Apple has officially released macOS 26.3 Tahoe, a significant update aimed at improving system reliability, security, and overall performance. While it does not introduce major new features, it focuses on resolving critical issues and refining the user experience. If your device is compatible with macOS 26, installing this update is highly recommended to ensure your […]
The smartphone market in 2026 remains a dynamic arena, with iPhones and Android devices competing fiercely for consumer attention. While iPhones continue to uphold their reputation for premium quality and brand prestige, Android devices have made significant strides in innovation, affordability, and performance. The video below from Nick Ackerman provides more insights into the key […]
The smartphone market in 2026 remains a dynamic arena, with iPhones and Android devices competing fiercely for consumer attention. While iPhones continue to uphold their reputation for premium quality and brand prestige, Android devices have made significant strides in innovation, affordability, and performance. The video below from Nick Ackerman provides more insights into the key […]
Every time you see “Shot on iPhone” superimposed over a stunning image, ask yourself what’s just outside the frame. Chances are good there’s a telephoto adapter screwed onto the phone, a stabilizing rig keeping it steady, professional lighting bouncing off reflectors, and maybe even an external monitor for the director to watch. Apple loves to showcase the iPhone’s camera prowess, but conveniently omits the ecosystem of professional gear that makes those shots possible. The phone is capable, sure, but it’s getting significant help from its friends.
That’s exactly the gap PGYTECH’s RetroVa Vintage Imaging Kit fills, except it doesn’t hide what it’s doing. The system gives your iPhone 16 or 17 Pro a camera-inspired grip with actual tactile controls, a 13-element optical telephoto system that brings you to 235mm equivalent focal length, external storage support via microSD, and a companion app that offers film-style rendering straight out of camera. Sandmarc and Moment have been in the iPhone lens game for years, but RetroVa takes a more holistic approach by addressing not just optics, but the entire shooting experience.
PGYTECH have played this game before. They’re the same company that builds the telephoto extenders for Vivo and Oppo’s flagship phones in China, smartphones that rank second and third in that market behind Apple. The 2.35X telephoto uses a professional 13-element, 3-group optical system crafted from premium ED glass, optimized specifically for the iPhone’s F2.8 aperture. Distortion sits at just 2%, which is impressive for a clip-on system. The optical design delivers razor-sharp clarity and organic bokeh without the digital noise that comes from cranking up your phone’s native zoom. Real glass doing real optical work makes a difference you can see in the final image, especially when you’re shooting wildlife, concerts, or anything else where you need serious reach without turning your photo into a pixelated mess.
The grip changes everything about how you hold and shoot with your iPhone… way more than the ‘Camera Control’ does. Physical buttons include a shutter release that half-presses to focus, just like a real camera. Control dials let you adjust ISO, white balance, and exposure value without tapping through menus on a touchscreen. A zoom lever switches focal lengths in the companion app’s vintage mode, letting you freely adjust zoom in standard shooting. There’s a multi-function button that handles power, quick start, mode switching, camera flips, and Bluetooth pairing. The whole thing weighs between 63 and 65.4 grams depending on your iPhone model, wrapped in classic black pebbled leather with a premium grip that feels like you’re holding a vintage Leica instead of a slab of glass and aluminum.
The grip also packs a built-in microSD slot to offset any storage woes you’d have from saving everything to your iPhone’s camera roll. Imagine this – you’re shooting 4K ProRes video and suddenly your phone throws up a “Storage Almost Full” warning, forcing you to stop everything and start deleting apps or old photos. An independent microSD slot avoids this problem entirely. You can record high-bitrate ProRes and RAW files directly to the card, completely bypassing your iPhone’s internal storage. The USB 3.1 connectivity delivers transfer speeds up to 312MB/s, so offloading footage to your tablet or computer takes seconds instead of the eternity you spend waiting for wireless transfers or slow card readers. The system supports external recording for ProRes, HEVC, and more formats, though 4K60+ ProRes external recording isn’t supported yet.
