designed, You’ll Wonder Why Every Campsite Doesn’t Come With Them first appeared on Yanko Design.

Its Time to Ditch Windows for Valve’s Lightweight SteamOS Gaming Platform

Its Time to Ditch Windows for Valve’s Lightweight SteamOS Gaming Platform The official Steam OS interface running on a desktop gaming PC.

SteamOS, a Linux-based operating system developed by Valve, is emerging as a compelling alternative to Windows for gamers. Designed specifically for gaming, it eliminates much of the overhead associated with traditional operating systems, offering a lightweight and efficient platform. Deck Ready explores how SteamOS shines on AMD hardware, such as Ryzen CPUs and Radeon GPUs, […]

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iOS 26 vs iOS 27: Should You Update Your iPhone 14?

iOS 26 vs iOS 27: Should You Update Your iPhone 14? Side by side comparison of iPhone 14 running iOS 26 and iOS 27

Apple’s iOS 27 builds upon the solid foundation of iOS 26, introducing a series of performance enhancements and compatibility updates aimed at refining the user experience. From faster app launches to significantly improved AirDrop transfer speeds, iOS 27 focuses on optimizing everyday interactions. While the changes may appear subtle on the iPhone 14, the update […]

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