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A Designer Just Turned His Memories Into Chairs You Can Sit In

The chair is probably the most taken-for-granted object in any room. You pull one out, you sit, you get up and push it back in. That’s the full extent of the relationship most of us have with it, a transaction so unremarkable it barely registers. So when a designer decides to treat the chair as a kind of autobiography, carved out of wood and layered with personal memory, it forces you to rethink that entire casual dynamic in a way that feels both unexpected and long overdue.
Chilean designer Camilo Huinca, who works under the studio name ONLYJOKE, has built a collection of sculptural wooden chairs that are less about sitting and more about telling. Titled Personal Histories, the work transforms familiar furniture forms into autobiographical portraits. Faces emerge from backrests. Figures are carved directly into seats and tabletops. Painted motifs trace emotional landscapes into the grain of the wood itself. These aren’t decorative touches you might overlook at first glance and appreciate later. They’re the whole point, present and insistent from the moment the piece comes into view.
Designer: Camilo Huinca


What Huinca is doing feels significant because furniture has long occupied this uncomfortable middle ground between design and art, never quite allowed to be taken seriously as either. Functional objects are expected to serve a purpose without demanding interpretation. Huinca rejects that, quietly but firmly. Each chair in Personal Histories carries a title with real weight: Rider on a Broken Horse, Partes Rotas (Broken Parts), Confluencia. These aren’t whimsical names assigned after the fact. They’re structural to the work itself, the same way a painting’s title can shift how you experience everything inside the frame. You come to each piece already oriented.


The material choice matters here, too. Wood carries time in a way that metal or plastic simply doesn’t. You can feel the decisions made in it, the places where the carver lingered and the places where they moved fast. Huinca draws on memories of summers spent in rural Chillán, Chile, and that rootedness in a specific place and biography gives the pieces an authenticity that’s hard to manufacture. The apple-shaped sculpture sitting atop one of his benches, the carved motifs, the exposed hardware, the layered paint: none of it reads as arbitrary. It reads as accumulated, like a life condensed into joints and grain and surface.



The chairs are also built through a modular system that allows them to be assembled and disassembled, which becomes more interesting when you consider how memory itself works. Nothing is permanently fixed. What you carry from your past doesn’t stay the same shape forever, and the fact that this furniture can be taken apart and reassembled feels less like a practical design consideration and more like a philosophical statement embedded quietly into the construction.


The inevitable question is about function. Can you actually sit in them? I’d like to think so, because the idea of using a piece of furniture that was carved from someone else’s grief or joy or the heat of a rural Chilean summer introduces an intimacy that most objects never manage to create. You wouldn’t just be in a room with the work. You’d be in direct contact with it, which is a different thing entirely.


The debate over whether furniture belongs in the gallery or in the home has been going on for decades. Designers like Ron Arad, Studio Job, and Nacho Carbonell have all pushed at that boundary in their own ways. But Huinca’s contribution feels distinct because the storytelling is so specific and so grounded in personal biography rather than formal experimentation. This isn’t furniture that gestures broadly toward concept. It’s furniture that insists on autobiography, that makes the personal structural and the structural unmistakably personal.


You walk away from Personal Histories with the nagging sense that every chair you’ve ever owned has been holding out on you. That the objects we press our bodies against daily could have been carrying so much more all along, and we simply never thought to ask.

The post A Designer Just Turned His Memories Into Chairs You Can Sit In first appeared on Yanko Design.
This BlackBerry Cyberdeck Brings Back the QWERTY Keyboard, Powered by an old Intel Compute Stick

