Showing posts with label creative ideas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label creative ideas. Show all posts

Saturday, January 30, 2016

CREATIVE IDEAS : Kitchenwares


I can’t imagine life in the next 20 years but for now, let me continue with my writing on the creative ideas for everyday living,  I’m always been fascinated with little things that makes our life easy ( I’m not lazy by the way….) but somehow, I appreciate the effort of the people behind these creations as it does makes life easy….


1.) Multi Function Creative Kitchen Bowl




2.)  Staffed Burger Presser



3.) Fish Scale Cleaner





4.) Food Grade- Kitchen Silicon Bowl






Photos Credit : Alibaba/ Aliexpress.com

Thursday, March 19, 2015

Creative Ideas: Smart Thermo Monitor Device for Kids




For moms like me, this product does certainly makes our lives easy!!  Health is wealth

Smart Thermometer Health Monitor for Babies,24h Thermometer Tracker






 

Creative ideas: XIAOMI Mi Multi-function Wristband



Phones/ Gadgets are becoming extremely advance, well-designed, durable and straightforward to use that everyday I woke up feeling that my current phone (1 week purchase) is already obsolete; 

One can only imagine our lives in many years from now, thinking how  phone designers/creators live and think everyday of their lives, oh well, not my concern but somehow I am affected with the progress of time, people and anything alike, I like change but I guess, things are so randomly fast…

Chinese creativity are fast arising and this article is a perfect example on how these genius people capable of conquering the world in terms of hi-tech gadgets,



Introducing:  XIAOMI MI WRISTBAND

Main Features:

* Water resistant (IP67)
* 30-day standby power
* Sleep-cycle smart alarm
* Fitness monitor & sleep tracker
* Running MIUI Android 4.4 and above
* Unlock your Mi phone without a password
* Stylish band options (incl. wrap-around and leather)







Wednesday, March 18, 2015

Creative Ideas: Leap Motion Controller




The Leap Motion Controller senses your hands and fingers and follows their every move.

It lets them move in all that wide-open space between you and your computer. So you can do almost anything without touching anything
It's the tiny device that just might change the way you use technology.
It's a super-wide 150° field of view and a Z-axis for depth. That means you can move your hands in 3D, just like you do in the real world.

The Leap Motion Controller can track your movements at a rate of over 200 frames per second.



Tuesday, March 10, 2015

HighTech Cosmetics, a Swiss-made skincare and makeup range



HighTech Cosmetics, a Swiss-made skincare and makeup range, designed and formulated to target problem areas with the utmost precision and efficacy

HighTech Cosmetics is finally unveiled as the most advanced skincare technology, with a proven ability to provide visible results. The essence of beauty, and the ability to stop time and restore youth to your complexion within just 15 minutes

HTC has both a makeup Range as well as a skincare range that are ground breaking in the beauty industry!







The hi-tech bra that helps you beat breast cancer and other clothes that can treat or prevent illness


Sun savvy: The Netatmo June bracelet has a sensor that measures UV light


This was the year we’d be wearing shoes that tied their own laces — or so the Back To The Future films predicted in the Eighties.
While this may seem as fanciful now as it did then, 2015 does looks set to be the year of so-called ‘wearable technology’, clothing and accessories that could transform not only our wardrobes, but our health, too.

Until now, wearable technology has largely taken the form of wristband trackers — such as the Fitbit (launched in 2008), 2011’s Jawbone and the much-hyped Apple Watch, due to go on sale on April 24.

But now, manufacturers are developing everyday items of clothing and shoes that can monitor our vital signs, and even treat serious conditions. The latest innovations include a bra that could deliver life-saving breast cancer medication and socks that warn if you’re at risk of injury.
Even big brands are moving into the market — this year, the U.S. designer Ralph Lauren will launch a sports top that monitors heart rate, muscle movement and calories burnt.
‘So far, wearable technology in the context of well-being has been mainly about monitoring personal data,’ says Caroline Till, course leader in Material Futures at Central St Martins, University of the Arts London. ‘The question now is what do you do with the data once you have it? Is the information of value?’

This is where the latest technology comes in, with the focus on giving you feedback from the information collated. So in theory, ‘wearables’, as they’re known, will not only take your blood pressure reading, they’ll tell you if it’s dangerously high. ‘The holy grail of wearable technology is something that’s integrated seamlessly into something you wear or use already, so you don’t notice it’s there,’ says Caroline Till.

