This $23 Titanium Carabiner Hides a Secret EDC Knife Inside It And Weighs Next To Nothing

I don’t sing enough praise of titanium as a material. It’s the strongest metal known to humankind, but at the same time, it’s also anti-corrosive, rust-resistant, and biocompatible (the body doesn’t reject it when used internally for implants/supports in surgery). It’s found in abundance on the moon, it self-heals (forms an oxidized layer if scratched), and is the only element that burns in nitrogen (every other element burns in oxygen). Titanium, aside from being such a weirdly wonderful element, is also a preferred alloy in EDC… and while most makers use titanium for a handle and call it a day, the folks at KeyUnity machined it in a way to give Titanium properties of a carabiner.

The KK08 carabiner from KeyUnity uses a single-piece titanium handle, which houses a 7Cr17Mov steel blade inside it. The handle is carabiner-shaped for a reason – it has this brilliantly machined detail that allows the carabiner arm to spring and bend without using a spring. Relying entirely on Titanium’s own properties, the zigzag machined pattern lets the carabiner work immaculately, providing spring as well as being durable enough to never break. The rest of the handle? Well, it’s cleverly designed to house the knife when not in use, sheathing the blade within its slim but incredibly cool design.

Designer: KeyUnity

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At 2.56″ when closed, this is your average-sized carabiner. It’s compact, weighs a paltry 16 grams, and can punch well above its weight. Titanium’s incredible strength-to-weight ratio means this carabiner can lift keys but even be used to do things like secure your water bottle to your backpack or even your backpack to a railing/fence. The cleverly machined detail on the carabiner arm allows the titanium to flex just like the spring-loaded arm on a regular carabiner. Meanwhile, the KK08 also hides a nifty blade inside it, for when you need a pocket knife.

The hidden blade folds out, revealing a 1.6″ cutting edge which might be on the smaller side, but it certainly gets the job done. The 7Cr17Mov steel build is brilliant on a budget, with high chromium for shine, and vanadium for strength and resilience. The drop-point profile makes it a great knife for all sorts of activities, from benign stuff like opening envelopes and packages, to more rugged activities like sharpening pencils, cutting branches, slicing through fruit/vegetables, or even self defense if push comes to shove.

Given its small size (and its fairly budget $23 price tag), the KK08 integrates everything into a minimal footprint, using a simple pivot for the knife to fold in and out. A frame lock is built into the titanium handle, allowing the blade to click into place while open, holding its position even while you’re working with tough materials like wood. KeyUnity mentions that the KK08 is the perfect hiking companion, although we see it as a brilliant EDC tool that you can carry anywhere – just not an airport or places where knives are considered taboo!

The KK08 comes in two colors – the plain titanium, as well as an anodized space grey finish. It honestly doesn’t need any color or pattern – the simple design language works wonderfully for this form factor, allowing it to also integrate seamlessly into your other EDC (especially your keychain). Both variants cost $23, and KeyUnity provides a 15 day exchange window upon damage or defect, along with a 1-year free maintenance period if your carabiner experiences regular wear and tear. There’s a lifetime warranty available too, although KeyUnity offers it at an added cost. Knowing their track record as well as how robust and durable titanium is, you’ll probably never need it.

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Mini House off-grid camper trailer opens up like an accordion to more than double the liveable space

For anyone who has spent time researching compact camper trailers, the biggest challenge is often balancing portability with livable space. Smaller trailers are easier to tow and store, but they can feel cramped once you arrive at camp. The Mini House from Turkish manufacturer Ortsan Outdoor takes a different approach, combining the convenience of a compact travel trailer with the functionality of a tiny home. This is achieved with the ingenious accordion-style design that dramatically expands its footprint once parked. As Ortsan likes to put it, the RV is built to “Fold, unfold, expand” with the push of a button.

At first glance, the Mini House looks like a conventional single-axle caravan. Measuring approximately 13.1 feet long and 6.8 feet wide in transport mode, it occupies just 90 square feet of space on the road, making it considerably easier to tow than many larger campers. Built on a heavy-duty steel chassis with a low-slung design for improved stability, it is also certified to O2 international transport standards, ensuring compliance with road regulations in various markets.

Designer: Ortsan

The real magic happens once the trailer reaches its destination. At the press of a button, both sidewalls fold outward, creating two expandable wings supported by canvas enclosures. This transformation more than doubles the available living area, increasing it to roughly 219 square feet. The expanded layout creates a more residential feel, separating spaces into dedicated zones rather than forcing every activity into a narrow corridor. The concept draws inspiration from accordion-style expandable structures, most notably the experimental De Markies caravan designed in the 1980s, but Ortsan has adapted the idea into a production-ready camper available on a made-to-order basis.

