Enter your username and password.
-
more about #decoration more comments → OMG! Ponies!: Thanks but no thanks. For $11, I can buy a six-pack of beer and a carton of Chunky Monkey and watch myself cry in the mirror. more » Curves: Unless their dog just died or something, I am not into weepers. (Keep that stuff in the closet.) To the guy who said this post is sexist, welcome to Giz. more » ShakeelJalopomy: THIS POST IS SEXIST more » IN THE FACE!: Everybody's Hugging! more » Kaiser-Machead: For some extra coin, you could always take CNN's route and just project a tree and get a few pine-scented candles. No needles! more » OMG! Ponies!: I don't need electric bangles to be inappropriate around holiday time. I can do that myself. However, electric bangles help make those lasting memori... more » -
#mencrying
Valentine's Day Magnets Favor the Strongly Sensitive Type
Looking for something to decorate your fridge with this V-Day, here's magnets of men weeping. Maybe it's just me, but if I really wanted to see grown ass men cry, I'd just start dating again. More » -
#keyboards
Japanese-Style Keyboards Look Almost Too Good for Typing
These traditional Japanese-style keyboards are a class apart from the grey or white boringness of the average keyboard. As well as looking different, and neat these devices are even handmade for that extra "creative" touch. The gold one's damn attractive and would look cool on many a desk: but not the green "kara kusa" one... that just looks like a typing nightmare. That attractiveness costs, mind you, as they're available for $154.90. Except the gold "Zip-Ang" one, which is a whopping $214.21. [Akihabaranews] -
#magneticleaves
Your Fridge Gets the Forest Effect with Leaf Magnets
Forget fridge magnet poetry— you know you only used it to make up smutty phrases anyway—stick these fridge leaves on that boring metal door, and you'd have your own indoor forest. Granted it would be much more "lovely" if it was made of real leaves not plastic ones, but I reckon they've got a charm all of their own. Designer Richard Hutten created them for office ceilings in a Rotterdam museum, and now they're being commercialised. No word on pricing or availability yet. [Dezeen] -
