We all have it - that blue can hidden somewhere in the depths of the bathroom cabinet among half-empty bottles of overpriced serums and promises of eternal youth. Nivea cream. Icon. Legend. But if you think it's only good for lubricating dry elbows in the winter or for days when you run out of your "real" cream, prepare for a serious beauty shock. The blue can is not just a cream; it's the base for an alchemy that will turn your bathroom into a Parisian beauty laboratory. Forget complicated chemical formulas, today we're mixing glamour with pantry ingredients!
PositionExecutive Editor
JoinedJuly 26, 2013
Articles4,873
Jan Macarol is the responsible editor of the printed and online editions of City Magazine Slovenia. Together with his two assistants, he strives to offer readers the most unique and fresh information about urban culture, technological innovations, fashion and everything an urban nomad needs to survive in a fast-paced world.
If you still think of marketing as putting up posters on digital walls, you're in trouble. The year 2026 brings a complete turnaround: algorithms have become jealous lovers, search engines are everywhere, and artificial intelligence reads minds. Only those who understand that adaptability is the new horsepower will survive.
We used to own things. We had shelves of CDs, garages of tools, and disks of data. Today? Today we are digital subtenants. We pay for music, for movies, for photo storage, and now even for intelligence. But a metal box called the Olares One has just entered the scene, and with its RTX 5090 brutality, it says, "Enough is enough." This isn't just a computer, it's a rebellion against the feudalism of Silicon Valley.
Summary Seiko proves that a diver's watch doesn't have to be just a boring piece of steel with the Seiko Prospex LX GMT SNR058. Featuring Spring Drive technology, a titanium case, and a dial that mimics the North American mist, this special edition blurs the line between tool and art. It's not a watch for everyone, but it is a watch for those who understand what true Japanese craftsmanship means.
Summary California jeweler Topper and Swiss watch giant Zenith have joined forces to create a watch that literally mimics the natural glow of the ocean. With only 50 pieces made and a price tag of over $12,000, it's a diver's watch that combines the high-frequency power of the El Primero with the aesthetics of the deep sea. It's the Zenith Defy Extreme Diver.
Let's be honest. Most people who decide to "restore" a car do so because rust has eaten away at the sills or because the engine sounds like a coffee grinder with nails in it. But in the world of the ultra-rich, where the Porsche Carrera GT Sonderwunsch is the holy grail of analog motoring, the word "restore" means something entirely different. It means taking something that's already perfect and stripping it down to its bare essentials, just to make the dream of red and white a reality. Victor Gómez from Puerto Rico did just that—and the result is so good that even the Mona Lisa would look like a quick sketch on a napkin. This is the Porsche Carrera GT Sonderwunsch.
Forget mediocre selfies and expensive storage expansion. The Dockcase Selfix revolutionizes with an AMOLED rear display and microSD card slot that directly mocks Apple's storage prices.
We all know that moment. The Christmas party where your aunt makes you wear that knitted sweater with the reindeer on it and the red nose made of felt. The shame is immense, the dignity is zero, but somewhere deep inside you feel warm - and not just because polyester is flammable. Now imagine putting that same "shame" on the manliest thing to ever roll out of Detroit or Toledo. I'm talking about the Mek Magnet "Ugly Sweater" body armor. It's not just a sticker. It's ballistic resin that turns your Jeep Wrangler or Ford Bronco into a holiday parade, while also protecting it when you decide to knock down the Christmas tree with your own bumper. Let's see - Mek Magnet.
The Mercedes-Benz Unimog is a legend. But it usually smells of oil, mud and hard physical work. This time, however, Stuttgart decided to put a tuxedo on it, send it to the gym and dress the interior in leather that is probably softer than your home sofa. This is a Unimog that is not used to plow the fields, but to show dominance in front of the casino in Monte Carlo.
If you think car designers are just quiet artists in black suits drawing lines in the basement, you're wrong. At least not in the case of Gorden Wagener. He was a rock star. The man who took Mercedes' hat off and put on its sunglasses. But on January 31, 2026, that era is coming to an end. After 28 years and countless scratches on the clay (and probably on the egos of his competitors), Gorden Wagener is leaving Stuttgart.
Jaguar has done everything it can to make us hate it in recent months. With strange logos, advertising campaigns that look like a fashion show for aliens, and a promise not to "copy anything." But before we write off this British icon as a victim of its own marketing, let's pause. Underneath all that "woke" glitz, there's a monster. A three-engine monster that will tear up the asphalt faster than the Internet can tear up the nerves of purists. It's the Jaguar Type 00.
Group B was the Wild West of motorsport – too much power, too much guts and not enough safety barriers. Autodromo and Mobil 1 have captured this dangerous but golden era in a 39mm titanium case. Meet the Autodromo x Mobil 1 Group B Pegasus Edition. But don’t look too long, as only 70 pieces are available.










