This 1,117-Brick LEGO Picasso Build Proudly Belongs on Your Living Room Wall

Cubism was, at its core, an act of radical fragmentation. Picasso and Braque looked at the world and decided that a single perspective was a lie, that the honest way to render a face was to show every angle simultaneously, cheekbone beside profile beside full-frontal stare, all collapsed into one electric, disorienting plane. The result was a new visual language built entirely from geometric shards, bold outlines, and colors that had no interest in behaving themselves.

Which makes the literally cube-shaped LEGO brick the perfect medium to translate it. LEGO builder CountVitalCauliflower102 has submitted a 1,117-piece wall-hanging MOC (My Own Creation) to LEGO Ideas that recreates Picasso’s 1953 painting “The Great Painter Face” in brick form, and the moment you see it, something clicks. The angularity, the bold color blocking, the hard-edged geometry, it all lands with the kind of inevitability that makes you wonder why LEGO was focused on Monet and Van Gogh when Picasso’s work translate so perfectly into brick-based art.

Designer: CountVitalCauliflower102

The painting itself is an interesting choice, and a deliberate one. “The Great Painter Face” sits outside Picasso’s most celebrated canon, less famous than Guernica or Les Demoiselles d’Avignon, but it is precisely that underdog status that makes it compelling. The subject is rendered in profile with the full Cubist vocabulary: fractured planes, simultaneous perspectives, a face that is somehow also a diagram of a face. Its bold, high-contrast outlines and vivid color fields translate visually into brick zones with a clarity that a softer, more painterly work simply could not offer. The builder understood exactly what he was choosing, and why.

At 34 studs wide and 50 studs tall, roughly 27 by 40 centimeters, the panel is substantial enough to command a wall. The color story is where it immediately grabs you: sweeping diagonal fields of orange, red, and purple form the background, layered at angles that give the composition real energy and depth. Over that, the face emerges in blues, aquas, grey, and white, outlined in black with the bold authority of a stained-glass window. What makes this genuinely impressive from a building standpoint is that CountVitalCauliflower102 avoided the pixel-mosaic approach entirely, opting instead for whole plates and bricks to build continuous color planes, which is absolutely the right call for Cubism’s broad, confident geometry.

My favorite detail, though, is the parts usage in the facial features. The eyes are built around large circular elements with red centers staring out from dark gear-like surrounds, radiating exactly the kind of confrontational intensity Picasso put into his subjects. The wavy blue hair rendered in flexible LEGO tubing is a lovely touch, loose and organic against all that hard geometry. The ear is a cluster of curved and mechanical-looking pieces that somehow reads immediately as an ear while also looking like something you might find in a Technic gearbox. And then there is the nose: a single white bar element, almost dismissively simple, and absolutely perfect. The builder also solved some genuinely tricky structural problems, using Pythagorean geometry to achieve diagonal stud lines at precise integer intervals so that every angled section locks in at two secure endpoints rather than hanging off a single ratchet joint.

The set also includes a minifigure of Picasso himself, wearing paint-splattered overalls and a blue shirt, holding a brush with wet orange paint and a white mixing palette. He stands on a 12×4 black base alongside a brick-built easel displaying a miniature printed canvas of the original painting. It is a lovely piece of editorial wit: the master surveying his own recreation, the tiny figure dwarfed by the monumental panel beside him. The whole build can be displayed either propped on a surface or hung on a wall, with an optional grey frame that gives it that final gallery-ready finish.

LEGO Ideas is the official platform where fan-designed sets earn their shot at becoming real retail products. Any submission that crosses 10,000 supporter votes gets sent to LEGO’s internal review team, which evaluates it for potential production as a boxed set. CountVitalCauliflower102’s Picasso MOC is currently in the early stages of gathering support, with plenty of runway left on the clock. Given that LEGO has released Art sets celebrating Warhol, Hokusai, and even their own brick motif as wall art, a Picasso feels like a genuinely logical next chapter. If you want to help make that happen, you can head to the LEGO Ideas page and cast your vote.

The post This 1,117-Brick LEGO Picasso Build Proudly Belongs on Your Living Room Wall first appeared on Yanko Design.

