Origin of Cool

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Origin of Cool: Australia

Forbidden Fruit Collage and Tee

(English)
A unique three color collage on paper or a similar Forbidden Fruit Tee. This is new work by Melbourne based street artist Meggs.
(Dutch)
Meggs, een Australische street artist, komt met nieuw werk. “Forbidden Fruit” bestaat uit  een papieren collage en een t-shirt. Beide worden in een prachtige kartonnen doos geleverd. Wees er snel bij, de oplage is gelimiteerd.

By Cool Connoisseur Tom Vangeneugden
spotted on complex.com 
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Origin of Cool: Australia

The Most Amazing Frisbee Catch Ever

Aussie frisbee throwing champion Brodie Smith (part of the How Ridiculous team) launches a frisbee from Narrows Bridge in Perth, Australia. Waiting below is a speed boat that tracks the flight of the frisbee. Just when you think the disc is out of reach, Derek Herron jumps full stretch out of the boat and catches the frisbee with one hand. 


By David J Lowe
Sent in by Dorothy Lowe

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Origin of Cool: Australia

920 pencils - One memorable stop-motion music video

This video was made by film maker and animator Jonathan Chong, also known as Dropbear. This video forms the music video for Australian indie-folk group Hudson and their song Against the Grain



Chong worked alone on this project shooting everything himself. The video is 3 minutes 23 seconds long. In total, he used 920 pencils and captured 5,125 frames of footage.


Sent in by Cool Connoisseur Paul Frade from ‘The Largest Man-Made Jungle’ South Africa.
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Origin of Cool: Australia

On the Bondi coastal walk in Sydney, Australia the Sculpture By The Sea exhibition features more than 100 displays. Simon McGrath’s ‘Who Left The Tap On’ and installations from Wang Shugang, Steve Croquett and Margarita Sampson are just a few highlights. Take a look at the photos to get a taste of the high quality of artwork.


By David J Lowe

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The Finders Keepers Market in Brisbane

Origin of Cool: Australia

The Finders Keepers market is the dream of every off-beat come to life.



Held bi-annually in Brisbane, Sydney and Melbourne, the Finders Keepers bring over 65 independent designers and artists to the attention of those members of the general public who crave oddity and a bit of all-round quirk.


For those who aren’t as excited over wooden brooches as others, those who tire easily of milling through throngs of people, or those who are just a little bit lazy (no judgement here), there is a large space outside filled with refreshment stalls, sunchairs and make-shift couches. From here, you can watch live performances from up-and-coming local groups and devour macaroons, organic hotdogs, and cups of tea (in more flavours than you can twirl your ironic moustache at) in comfort.

There is even a stand run by The Smoothie Cycle where you have to sit on a bicycle and pedal to make the blender work to make your smoothie! Origin of Cool loves this idea!



Here are a couple of beautiful flyers h
ighlighting the events at the market:





Sent in by Kristyn Currie from Australia.

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The 10 Coolest Swimming Pools

1). SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA

Sydney, Australia

Bondi Baths, an Olympic-size pool that became the home of the Bondi Icebergs, a winter swimming club, in 1929.
Accessibility:
Year-round.
Cost: Day pass for nonmembers = $6.

2). VIENNA, AUSTRIA

Vienna, Austria

“Krapfenwaldlbad” was opened in 1923 has four heated pools for swimmers, socializers, and families. Exclusive views over the entire city and vineyards are what make them exceptional.
Accessibility:
May 2–Sept.
Cost: Adult admission to the park, including pool access = $6.70.

3). COPENHAGEN, DENMARK
Copenhagen, Denmark

Kastrup Søbad, a circular wooden pavilion in the Baltic Sea created in 2005, the “sea bath” rises up at the end of a 328-foot boardwalk that connects it to shore (where visitors will find showers and lockers) and spirals in a way that shields bathers from sea winds. It’s a perfect place to experience hygge — an all-encompassing Danish term that means spending quality time with good friends — and it’s only a seven-minute train trip from the heart of downtown.
Accessibility: June–Sept.
Cost: Free.