Everyone has a drawer somewhere with a dead BlackBerry sitting at the bottom of it, wedged between a tangle of old chargers and a phone you swore you’d sell on eBay someday. Most of those BlackBerrys are never coming back to life, the batteries swollen and the software hopelessly outdated, fit only for nostalgia and the occasional TikTok unboxing. One Reddit user looked at that drawer of dead phones and saw raw material instead of trash. Rather than reviving an old BlackBerry as a phone, they ripped out just the keyboard and gave it an entirely new life and purpose. What came out the other end looks like a BlackBerry, types like a BlackBerry, and yet runs on hardware that has nothing to do with phones at all.
The build, posted by a Redditor going by thetechdoc, is currently named the blackberry cyberdeck while the comments section argues over something catchier. In place of a BlackBerry’s actual phone parts, the keyboard now sits on top of a tiny stick computer, the same kind of gadget people used to plug into a TV’s HDMI port to stream movies. It runs on a homemade power setup too, combining a charging circuit pulled from a phone charger with a battery salvaged from an old Android handheld, enough for about six hours of video so far. Everything is wrapped in a 3D printed shell that’s currently mint green, with a matte black version planned once the fit is finalized. There’s even talk of giving away the design for free, so anyone with a 3D printer and a soldering iron could build their own slice of BlackBerry nostalgia.
Designer: thetechdoc

BlackBerry’s keyboards were built for thumbs, with a slight curve on each key that helps you find letters without looking down. That shape is exactly why this build works, since the keys were already sized for something this small. We’ve covered cases like Clicks that bolt a similar keyboard onto an iPhone, though the phone grows noticeably longer to make room. This build skips that tradeoff by ditching the smartphone entirely and building a new device around just the keyboard. The footprint stays close to the keyboard’s own size, with a small screen stacked directly above it.

The project started as an attempt to retire an aging Palm Tx PDA, mainly for reliable alarms and a calendar. Small Android powered boards turned out to be a dead end, since none of them could properly sleep and wake. A rumored Palm OS port for the tiny Pi Pico chip also came up empty, with no public files anywhere. The fix ended up being an old Intel Compute Stick, a mini PC once meant for the back of a TV. It already has a working power button for sleep and wake, solving the one problem that kept derailing earlier attempts.

Crack the case open and it looks more like a tiny power station than a phone, with a charging board salvaged from a portable charger. A battery pulled from an old Android handheld powers it all, good for around six hours of video so far. A pair of USB ports and an HDMI output line the edge of the case for accessories or a monitor. Even the name is still up for grabs, with suggestions ranging from Deckberry to the slightly unfortunate Dickberry. Color is just as undecided, with the mint green prototype splitting opinion against the matte black finish planned for later.

What you can actually do with it once it’s finished is the more interesting question, since the x86 chip allows a real desktop operating system instead of the cut down mobile interfaces most pocket computers settle for. thetechdoc plans to run CentOS or Fedora as the main system, with an Android x86 build available as a secondary option for app heavy tasks. That means actual desktop software runs natively, browsers, terminal access, file managers, even basic coding tools, rather than a locked down phone interface pretending to be a computer. The original PDA goal of alarms and a calendar still works fine, but now it sits alongside the ability to SSH into a server, edit a document, or use the whole thing as a tiny desktop once it’s plugged into a monitor. What it adds up to is a genuinely useful pocket sized Linux machine that happens to type like a BlackBerry.

thetechdoc has floated releasing the design files for free, undercutting paid BlackBerry keyboard decks like the HackberryPi that sell for around $90 to $125 USD. All it would cost anyone else is a 3D printer, a soldering iron, and some patience. If the final version works, BlackBerry diehards finally have a good reason to dig that old keyboard muscle memory back out of storage.

The post This BlackBerry Cyberdeck Brings Back the QWERTY Keyboard, Powered by an old Intel Compute Stick first appeared on Yanko Design.
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The 5 LEGO Designs of June 2026 That Prove the Brick Has Never Been More Interesting

June has been a remarkable month for LEGO, and not just in the way it usually is. The sets, concepts, and collaborations landing right now feel less like product launches and more like cultural moments. Whether it’s a musician’s legacy cast in brick or a charcuterie spread that somehow makes you hungry, the breadth of creative ambition on display right now is hard to ignore. This is LEGO at its most wide-ranging and most interesting.
From the circuits of Monaco to the golden age of commercial aviation, LEGO is pulling from every corner of culture and giving it the tactile, buildable treatment it deserves. These five designs prove that the brick is still one of the most versatile creative mediums around. Not all of them are official sets, and some are still living on the Ideas platform. Every one of them, though, earned a place on this list by doing something genuinely worth paying attention to.
1. Linkin Park Hybrid Theory LEGO Brickset


