A Craftsman Just Turned Dead Car Engines Into One-of-a-Kind Guitars

I’ve been thinking about this one for days. A Slovenian craftsman named Vlado Plateis is turning discarded car engine heads into fully playable electric guitars, and every time I look at the photos, I still can’t decide if I’m staring at a musical instrument or a sculpture. Maybe that’s exactly the point.

The design logic here is deceptively simple: take the engine head as the body of the guitar, preserve its raw industrial form, and build around it rather than in spite of it. Nothing is polished away, sanded smooth, or disguised. The cast metal arrives with its own surface history of machined edges, bolt holes, and combustion chamber cavities, and all of it stays. The visible scars and geometry of the original part become the visual language of the finished instrument. That restraint is a design decision, and it’s a brave one. Most makers would be tempted to refine. Plateis resists that impulse entirely.

Designer: Vlado Plateis

What makes the objects so visually arresting is the tension between their two identities. The pickups, tuning pegs, and strings are all standard guitar hardware, clean and purposeful. Set against the rough, irregular topography of the engine casting, they create a contrast that reads as almost confrontational. One material is mass-produced and precise. The other is heavy, asymmetrical, and marked by mechanical life. Together, they don’t clash so much as they hold a conversation, and that conversation is what you keep looking at.

Each engine head also brings an entirely different geometry to the design, which means every guitar has a silhouette that could never be repeated. A guitar built from a Toyota Corolla head looks nothing like one built from a Mitsubishi Colt. The donor car determines the form. The bolt pattern, the fin arrangement, the overall mass and proportion are all inherited rather than designed, which paradoxically makes the final object feel more authored, not less. Plateis isn’t imposing a shape. He’s discovering one that was already there.

The weight is part of the design too, and I think it matters more than people initially consider. These are dense, substantial objects. You don’t pick one up and forget what it’s made from. That physicality communicates something about permanence that most contemporary design actively avoids. We’re so conditioned to lightweight, minimal, and frictionless that an object with genuine heft feels almost transgressive. It asks you to be present with it.

I also want to talk about what Plateis doesn’t do, because restraint is underrated in design. He doesn’t paint the metal. He doesn’t add decorative elements that aren’t structurally necessary. He doesn’t try to make the engine head look like something it isn’t. The honesty of the material is the aesthetic. That’s a philosophy rooted in the same tradition as Shaker furniture and Braun electronics, the idea that a thing should look exactly like what it is and nothing more. Applied to a guitar made from automotive scrap, it produces something genuinely unexpected.

Upcycling in design is popular right now, often to the point of feeling performative. Brands slap the word “reclaimed” on something and call it sustainable, but the object itself is forgettable. Plateis sidesteps all of that because the material isn’t incidental to the design. It is the design. Because every engine head has a different geometry, every guitar is structurally and visually unique. You cannot order the same one twice. The scarcity isn’t manufactured. It’s inherent to the process.

As someone who pays close attention to design, I think Plateis Guitars represents something genuinely interesting happening at the intersection of material culture, craft, and form-making. It’s a reminder that the most compelling design doesn’t always come from the biggest studios or the most advanced technology. Sometimes it comes from someone in Slovenia, a scrapped engine head, and a very considered eye for what already exists inside a piece of discarded metal.

Whether or not you play guitar, whether or not you care about cars, these objects deserve your attention. They are proof that constraints can be generative, and that found form, treated with patience and respect, can produce something completely new.

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Fire, Memory, and the Design That Wants to Keep Both Alive

Every year during the Ghost Festival, millions of people across East Asia stand at street corners, in parking lots, or on sidewalks, setting fire to paper offerings for their ancestors. It is one of the most intimate acts a person can perform in public. It is also, increasingly, a problem for the cities around it. The smoke is real. The fire hazard is real. And the tension between a deeply rooted cultural practice and modern urban living is just as real. That is the space where the Peace Urn was born.

Designed by a team of five students, Hao Qian, Xiyue Yang, Zetong Song, Chenchen Du, and Yichen Fan, the Peace Urn is a clay vessel built specifically for burning joss paper in dense urban environments. It took home a Student Notable in the Lifestyle Accessories category at a 2026 design awards program, and while the recognition might sound understated, the thinking behind the project is anything but.

Designers: Hao Qian, Xiyue Yang, Zetong Song, Chenchen Du, Yichen Fan

What the designers understood, and what I think gets missed in a lot of conversations about modernizing tradition, is that the goal was never to replace the ritual. It was to protect it. Burning joss paper is an act of grief and connection, a way of sending material offerings through fire to ancestors in the afterlife. You do not solve that by eliminating the fire. You solve it by giving the fire somewhere better to live.