This is now closer to being a reality because circuitry can be made small and light enough to be embedded in clothing. Another material technology, known as micro-encapsulation, allows tiny ‘nano’ particles of a substance — for instance, a drug — to be embedded into a material so it is gradually absorbed through the skin when worn.

Here, we look at the latest ‘wearables’— some of which are already available, with others still being developed — that could transform our health . . 
 
Hi-tech: A bra contains technology which allows tiny ‘nano’ particles of a substance - for instance, a drug - to be embedded into a material


BRA THAT DELIVERS CANCER DRUGS

The Foxleaf bra contains micro-encapsulated ‘bubbles’ of the drug Tamoxifen in soft, plastic inserts in the cups.
The idea is that the body’s heat and moisture rub off the bubbles’ coating and the Tamoxifen, which blocks oestrogen to slow the growth of cancer cells, can be gradually absorbed through the skin throughout the day.

The Omsignal top has sensors woven into the fabric in the chest to monitor heart rate and breathing
VEST TO HELP YOU BURN OFF CALORIES

NASA scientist Dr Wayne B Hayes has invented the Cold Shoulder vest, which he says boosts your body’s ability to burn calories.
The vest, which can be kept in the freezer, has pockets for ice packs around the back and shoulders. The idea is that by wearing the vest your body has to burn more calories to stay warm — as much as an extra 500 calories a day, says Dr Hayes.
From around £90 ($139.99) from coldshoulderweightloss.com

T-SHIRT TO MONITOR YOUR HEART

Omsignal, the company working with Ralph Lauren to create a tech sports shirt, has a top already on sale that has sensors woven into the fabric in the chest to monitor heart rate and breathing. The sensors can also monitor the electrical activity of the heart.
Fibres feed this information to a ‘black box’ — about the size of a credit card — attached to the shirt. The box sends the information to your mobile, with alerts from your phone telling you to breathe more, slow down or speed up.
The heart and breathing rate data is also used to estimate how many calories you’re burning — thought to be much more accurate than standard fitness tracking wristbands which make calculations based on how much you’re moving. At the moment the garment has only been designed for men. A version for women is in development.
Around £160 from omsignal.com


DRESS THAT GETS MUMS-TO-BE MOVING

It’s a wrap-dress, but not as you know it — maternity dresses designed by Blake Uretsky, a fashion student at Cornell University in the U.S., contain conductive silver fibres under the bust to monitor a pregnant woman’s heart rate, breathing, blood pressure and temperature, along with a device worn on the belt that can then communicate with a smartphone.
The dress can then alert a mother-to-be if her readings suggest she might be over doing it — or not being active enough.
Some research has suggested that women who are more active during pregnancy have fewer complications during both gestation and labour.



RUNNING SOCKS THAT CAN PREVENT INJURY

Sensoria’s smart running socks monitor the way your feet strike the ground, warning you if you are at risk of injury and also how to correct your stride. ‘Flaws in your gait are a common cause of injury,’ says physiotherapist Sammy Margo.

The Sensoria socks detect how your foot lands, and conductive fibres then relay this information to a small clip-on device on the ankle. This sends information to your phone, which can issue real-time audio warnings and advice if needs be.
From around £130 ($199), sensoriafitness.com


Wednesday, January 21, 2015

The mother who rescues Bratz dolls from their 'trashy' lifestyles and gives them a 'makeunder' before sending them outside to play 'the way kids should'

Totally Agree!!! Good Job Mommy!



A creative mother has begun a 'rescue' project in which she refashions sexualised children's dolls into a more natural and childlike form.





Sonia Singh, from Hobart in Tasmania, removes any trace of make-up, reduces the lip and eye size and personally sews the dolls modest new outfits.





Her before and after pictures of the refurbished dolls reveals a stark difference between the out-of-proportion Barbie dolls and make-up clad Bratz dolls, and her more natural alternative.








'Here are the Tree Change Dolls (ex-Bratz dolls) playing outside the way kids should, after their radical make-unders,' Ms Singh wrote on her website, Tree Change Dolls.

'These dolls have been rescued and rehabilitated from op-shops and tip shops around Tasmania.


'These lil  fashion dolls have opted for a 'tree change', swapping high-maintenance glitz 'n' glamour for down-to-earth style.

'I hand repaint the dolls faces, mould new shoes, and my Mum sews and knits their clothing.'




Read more:  Dailymail