RetroVa’s companion app delivers film camera texture and mood straight out of the sensor. You get full manual control over shutter speed, ISO, and white balance, creating with the precision of a dedicated camera. The app suppresses iPhone’s built-in sharpening and algorithm processing for a more natural look, avoiding those over-sharpened phone images that scream “shot on smartphone.” You can stamp shots with instant-style watermarks and custom frames for each creation, adding your personal mark before the image even leaves the camera. Vintage film presets give you that classic camera aesthetic without needing to run everything through post-processing filters later.
PGYTECH offers the RetroVa in two distinct tiers to cover different photography styles. The Grip Kit runs $72 for street and everyday shooters who want mechanical controls and external recording support. The Ultimate Kit at $184 adds the 2.35X telephoto extender, tripod collar, lens adapter ring, photography strap, and lens pouch, building a complete creator ecosystem for street, travel, portraits, and long-distance photography. Both kits work with iPhone 16 Pro, 16 Pro Max, 17 Pro, and 17 Pro Max. First units ship globally starting this month, with future iPhone 18 Pro compatibility requiring only a case swap while the grip continues working.
Imagine looking up at a city skyline and knowing that inside those towers, food is growing, water is being harvested from clouds, and entire communities are thriving in harmony with nature. The Eden Rise Vertical Eco Living Community is not just a building proposal. It is a bold reimagining of what a city can be when architecture becomes an ecosystem rather than an object.
The project tackles one of Chicago’s most urgent urban challenges: food deserts. In many neighborhoods, especially low-income ones, access to fresh and nutritious food is limited. Grocery stores are scarce, healthy options are expensive, and residents often rely on convenience stores or fast food. Eden Rise flips this reality by embedding vertical farms directly into a mile-high tower, allowing fresh produce to be grown where people live. Food no longer travels miles to reach a plate. It moves floors.
Designer: Yuhan Zhang and Dreama Simeng Lin
The tower’s design is as poetic as its purpose. Inspired by the fluid form of a water droplet, its organic silhouette reflects Chicago’s relationship with water while symbolizing life, renewal, and sustainability. This fusion of natural inspiration and urban ambition transforms the structure into a vertical extension of the city’s green belt, suggesting a future where skylines are defined not just by height but by ecological intelligence.
Inside, Eden Rise functions like a city stacked vertically. Homes sit alongside offices, hotels, schools, and recreational spaces, creating a complete lifestyle environment within a single structure. Residents can wake up, work, learn, relax, and socialize without ever needing to commute across town. Schools integrated throughout the tower ensure education is woven into everyday life, while hotels welcome visitors to experience this futuristic ecosystem from panoramic heights. It is urban life condensed, connected, and reimagined.
Scattered throughout the structure are sky terraces that act as elevated parks in the clouds. These lush communal spaces give residents places to gather, breathe, and reconnect with nature despite living in a dense vertical environment. They are not decorative add-ons but essential social and environmental anchors that support well-being and community interaction.
What truly sets Eden Rise apart is its seamless integration of advanced green technologies. Vertical farms in the core supply fresh food. Rainwater collection and cloud harvesting systems recycle water efficiently. Wind turbines built into the exoskeleton generate renewable energy. Natural ventilation and a breathable atrium maximize airflow and daylight, reducing energy use while improving indoor comfort. Each system works together like organs in a living body, turning the tower into a self-sustaining organism.
The engineering behind this vision is equally striking. Four conjoined towers are reinforced by layered bracing systems that provide structural depth and stability. A diagrid pattern spans multiple stories, weaving a network of structural lines that balance strength with elegance. Within this framework, an inner void allows light and air to travel deep into the building, ensuring that even its core feels open and alive.
Eden Rise is more than an architectural proposal. It is a manifesto for the future of cities. It shows how design can confront inequality, reduce environmental impact, and restore the relationship between urban life and nature. In this vision, skyscrapers no longer dominate the landscape. They nourish it.
If realized, the Chicago skyline would no longer be just a symbol of economic power. It would become a symbol of sustainability, equity, and imagination rising together.
