Many of us would remember the New Balance Niobium Concept 1. Launched back in 2020, the modular silhouette really reformed outdoor footwear with its multi-functional design, which allowed it to be used in more than one way. Of course, many brands have been approaching modular footwear design with the idea of a circular economy in mind, where the shoe can be taken apart for recycling convenience. However, New Balance’s approach is different.
It is working on a pair of shoes that can actually pull off not two but at least three different purposes. This was substantiated by the Niobium Concept 1, which is now flowing as inspiration into the newly launched New Balance TDS MSNB1, which offers similar capabilities but in a new form and colors.
A bold intersection of craftsmanship, innovation, and functionality, the TDS MSNB1 is a revival of the Niobium Concept 1, pulled off in partnership by New Balance and Tokyo Design Studio Revive. The remarkable New Balance adaptability of the silhouette is retained with the addition of Tokyo Design Studio’s signature lifestyle aesthetics to form this shoe that changes shape in “three distinct stages of wear.” It can be worn as a rugged waterproof boot and become a functional outdoor mule when required. When you finally retire to the cozy comforts of the camp, it can also be used as a comfortable indoor slipper.
The modular nature of the TDS MSNB1 is ensured by the use of a specialized system of zippers that run down the tongue and around the heel. These zippers allow the wearer to easily assemble or disassemble the shoe’s components according to the activity or the time of day.
New Balance TDS MSNB1 modular silhouette is available in two colorways. While the TDS MSNB1 Zinc Blue is somewhere close to the tested territories, the Pistachio Butter colorway – in a muted yellow-green – is more enticing and distinct. Both the versatile shoes share the same design language. They comprise a stretch rip-stop upper, a neoprene collar, and welded PU overlays. The tongue is devoid of usual laces and features bungee elastic laces inside, while a zipper runs down the side of the tongue and around the heel.
For its durability as a camping boot, it features an eVent waterproof membrane and a rubber outsole for comfort. Since the design and functionality remain the same, your choice of color is what can make the difference between the two new offerings. You can make up your mind now. The New Balance TDS MSNB1 in both colorways is available starting today, July 2, with each costing $300.
Most furniture with a sustainability story asks you to make a trade. You sacrifice the aesthetics for the ethics, and you call it a choice well made. The RE-UP Side Table by Thai design studio TAKEHOMEDESIGN is quietly rewriting that agreement. It is not asking you to settle. It is asking you to look at a food delivery container and actually see something beautiful. That is a harder ask than it sounds.
TAKEHOMEDESIGN, founded by designer Paphop Wongpanich and based in Bangkok, has been producing furniture that blends Thai craftsmanship with a globally informed design sensibility for over a decade. The RE-UP collection is the studio’s most pointed statement yet. The bases of these side tables are made entirely from moulded plastic waste, sourced from two material streams: polycarbonate from industrial sources, and post-consumer polypropylene pulled from food packaging and delivery containers. Thailand generates more than 2 million tons of plastic waste annually, and a significant portion of that comes from exactly the kind of single-use containers most of us forget about the moment we toss them out. TAKEHOMEDESIGN is pulling them back.
Designer: TAKEHOMEDESIGN
What makes the RE-UP particularly interesting from a design perspective is how unapologetically honest it is about its materials. The polycarbonate bases carry a frosted glass-like finish that reads as sleek and almost architectural. The polypropylene versions, on the other hand, reveal a visibly shredded texture beneath the surface, and when some of the designs are lit from within with soft internal illumination, that texture catches the light in a way that feels more like art than furniture. It is the kind of detail you would notice and then have to explain to a guest, which I think is exactly the point. Good design should give you something to say.
The tabletops bring a contrasting layer of naturalness. Options include rubberwood shaped using traditional Thai woodworking techniques, recycled UHT milk cartons (yes, really), clear tempered glass, and marble. The rubberwood itself is a byproduct of Thailand’s rubber industry, which means the sustainability thinking extends beyond just the base. For those who want a warmer tone overall, coffee grounds are used to tint the base in a mocha finish, which is either a very clever material choice or a very good piece of storytelling, possibly both.
I genuinely appreciate when design does not try to hide where it came from. There is a category of sustainable product that scrubs its origin story clean, presenting itself as simply tasteful and letting the eco credentials live quietly in a footnote. RE-UP is the opposite of that. The process is the product. The texture of the shredded plastic, the slight translucency of the base, the warm unevenness that tells you this did not come from a conventional mold. These are not flaws being forgiven. They are the design.
