
So with gas prices pushing $4 per gallon in many parts of the country, America must be snapping up fuel-efficient cars, right? Not so.

A recent investigation found that many of the everyday items you buy have been suspiciously shrinking, despite no similar reduction in cost.

Maybe there's life for print publications after all. Or at least an afterlife. Nike has released a set of shoes made from old glossies.

Does the winning entry compel you to consider some alternative gifts for the holidays?

Like a Terra Pass for the tech world, Belgrave Trust sells offsets for your Mac to fund clean energy projects around the world.

For the Free Fashion Challenge, 15 unlikely anti-consumers will refrain from buying clothes for one year.

Now that Black Friday is over, it's time to relive the craziness with the Picture Black Friday photo project.

A new California law means roughly 200,000 cleaning products will get a lot cleaner, potentially reducing smog in the state.

This colorful chart breaks down the spending of America's "average consumer unit," a 2.5-person household making a combined $62,000.

The Self-Repair Manifesto, by iFixit, advocates fixing rather than replacing products; it also empowers consumers by turning them into contributors.

A look back at some bizarrely wonderful advertisements computers-from a time when most people didn't already own one.

Bagster, the dumpster in a bag, presents a solution for big clean-ups that's aren't quite big enough for a dumpster.

Bring GOOD contributor Bryan Solarski's tilt shift photography into your home.
A day's worth of meals for a vegetarian, pescetarian, vegan, and a meat eater: tallied and compared, by price.
The innovative and refillable Replenish spray bottle could be a truly disruptive product, reducing and reusing first, and recycling later.

Each Typographic Map poster depicts the streets, neighborhoods, highways, and physical features of a city using only words.