Imagine looking up at a city skyline and knowing that inside those towers, food is growing, water is being harvested from clouds, and entire communities are thriving in harmony with nature. The Eden Rise Vertical Eco Living Community is not just a building proposal. It is a bold reimagining of what a city can be when architecture becomes an ecosystem rather than an object.
The project tackles one of Chicago’s most urgent urban challenges: food deserts. In many neighborhoods, especially low-income ones, access to fresh and nutritious food is limited. Grocery stores are scarce, healthy options are expensive, and residents often rely on convenience stores or fast food. Eden Rise flips this reality by embedding vertical farms directly into a mile-high tower, allowing fresh produce to be grown where people live. Food no longer travels miles to reach a plate. It moves floors.
Designer: Yuhan Zhang and Dreama Simeng Lin
The tower’s design is as poetic as its purpose. Inspired by the fluid form of a water droplet, its organic silhouette reflects Chicago’s relationship with water while symbolizing life, renewal, and sustainability. This fusion of natural inspiration and urban ambition transforms the structure into a vertical extension of the city’s green belt, suggesting a future where skylines are defined not just by height but by ecological intelligence.
Inside, Eden Rise functions like a city stacked vertically. Homes sit alongside offices, hotels, schools, and recreational spaces, creating a complete lifestyle environment within a single structure. Residents can wake up, work, learn, relax, and socialize without ever needing to commute across town. Schools integrated throughout the tower ensure education is woven into everyday life, while hotels welcome visitors to experience this futuristic ecosystem from panoramic heights. It is urban life condensed, connected, and reimagined.
Scattered throughout the structure are sky terraces that act as elevated parks in the clouds. These lush communal spaces give residents places to gather, breathe, and reconnect with nature despite living in a dense vertical environment. They are not decorative add-ons but essential social and environmental anchors that support well-being and community interaction.
What truly sets Eden Rise apart is its seamless integration of advanced green technologies. Vertical farms in the core supply fresh food. Rainwater collection and cloud harvesting systems recycle water efficiently. Wind turbines built into the exoskeleton generate renewable energy. Natural ventilation and a breathable atrium maximize airflow and daylight, reducing energy use while improving indoor comfort. Each system works together like organs in a living body, turning the tower into a self-sustaining organism.
The engineering behind this vision is equally striking. Four conjoined towers are reinforced by layered bracing systems that provide structural depth and stability. A diagrid pattern spans multiple stories, weaving a network of structural lines that balance strength with elegance. Within this framework, an inner void allows light and air to travel deep into the building, ensuring that even its core feels open and alive.
Eden Rise is more than an architectural proposal. It is a manifesto for the future of cities. It shows how design can confront inequality, reduce environmental impact, and restore the relationship between urban life and nature. In this vision, skyscrapers no longer dominate the landscape. They nourish it.
If realized, the Chicago skyline would no longer be just a symbol of economic power. It would become a symbol of sustainability, equity, and imagination rising together.
Imagine looking up at a city skyline and knowing that inside those towers, food is growing, water is being harvested from clouds, and entire communities are thriving in harmony with nature. The Eden Rise Vertical Eco Living Community is not just a building proposal. It is a bold reimagining of what a city can be when architecture becomes an ecosystem rather than an object.
The project tackles one of Chicago’s most urgent urban challenges: food deserts. In many neighborhoods, especially low-income ones, access to fresh and nutritious food is limited. Grocery stores are scarce, healthy options are expensive, and residents often rely on convenience stores or fast food. Eden Rise flips this reality by embedding vertical farms directly into a mile-high tower, allowing fresh produce to be grown where people live. Food no longer travels miles to reach a plate. It moves floors.
Designer: Yuhan Zhang and Dreama Simeng Lin
The tower’s design is as poetic as its purpose. Inspired by the fluid form of a water droplet, its organic silhouette reflects Chicago’s relationship with water while symbolizing life, renewal, and sustainability. This fusion of natural inspiration and urban ambition transforms the structure into a vertical extension of the city’s green belt, suggesting a future where skylines are defined not just by height but by ecological intelligence.