The collection won the BIG SEE Product Design Award 2026 in the Furniture for Living Spaces category, a European design recognition that signals this work is resonating well beyond its home market. TAKEHOMEDESIGN has also shown at the HD Expo in Las Vegas, which suggests the studio is thinking seriously about hospitality and commercial interiors alongside the residential buyer. It is the kind of traction that tends to follow studios that say something real with their work.
The RE-UP also extends into pendant lights and coffee tables, so it is not a singular statement piece floating in isolation. It is a liveable system, and that matters. A design philosophy only scales when you can actually build a room around it. For something born from a takeout container, it holds up remarkably well.
Picture a payphone. Not a sleek, reimagined version, just an actual, beat-up Telefónica booth, the kind you might walk past on a Barcelona street without a second glance. Except this one is overtaken by moss. And if you pick up the handset, the Earth answers.
That’s the premise of 2147: A Voice from the Future, an interactive installation by Cris Olmedo of Divina Machina, the digital art branch of creative innovation studio QS Ventures. The piece was presented at Sónar+D, set against the medieval backdrop of the Llotja de Mar in Barcelona. That pairing alone says something: one of the oldest commercial buildings in the city, hosting an open-ended conversation with an AI that speaks on behalf of a future planet.
The concept is disarmingly simple. You pick up the handset. The AI, voiced through an ElevenLabs system and powered by a Raspberry Pi 5 tucked inside the original booth, responds in real time as a fictional representation of the Earth. No scripts, no predefined dialogue paths, no multiple-choice menus. You take the conversation wherever you want, whether that’s climate, survival, memory, or grief. The Earth, imagined 121 years from now, has things to say. Whether you do is another matter.
What makes this work is the object itself. Olmedo didn’t design something new and purposefully futuristic. The booth kept its original Telefónica structure, its original signage, its unmistakably analog bones. Only what’s hidden inside changed. The moss slowly consuming the exterior reads like nature quietly reclaiming something that people gave up on. That tension between the obsolete and the alive does a lot of the emotional heavy lifting here, and it’s a smarter choice than any glowing interface could have been.
We tend to think of design as a forward-moving discipline, always chasing newer, faster, more capable. But 2147 asks a different question: what happens when you take something we’ve already discarded and give it a new reason to exist? The payphone is a perfect vessel for that question, precisely because it was once the most public, most democratic form of long-distance communication we had. You didn’t need an account, a plan, or a device you owned outright. Just a coin and a number to dial.
Now that infrastructure is largely gone. Olmedo took what’s left of it and filled it with something else entirely. That’s not just clever art direction. It’s a genuinely pointed observation about how we build things, discard them, and eventually recognize that the shell still has something to offer. The fact that this installation lives inside an actual retired Telefónica booth, rather than a replica, matters more than it might seem.
The year 2147 gives me pause, in the best way. It’s far enough to feel like science fiction, but close enough to feel like a countdown. It’s the kind of temporal framing that shakes you out of the comfortable haze of “we’ll deal with it later.” The Earth speaking through this installation isn’t a distant abstraction. It’s speaking through a receiver you’ve held before, in a language you already understand, about problems you’ve already heard about.
The moss is the detail I can’t stop thinking about. It reads as both beautiful and quietly alarming, the natural world slowly spreading over a structure that once represented human connection. As if the planet didn’t wait for us to sort things out. It also turns a mundane artifact into something you actually want to stop and stare at, which is half the job of any good installation. It communicates instantly and without explanation, which is exactly what good design is supposed to do.
2147: A Voice from the Future earns its concept. It’s not a payphone with AI bolted on. It’s a meditation on time, obsolescence, and the conversations we keep putting off. And the most compelling thing about it is that it asks you to start one, right now, handset in hand, with a planet that’s been waiting for you to pick up.
Summer EDC is its own design problem. The gear that carries you through a weekend trail needs to survive a Monday morning without looking like it arrived from a military surplus store. This year’s best picks live at exactly that intersection, considered enough to sit on an office desk and functional enough to earn their place on a trail. Eight products made the cut. Each one earns its pocket space in both contexts, not just one.
What separates a good EDC from a great one is the moment you stop noticing it. The knife that disappears into your pocket. The wallet that does not reshape the line of a jacket. The light that fits your hand like it was made for it. These eight reach that standard across a range of price points, from $23 at entry to the premium tier above it. Some are tools. One is a radio.
1. Olight Baton 4 Premium Edition
The Baton 4 Premium Edition is Olight’s flagship carry light, and the Premium designation earns its descriptor. The finish options, stainless and copper variants in particular, read as desk objects as readily as trail tools, which is precisely the quality that the outdoor-to-office carry problem demands. It is a flashlight that does not embarrass itself next to a good watch. That sounds like a small thing. In practice, it shapes what you are willing to carry on any given day.