There is a generation of people for whom Hybrid Theory wasn’t just a debut album; it was a kind of first language. A LEGO Ideas submission is now marking the record’s 26th anniversary with a freestanding 3D display piece built around the Winged Herald, that iconic soldier in red and white holding a tall red staff before a wall that simply reads “Hybrid Theory.” The recreation captures the album’s layered visual identity in brick form, with raised lettering and bold, graphic geometry throughout.
What makes this design resonate beyond pure nostalgia is how well it functions as a display object independent of any fan loyalty. The layered wings, the structural depth, the interplay between red, white, and gray brickwork all hold up on their own compositional terms. For Linkin Park fans, it’s a shrine. For builders, it’s a satisfying technical exercise that earns its place on a shelf and starts conversations the moment anyone walks into the room.
What we like
- The Winged Herald sculpture is genuinely striking as a standalone piece, with layered wing geometry and raised lettering that shows real structural ambition
- The strong graphic contrast between red, white, and gray gives it the visual punch of the original album artwork without relying on printed tiles
What we dislike
- It’s still an Ideas submission, meaning it needs 10,000 votes before LEGO will consider it for official production
- The concept is niche enough that it may struggle to connect with LEGO fans who don’t already have a relationship with the album
2. LEGO Icons Douglas DC-3 Pan Am Airliner


Few names in aviation carry the kind of romantic weight that Pan Am does. Before the airline folded in 1991, it was the symbol of a particular glamour, the kind where passengers dressed up just to board. The LEGO Icons Douglas DC-3 Pan Am Airliner (11378) channels all of that into a 1,903-piece set released in April 2026, priced at $219.99. Built for adults 18 and up, it’s a love letter to an era of flight that no longer exists but refuses to be forgotten.
The set features removable fuselage panels that reveal a detailed cockpit and passenger cabin complete with an aisle, seating, and four minifigures dressed in late-1950s Pan Am uniforms. A rotating dial deploys and retracts the landing gear, and when the build is done, it sits on a display stand with an information plaque. That’s the kind of centerpiece that earns every inch of shelf space it takes up. For anyone drawn to retro design, aviation history, or beautifully realized objects, this one is difficult to walk past.
What we like
- The retractable landing gear dial adds genuine interactive depth to what is primarily a display piece, making the build feel alive even after it’s finished
- Four minifigures in period-accurate Pan Am uniforms are a considered detail that roots the set firmly in its historical moment
What we dislike
- At $219.99, it’s a significant investment for a set that functions mainly as a display object rather than an active play experience
- The 18+ positioning puts it entirely out of reach for younger builders who might be just as drawn to the aviation history angle
3. LEGO Pokémon SMART Play Training House with Pikachu


LEGO has never built something quite like this before. The LEGO Pokémon SMART Play line, announced on June 2, 2026, introduces the LEGO SMART Brick, a component packed with more than twenty patented world-firsts that makes builds respond to how you play through light, sound, motion, and sensing, all without a screen. The Training House with Pikachu (72164) is the centerpiece of the launch, letting you feed your brick-built Pikachu using a SMART Tag attached to a brick-built sandwich, or train it for battle in ways that actually register and respond.
What separates this from a gimmick is the feedback loop. The SMART Brick responds across multiple inputs: tickle Charizard, and it laughs; offer food with a SMART Tag and Pikachu reacts. The bond between player and build is designed to deepen the more time spent with it, which is a genuinely novel direction for a brand that has long operated in static, display-focused territory. Twelve sets launch across the full range on August 1, 2026, but the Pikachu Training House makes the clearest case for where LEGO play is headed next.
What we like
- Screen-free interactive play powered by the SMART Brick is a genuinely new direction for LEGO, and the technology behind it is ambitious by any measure
- The Pikachu Training House captures the warmth and personality of the franchise without reducing it to a passive display piece
What we dislike
- Sets aren’t available to purchase until August 1, 2026, so the current excitement runs ahead of anything you can actually build right now
- Questions around the SMART Brick’s longevity and repairability over years of play remain unanswered at this stage
4. LEGO Charcuterie Board