Inside, Eden Rise functions like a city stacked vertically. Homes sit alongside offices, hotels, schools, and recreational spaces, creating a complete lifestyle environment within a single structure. Residents can wake up, work, learn, relax, and socialize without ever needing to commute across town. Schools integrated throughout the tower ensure education is woven into everyday life, while hotels welcome visitors to experience this futuristic ecosystem from panoramic heights. It is urban life condensed, connected, and reimagined.
Scattered throughout the structure are sky terraces that act as elevated parks in the clouds. These lush communal spaces give residents places to gather, breathe, and reconnect with nature despite living in a dense vertical environment. They are not decorative add-ons but essential social and environmental anchors that support well-being and community interaction.
What truly sets Eden Rise apart is its seamless integration of advanced green technologies. Vertical farms in the core supply fresh food. Rainwater collection and cloud harvesting systems recycle water efficiently. Wind turbines built into the exoskeleton generate renewable energy. Natural ventilation and a breathable atrium maximize airflow and daylight, reducing energy use while improving indoor comfort. Each system works together like organs in a living body, turning the tower into a self-sustaining organism.
The engineering behind this vision is equally striking. Four conjoined towers are reinforced by layered bracing systems that provide structural depth and stability. A diagrid pattern spans multiple stories, weaving a network of structural lines that balance strength with elegance. Within this framework, an inner void allows light and air to travel deep into the building, ensuring that even its core feels open and alive.
Eden Rise is more than an architectural proposal. It is a manifesto for the future of cities. It shows how design can confront inequality, reduce environmental impact, and restore the relationship between urban life and nature. In this vision, skyscrapers no longer dominate the landscape. They nourish it.
If realized, the Chicago skyline would no longer be just a symbol of economic power. It would become a symbol of sustainability, equity, and imagination rising together.
Imagine looking up at a city skyline and knowing that inside those towers, food is growing, water is being harvested from clouds, and entire communities are thriving in harmony with nature. The Eden Rise Vertical Eco Living Community is not just a building proposal. It is a bold reimagining of what a city can be when architecture becomes an ecosystem rather than an object.
The project tackles one of Chicago’s most urgent urban challenges: food deserts. In many neighborhoods, especially low-income ones, access to fresh and nutritious food is limited. Grocery stores are scarce, healthy options are expensive, and residents often rely on convenience stores or fast food. Eden Rise flips this reality by embedding vertical farms directly into a mile-high tower, allowing fresh produce to be grown where people live. Food no longer travels miles to reach a plate. It moves floors.
Designer: Yuhan Zhang and Dreama Simeng Lin
The tower’s design is as poetic as its purpose. Inspired by the fluid form of a water droplet, its organic silhouette reflects Chicago’s relationship with water while symbolizing life, renewal, and sustainability. This fusion of natural inspiration and urban ambition transforms the structure into a vertical extension of the city’s green belt, suggesting a future where skylines are defined not just by height but by ecological intelligence.
Inside, Eden Rise functions like a city stacked vertically. Homes sit alongside offices, hotels, schools, and recreational spaces, creating a complete lifestyle environment within a single structure. Residents can wake up, work, learn, relax, and socialize without ever needing to commute across town. Schools integrated throughout the tower ensure education is woven into everyday life, while hotels welcome visitors to experience this futuristic ecosystem from panoramic heights. It is urban life condensed, connected, and reimagined.
Scattered throughout the structure are sky terraces that act as elevated parks in the clouds. These lush communal spaces give residents places to gather, breathe, and reconnect with nature despite living in a dense vertical environment. They are not decorative add-ons but essential social and environmental anchors that support well-being and community interaction.
What truly sets Eden Rise apart is its seamless integration of advanced green technologies. Vertical farms in the core supply fresh food. Rainwater collection and cloud harvesting systems recycle water efficiently. Wind turbines built into the exoskeleton generate renewable energy. Natural ventilation and a breathable atrium maximize airflow and daylight, reducing energy use while improving indoor comfort. Each system works together like organs in a living body, turning the tower into a self-sustaining organism.
