This year I began learning how to develop webpages. In my mind, being able to construct a website seemed like the first step for me to becoming a one man team. Thus I learnt to use Webflow and grew fond of the no-code community. Learning to form a websites made me also invested in learning graphic design and design in general.
I have always been pegged as a mathematical person and thus I have forever prioritised exact sciences over other subjects.
Yet whenever I would face an artistic challenge, I would thrive with almost zero experience.
I have developed a healthy confidence in my buried artistic talent. And I try to keep art as a passion, as a hobby. To practice occasionally and improve it passively.
I try to think of one invention per week. Sometimes I think of two. I have been writing them down for two years now in hopes that at least one will see the light of day.
I believe in the power to think creatively on demand. And therefore I try to cultivate my imagination and motivate my peers to do the same with the goal of inventing something new.
A large drive for going into creative technology comes from realising the realm of possibilities that modern tech brings to inventors' fingertips.
The Futurecraft shoe is a groundbreaking innovation in printing. 3D printing has long been the key to swiftly sparking tangible objects into reality. Yet it has had quite a few physical limitations due to gravity.
The technology behind the Adidas 4D sole allows for greatly complex strand structures to be meshed out of rubber. This revolutionises cushioning.
When I imagine an engineering challenge being undertaken correctly, I imagine the wheels of the Mars rover.
The older wheels used to break easily. The new wheels cannot be punctured and can withstand any terrain.
I do not play basketball. But this ball has set an example of what is truly possible when the correct materials and precise geometric structures are chosen.
I am greatly inspired to learn to simulate pressure points and to 3D print designs which are meant to fold and compress.
The colour that broke the internet. This black color filters 99.5% of light, making any object practically invisible in terms of the light spectrum.
This has made me think of dozens of unique products and applications which could reinvent everyday objects.
The whole team at MSCHF are pushing the envelope in terms of social experiments and design.
The site is a treat, and their creations are world breaking.
As a web developer I see their branding as brilliant!