Morocco’s Mohammed VI Tower: The Rocket That Rewrote Africa’s Skyline

There are buildings, and then there are statements. The Mohammed VI Tower, inaugurated on April 23, 2026, in Salé, Morocco, belongs firmly in the second category. Rising 250 metres across 55 floors on the east bank of the Bouregreg River, it is now the tallest building in Morocco and the third tallest on the African continent. It did not arrive quietly. Visible from 50 kilometres in every direction, the tower has already redrawn the skyline that was once defined by centuries-old minarets.

The story behind it is as cinematic as the structure itself. Othman Benjelloun, the 93-year-old billionaire and chief executive of the Bank of Africa, conceived the idea decades ago after visiting a NASA facility ahead of the Apollo 12 mission. Standing before the Saturn V rocket, he saw not just a machine but a metaphor. That image, a rocket braced on its launchpad and ready to ascend, became the architectural soul of the tower. Spanish architect Rafael de la Hoz and Moroccan architect Hakim Benjelloun translated that vision into steel, glass, and concrete, producing a silhouette that reads like liftoff frozen in time.

Designer: Rafael de la Hoz and Hakim Benjelloun

The tower is far more than its form. Across its 102,800 square metres of floor area, it houses a Waldorf Astoria hotel, premium offices, high-end residential apartments, retail spaces, and a panoramic observation deck at its crown. Interior design was handled by Pierre Yves Rochon, with furniture and fittings curated by FLAMANT. The facade spans 70,000 square metres and integrates solar panels, while a tuned mass damper ensures stability at height. The building holds both LEED Gold and HQE sustainability certifications, setting a benchmark for green construction across the continent.

Construction began in July 2017 and was delivered by BESIX in a joint venture with TGCC, Six Construct, and the China Railway Construction Corporation, with a total cost of 3.5 billion Moroccan dirhams, roughly $700 million. The project forms the centrepiece of the Bouregreg Valley Development, a broader effort to transform Rabat into a city of international standing ahead of the 2030 FIFA World Cup, which Morocco will co-host.

Not everyone is celebrating at the same altitude. Critics point out that major investment continues to concentrate along Morocco’s Atlantic corridor, while inland regions contend with high unemployment and uneven public services. The tower, they argue, is a monument to ambition that has yet to translate into equity.

Still, as an act of architecture, the Mohammed VI Tower is difficult to argue with. Rafael de la Hoz and Hakim Benjelloun have given Morocco something rare: a building with a founding myth, a bold form, and the scale to match both.

The post Morocco’s Mohammed VI Tower: The Rocket That Rewrote Africa’s Skyline first appeared on Yanko Design.

Samsung Galaxy S27 Ultra Might Finally Break the 5,000mAh Barrier

Samsung Galaxy S27 Ultra Might Finally Break the 5,000mAh Barrier Battery lab photo showing silicon-carbon cell cycling tests after durability concerns seen during S26 Ultra trials.

The Samsung Galaxy S27 Ultra, once positioned as a potential benchmark for smartphone innovation, faces a complex interplay of advancements and limitations. While the device introduces several noteworthy upgrades, challenges in design, technology integration, and pricing strategies suggest that Samsung may be reserving its most fantastic features for the Galaxy S28 series. Below is an […]

The post Samsung Galaxy S27 Ultra Might Finally Break the 5,000mAh Barrier appeared first on Geeky Gadgets.

Posted in Uncategorized

Why Claude’s Design Agents Are Changing How AI Workflows Operate

Why Claude’s Design Agents Are Changing How AI Workflows Operate Diagram showing the six architectural patterns of Claude Design agents

Claude’s design agents are a method for building adaptable systems capable of responding intelligently to user needs, as explained by Sam Witteveen. A defining aspect of their architecture is agentic context grounding, which enables the agents to adjust outputs based on factors like user preferences, prior interactions and specific input details. For example, when generating […]

The post Why Claude’s Design Agents Are Changing How AI Workflows Operate appeared first on Geeky Gadgets.

Posted in Uncategorized

B!POD’s DRO!D Finally Makes Food Storage Worth Showing Off

Most kitchen gadgets follow an unspoken agreement: the more useful they are, the uglier they get. Vacuum sealers are probably the worst offenders. Big, loud, plasticky things that you dig out from the back of a cabinet twice a year and promptly hide again. Italian company B!POD decided to ignore that agreement entirely, and the result is DRO!D, a rechargeable food vacuum system that looks less like a kitchen appliance and more like something that rolled off a design studio table.

