3-in-1 Cardboard Pot Just Made Plastic Pots Obsolete

The plant pot is not a product most people think about reinventing. It holds soil, it sits on a shelf, and eventually you wrestle it off the root ball and toss it in a bin. End of story. But three design students from Münster School of Design looked at that ordinary object and saw something worth fixing, and the result is POT+, a 3-in-1 recyclable cardboard plant pot that manages to be both surprisingly clever and genuinely necessary.

Sophie Greif, Paul Sommerfeld, and Paula Storm developed POT+ over just eight weeks as part of a course on sustainable cardboard packaging. Eight weeks is not a lot of time. It barely covers a single design iteration at most studios, which makes what they produced even more impressive. The concept is straightforward: a biodegradable, glue-free cardboard pot that doubles as a scoop and includes a built-in plant tag. Three tools, one object, zero plastic.

Designers: Sophie Greif, Paul Sommerfeld and Paula Storm

The plastic plant pot problem is bigger than most of us realize. Most of those thin, flimsy pots that come with supermarket herbs or garden centre annuals are not recyclable. They fall into a category of plastics too contaminated with soil and organic material to process properly, so they end up in landfill. Billions of them, every year. Environmental groups have flagged this as one of the garden industry’s most persistent and overlooked waste problems, and yet the plastic pot has remained almost entirely unchanged for decades. We have essentially built a throwaway infrastructure around plants, which is a genuinely bizarre thing to do for products sold in the name of nature.

POT+ addresses this directly and without fanfare. Made from 100% recyclable cardboard, it can be tossed straight into the paper recycling bin after use. It is water-resistant and stable for up to two weeks, which covers the window between purchase and repotting for most plants. Beyond that, the ergonomic design and integrated scoop make the actual task of repotting cleaner and easier. And the built-in plant tag is one of those small details that makes you wonder why it was not always part of the package. Anyone who has scratched a plant name on a popsicle stick and promptly lost it will know exactly what I mean.

What strikes me about POT+ is how it reframes the idea of sustainable design. So much green design falls into the trap of asking people to change their behavior significantly in exchange for a smaller environmental footprint. POT+ does not do that. The user experience is genuinely better: fewer tools to fumble with, a biodegradable pot that sidesteps the recycling bin debate, and a plant tag already built in. The sustainability is incidental from the user’s perspective, even though it is clearly the central intention from the designers’.

That alignment between good design and ethical design is harder to achieve than it looks. Students are often praised for one or the other, but rarely both. Sophie, Paul, and Paula merged perspectives from Communication & Product Design and Media & Product Design, which likely accounts for the final product feeling as considered in its branding as it is in its function. POT+ has a clear identity. It looks intentional, not experimental.

The Green Product Award recognized it for good reason. But the more interesting conversation is about what POT+ signals for design education. Eight weeks, three students, three different disciplines, and a finished concept that could genuinely replace a product category. That is not a student project in the diminutive sense of the phrase. It is the kind of outcome that most professional design teams would be proud to put their name on.

The plastic plant pot has been a quiet environmental problem for decades, hiding in plain sight because it is so mundane, so ubiquitous, so easy to overlook. POT+ does not try to be remarkable. It just quietly gets the job done better. And right now, that might be the most useful kind of design there is.

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Xbox Series X25 Limited Edition celebrates brand’s 25 years of nostalgic gaming

Xbox limited edition makes are nothing uncommon, as Microsoft often delves into collaborations for some really interesting themed consoles and controllers. The gaming brand just turned 25 this year, and Microsoft isn’t going to let go of the opportunity to amaze fans.

This is the limited edition Xbox 25th Anniversary Collection specifically designed to celebrate the quarter-century of Microsoft’s gaming brand. The special themed console and controller remember the platform’s historical development right from the time it came to the shelves, and also pays gratitude to its dedicated community of gamers.

Designer: Microsoft

Since we are talking about the highly nostalgic element, the limited-edition creation is draped in the OG Green translucent theme. If you are an avid Xbox fan, that reminds me of the aesthetic worn by the original 2001 Xbox console. The fused hues of the outer shell are absolute dope, both on the console and the controller, while the backplate gets the more traditional black make. Apparently, this is the first time Microsoft has gone for the translucent treatment for the chassis on any current-generation console models. I’m glad they did, because the thing looks so magnetic.

 

According to Jason Ronald, VP Next Generation, “The XBOX Series X25 Limited Edition respects our history, with the power and performance of the XBOX Series X, including 1TB of storage, and a design that reflects where we’ve been and the community that’s been with us along the way.” Both the console and the controller are etched with the “Xbox 25” anniversary logo on the front. That is complemented by the “X” button that turns green as soon as the console is switched on.

The controller comes with the original ABXY colors for the buttons, and the bumpers on the gamepad are black and white to go with the classic theme of the Duke controller. The translucent goodness flows to the rear, where the back case and the battery panel reveal the Xbox logo. That said, the texture feel and the ergonomic grip are more comparable to the current generation gamepads. Ronald added that there will be some “hidden surprises throughout” to keep things interesting for lucky owners.

Microsoft hasn’t detailed anything about the pricing of the special edition Xbox console, but it’ll be within bounds, I guess. Availability, though, is hinted at for select markets as a special edition collection in November. Those who fail to buy the collection can grab the XBOX Wireless Controller X25 Special Edition standalone as well, but that’s also a limited Edition offering.

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At $214, This Lamp Is a Real Dandelion Built One Seed at a Time

Most decorative lighting doesn’t ask much of you. It sits on a shelf, does its job, and eventually gets replaced when something newer or cheaper comes along. The design industry produces objects by the millions, and very few of them carry any real sense of craft or intention. Even those marketed as artisanal tend to follow predictable patterns, rarely drawing from the natural world in any genuinely meaningful way.