For summer specifically, the Baton 4 gives you dependable illumination for the moments when daylight runs out faster than expected. A trail that looked like two hours takes three. A parking structure at midnight after a late client dinner. The light handles both without ceremony. The Premium Edition’s build quality means it lives in a pocket indefinitely without scratching or corroding, which matters in a season where salt air, sweat, and sunscreen are routine rather than occasional hazards.
What we like:
Premium finish variants look considered rather than tactical in a professional or social setting
Build quality holds up to the summer conditions that compromise less serious carry lights
What we dislike:
Premium Edition pricing sits at the higher end of what most people budget for a pocket light
The charging method may feel dated alongside newer competitors with cable-free options
3. KeyUnity KK08 Titanium Carabiner Knife
A carabiner is already something you carry. KeyUnity’s KK08 decided it should also be a knife. The single-piece titanium body clips onto a bag strap, belt loop, or backpack zipper the way any carabiner does, and the 7Cr17Mov steel blade lives inside without adding visible bulk. At $23, it is one of the most quietly intelligent EDC buys of the year, the kind of object you show people once and watch them immediately want one for themselves.
The case for carrying the KK08 is simple. You likely already have a carabiner somewhere on your person in summer, holding a water bottle to your bag or keeping keys organized. This replaces it without changing a single habit, and adds a blade you will reach for more often than you expect. The titanium body is light enough to forget it is there, and durable enough that forgetting it entirely is not a concern worth having.
What we like:
$23 price point makes it the most accessible titanium EDC on this list
The hidden blade design clips anywhere without announcing itself as a knife
What we dislike:
Blade size suits light tasks better than heavy cutting work
Carabiner gate is functional rather than load-rated for technical use
3. Fantom X Wallet
Most wallets are storage solutions dressed up as accessories. The Fantom X is closer to the other way around. The slim card carrier strips the wallet back to its core job and does it in a chassis thinner than most of what it replaces. It fits a front pocket cleanly, does not print through fabric, and does not build up the kind of bulk that quietly ruins the line of a pair of trousers across a long day. That restraint is the whole design argument.
Carrying a better wallet sounds like a minor upgrade until you spend a full day without sitting on a thick fold of leather and accumulated receipts. The Fantom X removes that discomfort. It keeps your most-used cards accessible without requiring you to excavate the whole thing, and its design reads as considered rather than tactical. That means it works as well on a restaurant table as it does clipped to trail gear, a small object that quietly changes how the day feels.
What we like:
Genuinely slim profile disappears into a front pocket without printing or pulling
Design aesthetic reads as refined rather than overtly gear-oriented in professional settings
What we dislike:
Limited capacity for those who carry cash regularly alongside cards
Fixed form means you cannot expand it as your card count grows over time
4. 8-in-1 EDC Scissors
Scissors are the EDC tool nobody thinks about until they need them, which turns out to be more often than expected. The 8-in-1 version addresses that by folding eight functions into a form that packs flat and opens in a single motion. It covers the utility tasks that multitools handle clumsily and dedicated scissors handle without any additional capability. For summer specifically, the use cases stack up faster than most carry lists would predict.
The honest case for scissors in your EDC is that cutting tasks come in more varieties than a knife can handle gracefully. Opening packaging cleanly before a client delivery. Trimming a loose thread from a collar before a meeting. Cutting the cord to length at a campsite without tearing it. The 8-in-1 handles all of that and brings enough additional tools that it earns its pocket space even on days you do not reach for it a single time.
Eight functions in a form factor that most people will actually carry consistently
Flat pack profile means it does not compete with other tools for pocket space
What we dislike:
Scissors remain the tool people most reliably forget to pack until they need them
The multi-function format means none of the eight tools reaches specialist-grade performance
5. Pockitrod Multitool Pen
The Pockitrod resolves the oldest argument in EDC. You need a pen. You also need a multitool. You do not need to carry both as separate objects. The design organizes a central driver assembly inside the pen body with modular additions, including a box opener and pry bar, that attach as the situation calls for them. In pen form, it sits in a shirt pocket without the weight that makes most multitools feel like a deliberate choice rather than a habit.
The office-to-outdoor transition is where the Pockitrod earns its place on this list. You write with it in a meeting, tighten a loose screw on a camp chair in the evening, and open a box with it the following morning without changing what is in your pocket. That continuity of carry is the entire point of a well-chosen EDC, and the Pockitrod reaches it without asking you to compromise the pen or the tool to get there.