4). BATH, ENGLAND

 Bath, England

The Thermae Bath Spa taps into the same thermal springs that once soothed Roman conquerors in 43 A.D. From the naturally heated rooftop pool on the spa’s New Royal Bath building, visitors can take in a panorama that includes the ornate towers of 17th-century Bath Abbey in the center of town. This building also houses the Minerva Bath, the largest and most futuristically stylized of the three on offer, with massage jets, a whirlpool, and a “lazy river.
Accessibility:
Year-round.
Cost: 2 hour spa usage, including pool access = $40.


5). MONTPELLIER, FRANCE

Montpellier, France

Piscine Olympique d’Antigone hosts an Olympic-size lap pool (called Antigone) and the leisure pool (Venus). Upstairs there is a sun terrace beneath a retractable roof, a whirlpool, and the most chic waterslide you’ve ever seen.
Accessibility:
Year-round.
Cost: Adult day pass = $7.


6). BERLIN, GERMANY

Berlin, Germany

Badeschiff (literally, “bathing ship”), floats southeast of Berlin on the Spree River. The 90-foot-long, seven-foot-deep, bright blue pool was created in May 2004 from a converted barge.  
Accessibility:
May–Sept., Nov.–Mar.
Cost: $6.

7). BUDAPEST, HUNGARY

Budapest, Hungary

The Gellért Thermal Baths is an expansive Eastern European respite decked out in intricate stonework and mosaic tiles on a grand scale. The effervescent swimming pool in the art-nouveau-style main hall is impressive, sparkling 98 feet long under the double-height glass roof and inevitably inspiring fantasies of swimming in champagne. The rest of the building encompasses the original mineral-hot-spring baths, plus cold baths, saunas, a steam room, a spa, and two outdoor pools, including a 130-foot-long open-air wave pool.
Accessibility:
Indoor, year-round; outdoor, summertime.
Cost: Pools only from $20.

8). GRINDAVIK, ICELAND

Grindavík, Iceland

Blue Lagoon outside of Reykjavík has 1.6 million gallons of approximately 100-degree seawater. Steam rises from the sky-blue hot springs across a surreal landscape of black lava mounds, and bathers slather themselves with silica mud, precipitated from the springwater and known for its relaxing (and purported healing) properties. Formed in the 1970s as a by-product of the neighboring geothermal plant (after the plant used the hot water, it was led back to the lava field and formed the lagoon), the Blue Lagoon spawned a wellness center in 1999. With a restaurant, a spa, a dry sauna, and steam baths, the facility draws visitors from around the globe.
Accessibility:
Year-round.
Cost: Day pass = $42.


9).AUSTIN, TEXAS

Austin, Tex.

Barton Springs Pool allows you to take a dip in the natural spring water or lounge poolside on grassy knolls shaded by ancient oak and pecan trees in surrounding Zilker Metropolitan Park. The idyllic 355-acre green sprawl south of downtown is host to the annual Austin City Limits Music Festival and features Frisbee golf, playgrounds, and the Zilker Botanical Garden, which includes the Isamu Taniguchi Japanese Garden.
Accessibility:
Mar. 12–Jan. 24.
Cost: Adults = $3.


10). CORAL GABLES, FLORIDA

Coral Gables, Fla.

Coral Gables Venetian Pool is a man-made, jade green, eight-foot-deep lagoon created in 1924 by the city’s founding father, George Merrick. Drained every night and refilled with 820,000 gallons of spring water, the pool is connected to a pair of waterfalls (one of which is 25 feet high!) and grottoes.
Accessibility:
Year-round.
Cost: Day pass for nonresident adults = $11.


Found on Travel Spy

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The Cage of Death

Origin of Cool: Darwin, Australia

Crocosaurus Cove - Allows you to meet crocodiles face-to-face whilst swimming in a cage made of transparent plexiglass , aka the “Cage of Death”!




Found at Bored Page

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