Despite its compact footprint, the interior offers a surprisingly complete living setup. A full-width bathroom occupies the front section of the trailer, while a long kitchen stretches along one side. The section includes a 90-liter 12-volt refrigerator, a two-burner gas cooktop, a stainless-steel sink, generous countertop space, multiple cabinets and drawers, and even a slide-out dining table. The bathroom also incorporates a large storage area, helping compensate for the limited storage available within the expandable wings. Additional storage can be found in a tongue-mounted box at the front of the trailer.

The Mini House is designed for off-grid travel as well. A roof-mounted 470-watt solar array works alongside a 200Ah lithium battery and inverter to provide electrical independence for extended stays. Water needs are supported by separate 200-liter fresh and gray water tanks, while a cassette toilet eliminates the need for a dedicated black-water system. These features make the camper suitable for weekend adventures and longer trips away from traditional campground hookups.

Cozy comfort is in no way compromised in the accordion-style setup. Ortsan equips the trailer with a wood-burning stove, air-conditioning system, Webasto diesel heater, and a smart TV with integrated multimedia capabilities. Many of the camper’s functions, including lighting, climate control, and the expandable sections themselves, can be managed through a tablet-based control system that serves as a central command hub.

Like any expandable design, the Mini House requires more setup than a conventional trailer and incorporates additional moving parts. However, the tradeoff is substantial as it delivers the towing convenience of a compact caravan while providing the livability of a much larger tiny home. Starting at approximately $19,300 (before taxes, shipping, and customization), the Mini House is truly a utilitarian solution for travelers seeking greater comfort without committing to a larger RV.

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This Tiny House Spreads Out Like an Apartment and Lives Like One Too

Most tiny houses try to be everything at once. The Miami, the latest park model from Phoenix Building Solutions, gets that. Rather than stacking lofts and squeezing in storage tricks, it spreads out — single-floor, open plan, and unapologetically apartment-like. At 400 square feet, it’s one of the more generously proportioned models in its class, and it wears that space well.

Built on a quad-axle trailer and measuring 11 feet 8 inches wide by 40 feet 3 inches long, the Miami sits closer to the wider end of park model specs. That extra width changes everything. It’s what separates a home that feels borrowed from one that actually feels lived in. The exterior keeps it tight — board-and-batten engineered wood siding, warm timber accents, a clean metal roof, and a monoslope roofline that cuts a sharp silhouette against any backdrop.

Designer: Phoenix Building Solutions

Step inside and the single-level layout does the heavy lifting. The kitchen is the kind of setup most apartment renters would envy — dual-basin stainless steel sink, oven and cooktop, microwave, dishwasher, and a full fridge/freezer. It’s a proper kitchen, not a kitchenette dressed up with good lighting. The living area flows naturally from it, and the large windows pull in enough natural light to make the 400 square feet feel considerably more generous than the number suggests.

The bedroom is where the Miami earns its keep as a two-person dwelling. A double bed sits alongside two built-in wardrobes and a small chair — practical without being sparse. There are no loft ladders to navigate in the dark, no tucked-away sleeping nooks. The single-floor commitment means everything is accessible, which matters more than most people realize until they’re actually living in a small space long-term.

Phoenix Building Solutions, based in Greenville, Alabama, manufactures from a 75,000-square-foot facility certified to ANSI A119.5 standards — a detail that speaks to build quality rather than just curb appeal. The Miami isn’t a concept or a render. It’s a production model from a company with over 130 years of combined industry experience, built for people who want something that lasts.

What makes the Miami genuinely interesting isn’t any single feature — it’s the restraint. Phoenix didn’t overcomplicate it. They took a straightforward idea — comfortable, modern, single-floor tiny living — and executed it cleanly. In a market full of houses competing to cram in one more clever feature, that kind of discipline is harder to pull off than it looks.

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The Umbrella That Makes Kids Chase Their Own Shadow

Most sun safety products for kids follow the same playbook: bright colors, cartoon prints, maybe a fun shape. They’re designed to appeal to parents, not children, which is probably why half of them end up abandoned in school bags by 10 a.m. Studio torinoko, a Japanese design studio, took a very different approach.

Their latest project is called Kage no Otomodachi, which translates to Shadow Friends, and it’s a children’s umbrella that projects illustrated characters onto the ground when held open in direct sunlight. That’s the entire premise, and it’s so elegantly simple that you wonder why no one thought of it before.