The Peace Urn does exactly that through airflow. The geometry of the vessel is engineered so that air moves through it in a specific pattern, slowing ash as it rises and drawing it back down rather than letting it scatter across streets and neighbors’ windshields. Smoke is managed similarly. The result is a contained burn that still looks and feels like a burn, which matters more than it might seem.

The designers were deliberate about keeping the visual experience intact. Flames remain visible through openings in the vessel because that visibility is not decorative. It is the whole point. Watching the offerings transform is part of the ritual itself. A closed, purely functional container would have technically solved the problem while emotionally gutting it. The Peace Urn refuses to make that trade.

The material choice is worth noting too. The urn is made from unglazed heat-resistant clay, chosen for its thermal stability, affordability, and cultural familiarity. But the choice goes beyond practicality. As the urn ages and accumulates soot, heat marks, and residue from repeated use, it becomes a record of the rituals performed in it. The surface changes. It holds memory in a tangible way, which feels entirely fitting for an object designed to help people honor the dead.

There is also a structural proposal embedded in the design: moving the practice from informal street corners into designated public spaces. The urn is not just a personal object. It is part of a system, a piece of infrastructure that allows the practice to be relocated into designated spaces, improving safety and spatial order while maintaining the privacy and emotional intimacy of the ritual. That shift from “this is someone’s private act happening in public” to “this is a supported civic practice” is, I think, quietly significant. It is an argument that tradition deserves planning, not just tolerance.

The geometry carries one more layer of meaning. The circular form of the urn references the traditional practice of drawing a circle on the ground when burning joss paper, where the boundary defines sacred space and the opening represents the direction of spiritual transmission. Translating that into the vessel’s shape is the kind of detail that separates thoughtful design from clever design. The circle does not just look good. It means something.

The Peace Urn will not end up in a museum as an object of aesthetic appreciation, and it is not trying to. It is trying to show up every Ghost Festival, on a designated corner somewhere, smelling like smoke and doing its job. That restraint is admirable. Not every design needs to be timeless. Some just need to be useful at the right moment, for the right people.

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This Skyscraper-Style Tiny Home Packs Two Floors Into Just 107 Square Feet

Most tiny homes go wide. La Ruche goes up. Designed by Quadrapol, the French company behind some of Europe’s most refined compact living solutions, La Ruche is a vertical two-story tower that fits a full kitchen, bathroom, dining area, and bedroom into just 10 square meters of total floor space. At 107 square feet, it is exceptionally small — even by the standards of a category that has made minimalism its identity.

The name translates to “The Hive” in French, and the form earns it. The structure rises to 4.12 meters tall on a footprint of just 2.17 by 2.3 meters. Built on a KVH finger-jointed solid wood timber frame, the exterior is clad in FSC and PEFC-certified treated pine siding available in a choice of colors, with a roof finished in either EPDM or steel pan. Quadrapol guarantees the structural frame for 20 years, and a 10-year warranty covers the broader build. This is not a weekend shed project. It is a precision-manufactured habitat delivered by truck, ready to drop into a back garden, campsite, or vacation lot without requiring any planning permit or administrative authorization.

Designer: Quadrapol

Step through the single glass door and you arrive in the kitchen, which is smaller than most studio apartment bathrooms but remarkably well-equipped. There is a two-burner induction hob, a built-in fridge, a sink, and cabinetry. A wall-mounted drop-down table unfolds to seat two. Separated from the kitchen by a curtain, the ground floor bathroom contains a 70 by 70 centimeter shower and a floor-mounted toilet. The spruce paneling and laminate flooring run throughout, keeping the interior palette tight and coherent.

A wooden ladder leads to the upper level, designed to stow flush against the wall when not in use. Up top, the bedroom fits a double bed alongside a storage unit and a netted shelf. It is snug in the way only intentional design can pull off — the kind of snug that feels considered rather than cramped, at least for a weekend or seasonal stay. Quadrapol positions it for permanent housing, second homes, vacation rentals, and student accommodation, though the curtain-divided bathroom and ladder access suggest it is best suited to shorter-term use or solo living.

La Ruche is priced at approximately $31,000 USD. With delivery running two to three months, it sits in a price bracket that makes it a genuinely accessible entry into compact ownership. For those willing to rethink what a home needs to be, Quadrapol’s answer is simple: four meters tall, two floors, and not a centimeter wasted.

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Why Buy a Console? The REDMAGIC 11S Pro Is a Gaming Powerhouse in Your Pocket

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Siri AI vs. ChatGPT vs. Claude: Can Apple’s Deep OS Integration Beat Raw Brainpower?

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Will the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 8 Wide Fit In Your Pocket?

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How to Use Fable 5 for Complex Tasks Before July 7th

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Samsung Galaxy S27 Ultra and Pro Camera Specs Finally Leak

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