That’s what makes the Dandelight from Studio Drift so quietly disarming. It’s a small table lamp, but its material isn’t glass or ceramic or carved wood. It’s a real dandelion, handpicked during spring in the Netherlands, its seeds attached one by one to a tiny LED. Designers Lonneke Gordijn and Ralph Nauta first conceived it in 2007 as a statement against mass production and throwaway habits in design.

Designers: Lonneke Gordijn and Ralph Nauta (Studio DRIFT)

Dandelions grow practically everywhere, from pristine meadows to the edges of busy highways, yet most adults barely register them. They’re generally dismissed as weeds, which makes it easy to overlook that they’re historically prized for their medicinal value and that their seed heads are among nature’s most precisely engineered structures. Studio Drift’s interest in them isn’t sentimental; it comes from a genuine curiosity about what nature quietly constructs and what that construction might illuminate.

Put it on a bedside table or a windowsill, and the glow that filters through those fragile seeds isn’t harsh or bright. It’s soft and diffused, the kind of light that tells a room to settle down for the evening. The dandelion isn’t decorating the lamp; the dandelion is the lamp, and that distinction changes everything about how you experience it and, perhaps, the plant itself.

The making is as deliberate as the idea. During spring, the studio handpicks dandelions and attaches each seed to an LED, one at a time. A slender phosphorus bronze stem carries the current to a battery, which sits in plain view rather than tucked out of sight. That visible battery isn’t an oversight; it’s a reminder that the object owes nothing to any pretense of effortless production.

Two versions are available. The standard Dandelight, priced at $214, stands 18 cm tall and leaves the dandelion open to the room. The dome version, at $437, encloses everything inside a handblown glass shell on a concrete and polymer base, measuring 28 cm tall. The dome turns the seeds into something closer to a preserved specimen, which makes it feel like a collector’s object as much as a light source.

The Dandelight also invites you to look at the dandelion as a built form, a radial structure shaped by repetition, lightness, and balance that few people ever slow down to notice. Each piece comes out slightly different since no two dandelions are identical, and the hands doing the placing aren’t machines. That variability isn’t a flaw; it’s exactly what the object has that no mass-produced lamp can replicate.

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SharkNinja’s $499 Vacuum Now Comes in Colors Your Designer Would Pick

Most home appliances are designed to be forgiven, not admired. You buy them, you use them, and when company comes over, you hope nobody notices the boxy gray robot charging in the corner or the utilitarian stick vacuum propped against the wall. That’s just been the unspoken contract between cleaning products and the people who own them: function first, aesthetics never. SharkNinja just tore up that contract.

The Shark Home Luxe Collection is SharkNinja’s first coordinated cross-category color initiative, and it’s a surprisingly considered move from a brand better known for suction power than style. The collection spans two of Shark’s most capable products: the PowerDetect UV Reveal robot vacuum and mop, and the PowerDetect Speed cordless vacuum. Both get a total of eight new colorways, split across the two products, and they are genuinely beautiful in a way that feels deliberate rather than decorative.

Designer: SharkNinja

For the robot vacuum, the shades are Espresso, Evergreen, Deep Harbor, and Ivory. The cordless gets Walnut, Oatstone, Sagewood, and Harbor Slate. Read those names and you’ll notice a pattern immediately: these are the exact same tones showing up in Japandi interiors, minimalist furniture lines, and the kind of design-forward spaces that get 400,000 likes on Pinterest. SharkNinja clearly did its homework. The names alone do half the marketing work.

Interior designer Jeremiah Brent was brought in to mark the launch, and his take on it cuts right to the point. “For so long, products in this category were designed to be hidden, when the reality is they live alongside us every day,” he said. He’s right. Robot vacuums don’t get tucked into closets; they sit in plain view on their charging docks. Cordless vacuums lean against walls in the hallway or the bedroom. They occupy space in the same rooms as carefully chosen furniture and lighting, and for years, the design language of those products has been completely at odds with everything else around them.

The Shark Home Luxe Collection doesn’t just slap a new coat of paint on existing hardware either. The finishes feel considered, the proportions haven’t changed, and the products underneath are legitimately strong. The PowerDetect UV Reveal is the first robot vacuum and mop to use UV light detection to identify hidden messes, including dried spills, pet accidents, and residue that standard sensors would otherwise miss. It vacuums and mops simultaneously, adapts in real time to different floor types, and the self-empty base holds debris for up to 45 days. Prices for the UV Reveal Luxe start at $1,299.

The PowerDetect Speed, meanwhile, is a 7-pound cordless vacuum offering up to 60 minutes of runtime, with PowerDetect Intelligence that automatically adjusts to different surfaces and cleaning directions. Its auto-empty base can go up to 45 days between empties. The Luxe version starts at $499.99.

Now, is a color refresh a radical redesign? No, and nobody is pretending otherwise. But that’s not really the point. The point is that SharkNinja is acknowledging something the design community has quietly understood for years: objects we live with daily should be held to the same aesthetic standard as everything else in our homes. A vacuum isn’t a utility hiding in a utility closet anymore. It’s furniture, essentially.

The broader trend here is one worth watching. Brands across categories, from air purifiers to kitchen appliances to Wi-Fi routers, are starting to understand that people want technology that integrates into a home visually, not just functionally. Dyson figured this out early. Now SharkNinja is making the same argument, at a wider price range and with a much clearer design vocabulary.

Whether the Shark Home Luxe Collection becomes a defining shift in how cleaning appliances are marketed, or whether it remains a smart but limited edition palette refresh, depends entirely on how consumers respond. My instinct says the response will be warm. Because given the choice between a vacuum that blends into your home and one that doesn’t, most people will choose the one that doesn’t make the room look worse.

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