Print.

We live in an age where convenience is king. A fingerprint here, a facial scan there—it takes virtually no effort to access our phone, bank account, or even the office. The fingerprint has become the ultimate symbol of modern efficiency. But perhaps it's time to give that finger a rest. There's a more dignified, subtle, and meaningful alternative: the elbow print. The elbow print isn't a fad. It's a statement. Where the fingerprint symbolizes haste, routine, and automation, the elbow print represents dedication, awareness, and a touch of rebellion against the digital grind. By making their identity known through their elbow, they're essentially saying: I'm willing to put in the effort to be authentic.

Coat rack.

The act of hanging up a coat on a peg seems at first glance to be a simple, trivial activity—a routine reflex, an action performed at the edge of consciousness, barely worthy of notice. Yet, when we examine this seemingly banal action, a rich palette of philosophical, cognitive, and phenomenological implications open up that radically undermine its seemingly self-evident character. What really happens when someone hangs up their coat? What cognitive, motor, and existential processes are involved? And what does this apparent banality reveal about human experience, the interaction with objects, and the structure of everyday life?

Party.

Cutting an orange seems like a simple ritual, an almost automatic act that transforms the fruit from an intact bastion of taste to an accessible pleasure. The cutting line that is usually chosen is so obvious that it is almost not up for discussion: from calyx point to blossom base, followed by a horizontal cut along the "equator." This method produces the familiar segments, evenly shaped, symmetrical and clear. But what if we break this pattern? What if we do not cut as expected, but approach an orange with the spirit of an explorer, with a knife that chooses routes that map the unknown?

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