The engineering behind this vision is equally striking. Four conjoined towers are reinforced by layered bracing systems that provide structural depth and stability. A diagrid pattern spans multiple stories, weaving a network of structural lines that balance strength with elegance. Within this framework, an inner void allows light and air to travel deep into the building, ensuring that even its core feels open and alive.
Eden Rise is more than an architectural proposal. It is a manifesto for the future of cities. It shows how design can confront inequality, reduce environmental impact, and restore the relationship between urban life and nature. In this vision, skyscrapers no longer dominate the landscape. They nourish it.
If realized, the Chicago skyline would no longer be just a symbol of economic power. It would become a symbol of sustainability, equity, and imagination rising together.
If you live in an apartment or a home with a narrow entryway, you know the struggle. Coats pile up on dining chairs. Umbrellas lean precariously against walls. Traditional coat racks with their sprawling arms take up precious floor space you simply don’t have. You need something that actually works without turning your entry into an obstacle course.
Enter The Bugle by Design by Joffey, a coat and umbrella stand that rethinks the entire concept by borrowing its form from an unlikely source: a brass musical instrument. This isn’t just clever design for the sake of being clever. It’s a genuinely smart solution to a problem that plagues anyone living in tight quarters.
The beauty of this piece is in its vertical footprint. Where most coat stands spread outward with multiple arms jutting in different directions, The Bugle stays contained within a slim, elegant silhouette. A single curved loop rises from a slender pole, mimicking the distinctive shape of a bugle, complete with a flared bell detail at the top. Everything sits on a simple circular base that keeps it stable without hogging floor space.
That curved loop is where the magic happens. It’s perfectly sized to drape a jacket or hang a scarf, while a smaller ring positioned within the larger curve holds umbrellas upright. Two storage solutions in one compact design, occupying roughly the same footprint as a single dining chair but infinitely more functional and better looking.
The proportions feel just right because they’re borrowed from something that was already thoughtfully designed. Musical instruments like bugles have curves that exist for acoustic and ergonomic reasons. Those shapes have been refined over centuries to feel balanced and purposeful. By translating that form into furniture, Joffey taps into proportions that our eyes instinctively recognize as harmonious.
What really sets The Bugle apart is its ability to be both functional and sculptural. In a small entryway, every object needs to pull double duty. This piece stores your essentials while also acting as a visual anchor that defines the space. The saturated periwinkle blue gives it presence without overwhelming the room. That matte finish adds a contemporary softness that works with almost any decorating style, from Scandinavian minimalism to eclectic maximalism.
There’s something playful about the design that makes coming home a bit more enjoyable. Instead of generic IKEA-standard furniture, you get a conversation starter. Guests notice it immediately. The bugle reference is clear enough to be charming but abstract enough to feel sophisticated. It nods to vintage Americana, summer camps, and military ceremonies without being literal or kitschy about it.
From a practical standpoint, the compact design means you can tuck it into corners or narrow spaces where a traditional coat rack would never fit. Got a skinny hallway? A weird alcove by the door? A studio apartment where every inch counts? This works. And because it stays vertical rather than horizontal, it doesn’t interfere with foot traffic or make your entryway feel cluttered.
The restraint in this design is what makes it successful. There are no unnecessary embellishments, no gimmicks, no trying-too-hard details. Just a pure, confident form that solves a real problem beautifully. In an era where product design often veers toward the overly complex, The Bugle proves that simple ideas executed well will always win.
What I love most is that it demonstrates how everyday objects can be better. Your coat rack doesn’t have to be an eyesore you tolerate. It can be something you actively enjoy looking at, something that makes your tiny entryway feel more intentional and curated rather than cramped and chaotic.
Design by Joffey gets it. Small spaces need smart solutions, and smart solutions can also be delightful. The Bugle delivers on both fronts, turning a mundane necessity into a little moment of joy every time you walk through your door. And in a tiny apartment, those moments matter more than you’d think.