Designer: studio torinoko

The way it works is almost effortlessly clever. The umbrella’s canopy features illustrated cutouts that cast playful, character-like figures onto the pavement below. When a child opens it on a sunny day, a little shadow companion appears at their feet, inviting them to follow, chase, and walk alongside it. The child stays under the umbrella. The umbrella keeps them out of the sun. Nobody had to argue about it.

This is behavioral design doing exactly what it’s supposed to do: shifting behavior not through enforcement but through genuine appeal. The studio describes it as a move away from “forcing protective behaviors” toward creating the conditions that make children want to protect themselves. It’s a subtle but important distinction, and it matters a lot in the context of where we’re heading with summer temperatures globally. We’re not just dealing with a UV index inconvenience anymore. We’re dealing with heat that poses real risk, especially to kids who are outside walking to school or playing during peak sun hours.

What stands out most about this design is that it respects the child as a user, not just a passive recipient of adult decisions. Children have a near-universal fascination with shadows. They stomp on them, race them, try to escape them. Studio torinoko didn’t just understand that; they built an entire product philosophy around it. The result is an umbrella a kid will actually want to carry, which is arguably the hardest design problem of all.

The umbrella debuts in a single turquoise-blue colorway, chosen specifically for visibility and ease of recognition outdoors. It also features reflective details for added safety during rainy weather and evening walks, which shows the team was thinking beyond the obvious use case. It’s a considered, holistic design rather than a one-trick novelty.

From a purely aesthetic standpoint, I love how restrained it is. The magic isn’t in the umbrella itself but in what it casts below, which means the object doesn’t need to work hard visually. It doesn’t scream at you. It just quietly does something wonderful when the sun hits it right. That kind of understated design intelligence doesn’t come around often, especially in the children’s products market, where “louder” almost always wins.

Studio torinoko has also stated that they hope future production runs will expand into additional colors and further refinements, with a broader goal of normalizing parasol use among children in general. That cultural angle is worth noting. Parasol culture is well-established in Japan and parts of East Asia as a practical, everyday sun protection habit, but it remains far less common in Western markets for kids specifically. If Shadow Friends helps shift that, even slightly, it’s doing something well beyond its immediate design brief.

It’s rare to come across a product that feels genuinely joyful without being gimmicky. Shadow Friends manages that balance. It’s not trying to be a toy. It’s not trying to be a collectable. It’s trying to be a useful, protective everyday object that a child will actually form a relationship with, and the shadow play is the bridge that makes that relationship possible. If good design is about solving real problems beautifully, this is a near-perfect example. The problem is real, the solution is beautiful, and the mechanism is pure delight. That doesn’t happen as often as it should.

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This Retro Arcade Machine Folds Into A Furniture Cabinet Right Out Of Pottery Barn

You bring home a new piece of furniture. It’s a handsome, mid-century modern style cabinet in a rich walnut finish, and your partner is frankly stunned. They thought your design sensibilities peaked at a framed movie poster, yet here is this sophisticated, adult-looking object that actually complements the living room. They nod, impressed. The next evening, they go to open one of the doors, planning to store some coasters or maybe a few new wine glasses. Except the handle is just for show, and the doors don’t open. The look of confusion on their face is priceless, because they’re about to learn your secret.

That’s because this beautiful cabinet is a beautifully crafted lie. The front panel doesn’t swing open; it unlocks and folds down to reveal a two-player control deck. The entire top half then pivots upward, extending into a full-height marquee that glows with the promise of 8-bit glory. In seconds, the quiet, respectable piece of furniture has undergone a transformation worthy of a Saturday morning cartoon, revealing itself to be the Swap Arcade. It’s the ultimate stealth entertainment system, hiding in plain sight and waiting for your friends to come over.

Designers: Les Cookson & Ken Higginson

The brainchild of Les Cookson and Ken Higginson out of Lincoln, California, the Swap Arcade tackles a very real problem for gaming enthusiasts who happen to live in actual homes with actual partners who have actual opinions about décor. Closed, it sits at a compact 36 inches tall with a footprint slim enough to tuck against any wall. Open, it rises to a full 70 inches with a 27-inch HDMI display, built-in speakers, and a two-player control panel loaded with SANWA joysticks.

The transformation is handled by a counterbalanced mechanism that manages the weight as the hideaway arcade moves up and down, keeping the movement smooth and controlled rather than the kind of chaotic reveal that ends with someone’s fingers in the wrong place. Once fully open, front corner locking pins secure the arcade immediately after transformation, with a second redundant set at the rear corners for added stability, keeping everything firmly locked in place before anyone even thinks about touching a joystick.