A LEGO Ideas submission from June 2, 2026 might be the most pleasantly disarming design of the month. Creator BiologyBuilder built a fully realized charcuterie board across 1,079 pieces, and the results are genuinely convincing. Salami is rendered in dark red round bricks with a salmon-colored plate at the end to show the pink interior of the cured meat. Brie is built from cream-colored round plates and tiles. Cheddar cubes are stacked from 2×2 bricks. It’s food that cannot be eaten and somehow still looks entirely appetizing.
The rest of the board fills out with strawberries, dark chocolate sitting on a napkin beside the fruit, and olives scattered across the spread. It works equally well as a coffee table object or a kitchen shelf accent, something that bridges LEGO’s world with the food and entertaining aesthetic dominating interior design right now. If the Ideas platform does what it should, this one gathers the votes it needs and eventually earns its place on a store shelf where it clearly belongs.
What we like
- The material translations are inventive throughout: dark red round bricks for salami, cream tiles for brie, a napkin detail beneath the chocolate, showing a thorough understanding of LEGO’s parts library
- The concept sits at the intersection of food culture and home décor, giving it appeal well beyond LEGO’s core audience
What we dislike
- As a fan-created submission, it has no guaranteed path to official production, and the Ideas process can stretch across years
- At 1,079 pieces, the likely retail price would be a harder sell for something positioned as a décor object rather than a traditional play set
5. McLaren F1 1000th Race LEGO Helmet Sets
For McLaren’s 1,000th Formula 1 race, the team didn’t arrive at Monaco with just a special livery. They co-created buildable LEGO helmet sets with Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri, released on June 3, 2026. The two LEGO Editions sets mark the first time either driver has appeared in LEGO minifigure form. The real helmets worn by both drivers at Monaco were based directly on the LEGO sets, meaning the design process ran in a direction you rarely see: from brick to track.
Lando’s set leads with his iconic fluorescent blob design alongside his new driver number, the coveted 1, rendered in brick form. Each set comes with a display stand and a printed signature plaque. The LEGO design team worked directly with both drivers, and the organic shapes involved pushed them toward new building techniques, which is visible in the finished results. As race-day collectibles go, this is one of the more thoughtful executions of sport and design meeting inside a LEGO format.
What we like
- The reversed design process, from LEGO set to real-world helmet, makes this collaboration feel genuinely original rather than a standard licensing exercise
- Both drivers appearing as minifigures for the first time gives collectors a meaningful, first-edition reason to own the sets beyond the build itself
What we dislike
- Translating the organic, curved geometry of a race helmet into right-angled brickwork is a genuine challenge, and the compromise shows at certain angles
- Tied tightly to a single race milestone, these sets may feel less resonant on display once Monaco weekend fades into the background
The Brick Is Still the Most Interesting Canvas Around
June 2026 makes clear that the most interesting LEGO designs aren’t arriving from a single direction. They’re coming from fan creators on the Ideas platform, from decades of aviation history, from the Monaco pit lane, from music anniversaries, and from the logic of a well-built cheese spread. The through line is the same as it has always been: someone thought carefully about what a subject looks like when rendered in brick, and they cared enough to get it right.
Some of these will make it to store shelves. Some won’t. The Pikachu set already has a launch date. The Pan Am DC-3 is already sitting on yours. The Hybrid Theory brickset and the charcuterie board are still waiting for their moment. What they all share is a clarity of concept, a designer, official or otherwise, who knew exactly what they were building and why it was worth building in the first place.
The post The 5 LEGO Designs of June 2026 That Prove the Brick Has Never Been More Interesting first appeared on Yanko Design.