"By "interesting" I take it you're insinuating its hideous. Nothing about the aesthetics of this piece is charming, It's pedestrian, in every way. But wait, there's a rolled-up rug strapped to the back, ooooohhh!. What a terrible pairing of timber, its screams early years commercial school furniture. Perhaps this chap woulb be better-suited to being a journo and concocting pretentious babble. The only active positive analogue behaviour this warrants is introducing it to the contents of a box of matches. Armrests look 150mm shy to be useful, but then again he probably conceived then as "snack platforms". That rope, nuff said. I backed brutally honest because it was featured on Core 77. Amazing Stuff! Can't wait to read it!Today, Core 77 has delivered in my 7 years of daily visits, an utter eyesore. Poor show!Not bad though, 1 whoopsie in 7 years. Thumbs up!New Designers is full of exceptional delightful design.Pack Horse, on the other hand, is a genuine horse turd. No amount of polishing or glitter can redeem it.The best part is he paid potentially £18000 to acquire skills so he could unleash this famine of beauty on the world.2"
"A twofer, the toyline for the show was a terrific example of a designer doing a great job, all the vehicles had a form of manual or automatic transformation that did not require batteries and all the figures had wee magnets in there boot so they mag locked onto the vehicles and playsets, had me engaged for hours when I was a kid, "
"Tapes a twofer maybe, better visibility, as theres also spokie dokie reflectors on the wheels and touch of frame protection but also covers component branding over the bike hence the strange placement on the shocks (probably worth $400), and over the Head Tube badge. Looks like the bikes potentially worth up to $2000 or more as its EV from the Rear hub and the pannier battery which looks like its also locked onto the frame as well."
"Not the sort to rain (no pun intended) on someones hard work, the colour is grand, but with the best intention in the world, the third rider in the illustration on the road bike, will still get the familiar wet mark of greatness up his arse and back without mud guards. And no one like's rocking up with a vertical skid mark that says, "I rode to work in the rain" on them."