Running on a Raspberry Pi 4 with Batocera preinstalled and a starter library of 100 games, the machine is ready to play straight out of the box, a self-contained gaming system from day one. From there, thousands of additional retro titles can be loaded, giving access to a huge library of arcade, console, and retro favorites through one clean multicade interface. The controls run through a Brook Zero-Pi Fighting Board encoder, adding compatibility with Nintendo Switch, Switch 2, PS3, PS2, the original PlayStation, and PC via X-Input. Hook up a Nintendo Switch Online subscription and suddenly you have access to classic Nintendo libraries on a proper stand-up cabinet. Connect a PC and play arcade-style games through Steam. The machine evolves with what you already own.

Cookson clearly had no intention of letting the furniture half of the equation slide. The cabinet shell is actual wood, and the unfinished bare wood option means it can be stained or painted to suit any interior. Three finished options are also available, Natural, Walnut, or Dark Tobacco, each looking convincingly like something sourced from a design-forward furniture store. For anyone wanting something completely custom, a graphic designer and printer can create custom vinyl decals using almost any artwork, making the Swap Arcade truly personal. The nostalgia you’re chasing here is entirely your own to define.

The lower section includes built-in storage for game systems, controllers, cables, and accessories, accessible when the Swap Arcade is opened into arcade mode… or maybe some of those wine glasses your partner wanted to originally store. It’s a detail that keeps the illusion perfectly intact. When closed, nothing gives the game away.

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The Thermostat That Finally Looks Like It Was Designed

At some point, every well-designed room has a thermostat on the wall. And at some point, nearly every well-designed room has been slightly let down by it. That’s the quiet irony of home design. We agonize over paint colors, hunt for the perfect light fixtures, spend weekends debating sofa legs, and then right there at eye level lives a beige plastic rectangle covered in tiny buttons that no one fully understands. We’ve simply accepted it as the ugly compromise of functional living.

Uriel Electronics, a design-focused electronics brand, apparently decided that compromise is no longer necessary. Their new temperature controllers, the USH-02 and the UEH-02, make a surprisingly compelling argument that utility and beauty don’t have to negotiate a truce. They can just coexist, elegantly, without one apologizing to the other.

Designer: Uriel Electronics

I’ll be upfront: I didn’t expect to have strong opinions about thermostats. But these two pieces carry a clarity of intention that’s difficult to walk past. Both models are built around the same core idea: strip away the complexity, keep only what matters, and make it look like it belongs on the wall rather than just stuck to it. A single rotary dial. A clean display showing the temperature. A refined body that reads more like a considered object than a hardware accessory. No confusing menu navigation, no crowded button grid, no searching through a manual to figure out how to lower the temperature by two degrees.

The USH-02 is the surface-mounted version, and it’s the one with visible personality. Its translucent skeleton design lets you glimpse the hardware inside, which feels like a little gift to anyone who appreciates how things are made. The graphic detailing adds visual wit to what could have easily been a clean but flat minimalist slab. It sits on the wall in a way that makes you actually stop and look, which is a strange thing to say about a thermostat, but here we are. It doesn’t disappear into the surface; it quietly introduces itself.

The UEH-02 takes the opposite route. Flush-mounted and incredibly slim, it’s designed to nearly vanish. The profile barely protrudes from the wall, creating the kind of visual quiet that interior designers specifically obsess over. If the USH-02 says “notice me,” the UEH-02 says “I’m here, I work perfectly, and I won’t interrupt your space.” Both approaches are valid. Both are well-executed. The choice between them is really just a question of how much personality you want your walls to carry.

The discipline behind this project is worth calling out. It is genuinely difficult to design something that is both beautiful and immediately intuitive, especially in a category most manufacturers have treated as purely functional. Removing complexity rather than adding features is a confident design move, and we’re living through a moment when more is still frequently mistaken for better in tech. Seeing a product that resolves itself into a single tactile dial and a clear display feels almost like a statement. The rotary control has a satisfying physicality that touchscreens never quite manage to replicate. High-end audio equipment and quality appliances have kept the dial alive for exactly this reason: turning something to get a result is one of the most natural gestures there is. It’s a reminder that good design often means returning to what already worked, done with more intention.

The engineering side, visible in the controllers’ back panels, confirms this isn’t just a surface-deep exercise. Components are neatly organized, an Omron relay handles the heavy work, and the specs support voltages between 85V and 265VAC with a max current of 18A. The function is serious. The form just happens to be beautiful.

That balance is rarer than it should be. Home tech has long been given a pass on aesthetics in a way that furniture or lighting simply would not tolerate. Uriel Electronics is quietly making the argument that it shouldn’t. Your thermostat is on your wall every single day, in full view of everyone who walks into that room. It might as well earn its place there.

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