I’ll be upfront: I don’t usually get excited about food storage. It’s not exactly a glamorous category. But DRO!D genuinely surprised me, and a lot of that starts with how it looks. The unit itself is compact, black, and almost architectural in its restraint. A deep V-shaped channel runs down the front face, creating shadow and depth that make it feel sculpted rather than manufactured. The ventilation grilles on either side are flush and minimal. The only real pop of color comes from two small orange rings at the base, the legs that dock into the container lids. It’s a considered detail — functional, but also the kind of thing that makes you look twice. On a white shelf, it reads more like a design object than a kitchen tool.

Designer: B!POD

The containers are where the palette really opens up. They come in a deep matte red, a rich navy, and a soft teal, all with the same rounded, low-profile bowl shape and clear lids. The lids themselves have a sculptural quality, two circular ports with a valve mechanism that catches light in an interesting way. From above, it almost looks like a face. Whether that’s intentional or not, it gives the whole system a personality that most food storage products completely lack.

The system removes up to 95% of the oxygen from those containers, slowing the oxidation process that makes leftovers go stale, mushy, or moldy. B!POD describes the technology as working on a molecular level, essentially slowing how quickly your food ages from the inside. The claim is that it keeps food fresh up to five times longer than conventional storage. That’s not a small number. That’s the difference between meal prepping on Sunday and still having something worth eating on Friday.

Using it is deliberately simple. One button, two vacuum power modes, and a 30-second cycle monitored by a small circular OLED display at the top of the unit. There’s a gentler setting for delicate foods and a stronger one for everything else. The battery charges fully in under two hours and gives you 15 to 20 sessions per charge.

What really sells the design though is how the system looks when it’s not in use. The containers stack cleanly, and with the chalkboard-style labeling that B!POD leans into in their own photography, a shelf full of them becomes something you’d actually want people to see. Pasta, coffee, granola, matcha — written in chalk across those matte bowls, it looks more like a still life than a pantry. That’s a rare thing to say about food storage.

The sustainability angle also deserves more than a footnote. Food waste is one of those issues that sounds abstract until you think about how often the wilted greens or forgotten leftovers quietly end up in the trash. If DRO!D delivers on its promise to extend food life by five times, that’s a meaningful reduction in daily household waste. B!POD even offers free green shipping across their range, which reads less like a marketing gesture and more like a real alignment of values.

Is it perfect? Probably not. Like most closed-system products, you’re investing in an ecosystem. The containers are proprietary, so once you’re in, you’re in. That’s a commitment, and not everyone will be ready for it. That said, the premise is genuinely compelling. We’re in a moment where people are thinking harder about what they buy, where it goes when they’re done with it, and whether it was worth making at all. DRO!D sits at the intersection of good design, real utility, and conscious consumption. It’s not trying to be a luxury object, but it carries the aesthetics of one. If kitchen appliances got the same cultural attention as sneakers or headphones, DRO!D is exactly the kind of product people would be talking about. Maybe it’s time to start.

The post B!POD’s DRO!D Finally Makes Food Storage Worth Showing Off first appeared on Yanko Design.

Don’t Wait for WWDC: New Leaks Reveal the M5 Mac Studio is Delayed Until October

Don’t Wait for WWDC: New Leaks Reveal the M5 Mac Studio is Delayed Until October Close view of an M5 Ultra style system-on-chip graphic next to performance arrows and Mac Studio silhouette.

Apple’s highly anticipated 2026 Mac Studio has been delayed until October 2026. The delay is attributed to a global shortage of high-performance memory, a critical component in advanced computing systems. This shortage, fueled by the growing demand from artificial intelligence (AI) applications, data centers and server farms, has disrupted supply chains and slowed production timelines. […]

The post Don’t Wait for WWDC: New Leaks Reveal the M5 Mac Studio is Delayed Until October appeared first on Geeky Gadgets.

Posted in Uncategorized

How Google’s New DeepMind Medical AI Could Change Healthcare Forever

How Google’s New DeepMind Medical AI Could Change Healthcare Forever Patient using Google DeepMind AI for a virtual medical assessment

Google DeepMind’s AI Co-clinician is poised to reshape how medical consultations are conducted by combining advanced diagnostic reasoning with real-time video analysis. As highlighted by AI Grid, this system is designed to work alongside physicians, enhancing their ability to assess and address patient needs. For example, during a video-based physical exam, the AI can guide […]

The post How Google’s New DeepMind Medical AI Could Change Healthcare Forever appeared first on Geeky Gadgets.

Posted in Uncategorized