Moon-Shaped Ice-Cream Sandwich Balls: Coming to a Freezer Near You
By Molly Oswaks, Oct 3, 2012 8:30 PM
http://m.gizmodo.com/5948791/moon+shaped-ice+cream-sandwich-balls-coming-to-a-freezer-near-you#
The only thing better than ice cream is ice cream with a gimmick. And
since ice cream trucks are all actually sort of drugs vans in disguise
(right?), and those Pikachu-faced Popsicles aren't even that tasty,
please direct your attention to this new and very wonderful upgrade,
coming straight from the guys who know how to make ice cream best:
Häagen-Dazs.
Coming just in time for the holiday season (although... who wants to eat
ice cream when it's snowing? Eh, whatever), these crater-pocked lunar
bombes contain a delicious layering of nuts, biscuits, caramels and
merigues - depending on which flavor/color moon you choose.
They were designed by the London-based Doshi Levien, who, according to
Dezeen, "were inspired by Georges Méliès' 1902 silent film Le Voyage
dans la Lune, Armenian surrealist Léon Tutundjian's relief work of
1929, a childhood Bollywood song, and the near-spherical shapes of
early ice cream bombes."
By Molly Oswaks, Oct 3, 2012 8:30 PM
http://m.gizmodo.com/5948791/moon+shaped-ice+cream-sandwich-balls-coming-to-a-freezer-near-you#
The only thing better than ice cream is ice cream with a gimmick. And
since ice cream trucks are all actually sort of drugs vans in disguise
(right?), and those Pikachu-faced Popsicles aren't even that tasty,
please direct your attention to this new and very wonderful upgrade,
coming straight from the guys who know how to make ice cream best:
Häagen-Dazs.
Coming just in time for the holiday season (although... who wants to eat
ice cream when it's snowing? Eh, whatever), these crater-pocked lunar
bombes contain a delicious layering of nuts, biscuits, caramels and
merigues - depending on which flavor/color moon you choose.
They were designed by the London-based Doshi Levien, who, according to
Dezeen, "were inspired by Georges Méliès' 1902 silent film Le Voyage
dans la Lune, Armenian surrealist Léon Tutundjian's relief work of
1929, a childhood Bollywood song, and the near-spherical shapes of
early ice cream bombes."