What we like:
Pen format earns legitimacy in professional settings where most multitools do not belong
A modular system means you carry exactly what you need, rather than a fixed tool set
What we dislike:
Writing experience is functional rather than exceptional for those particular about pens
Modular attachments are additional small pieces that can be tracked and potentially misplaced
6. Anywhere Use Lamp
The Anywhere Use Lamp earns its name by refusing to be precious about where it sits. It moves from a bedside table on a Sunday morning to a picnic blanket on a Saturday evening without requiring you to adapt your behavior to suit it. For a summer, carry these matters more than raw output figures do. The best portable light is the one you actually bring with you, and the Anywhere Use Lamp is designed precisely to be that light.
Ambient lighting is the EDC category most people overlook until they are squinting over a campsite table or apologizing to a companion for the harsh overhead light in a hotel room. This lamp gives you control over that without adding meaningful weight or a complicated setup. It is one of the few items on this list your non-EDC friends will pause over and ask about, which is either a bonus or a signal that you need different friends.
Portable form factor transitions between outdoor and indoor settings without adjustment
Aesthetic reads as a design object rather than camping equipment in a professional space
What we dislike:
Ambient output supplements existing light rather than replacing it in demanding conditions
Best suited as a mood or task light rather than a primary illumination source in the field
7. MetMo Pocket Grip
The MetMo Pocket Grip started as a 113-year-old patent that nobody had properly built until MetMo did. The result is a precision grip multi-tool measuring 95.5mm by 45.5mm that disappears into a front pocket alongside a phone. The mechanism is the interesting part: Victorian-era engineering applied to a current material palette, which gives it a tactile quality that most modern multitools, machined to tight tolerances with no analog history behind them, tend to lack entirely.
Carrying the Pocket Grip changes what you notice. Bolts that need tightening. Mechanisms that need adjusting. The tool gives you confidence to engage with the physical world in a way that most EDCs do not, because most EDCs prepare for emergencies rather than enabling daily interaction. The fact that it looks like something a craftsman from 1913 would recognize is not nostalgia. It is just good design, proven and re-proven across a century of people finding it useful.
What we like:
The design origin story gives it a depth of character that most modern multitools cannot replicate
95.5mm by 45.5mm footprint fits a front pocket without competing with a phone for space
What we dislike:
The patented mechanism takes a few uses to feel fully intuitive in the hand
Precision grip application makes it more specialized than a general-purpose multitool
8. Retrowave 7-in-1 Radio
The Retrowave Radio is the personality piece on this list, and it earns that role without apology. The 7-in-1 build integrates radio functions with a 2000mAh power bank, giving it enough practical utility to justify the carry, while the design does the heavier cultural work. It looks like something that belongs on a vintage shelf and behaves like something you actually use. Every good summer EDC has room for one object that makes people stop and ask what it is.
The 2000mAh capacity will not charge a dead phone from zero, but it will extend a phone running low at the end of a long outdoor afternoon, which is the use case that matters. Beyond that, the radio function gives you off-grid audio without relying on a Bluetooth connection or a streaming service, both of which assume infrastructure that trails and campsites do not always provide. For summer carry, that independence is worth more than a spec sheet suggests.
7-in-1 functionality earns pocket space well beyond the novelty of its visual appeal
Off-grid radio works without the infrastructure that digital audio streaming depends on
What we dislike:
2000mAh capacity offers an emergency top-up rather than a full charge from a depleted battery
The retro design aesthetic is a deliberate choice that does not suit every carry style
The Only EDC Rule That Matters: Carry What You’ll Actually Use
The best summer EDC is not the most capable set of tools you can assemble. It is the one you actually carry. These eight cover the categories that matter across a season, moving between trails and offices, without asking you to rethink your pockets every morning. Each earns its place on its own terms. Together they build a carry that handles whatever summer asks, from the practical to the unexpected, without demanding you plan for every possibility in advance.
The price range here is deliberately wide, from $23 at entry to the premium tier above it. That spread is intentional. Good EDC does not require spending aggressively across the board. Pick the three or four that match your summer honestly, carry them until they become a habit, and let the others follow when the season calls for them. The goal is a carry that disappears into your day rather than one that announces it.
Rogbid has introduced the VisionPro AI smart glasses, an innovative wearable designed to seamlessly integrate advanced technology into your daily routine. These glasses combine a high-definition camera, sophisticated artificial intelligence (AI), and a thoughtfully crafted design to enhance various aspects of life, including communication, learning and entertainment. Whether you’re capturing precious moments, navigating unfamiliar environments, […]