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Meet Prule: The All-in-One Titanium EDC and Stationery Crossover thats a Game-Changer
EDC and stationery have more of an overlap than you think. EDC multitools help you deconstruct objects physically, stationery helps you do the same creatively on paper. Making notes as you fix a product go hand in hand. Creating an engineering schematic while reverse-engineering a gadget go hand in hand. One uses stationery, the other uses EDC so rather than separate them, Ideaspark decided to combine them with the Prule a fusion of a protractor, ruler, and a precision craft knife all in one incredibly sleek package.The Prule may function primarily as a stationery instrument, but it isnt designed like one. Machined from Grade 5 Titanium, the Prule outlasts any plastic or metal ruler youd have ever owned in your lifetime. Its well-designed, grippy, ruthlessly efficient, compact, and robust enough to last generations. Civilizations might come to an end but the Prule wont.Designer: IdeasparkClick Here to Buy Now: $69 $99 (30% off) Hurry, only 40 hours left!The Prule tries to achieve multiple things, and succeeds thanks to two things a good vision and great execution. Your stationery tool is effective when it needs to be, and just in case you need yourself an EDC blade, the magnetic Xacto knife pops right out, giving you something to cut with, whether its a delivery parcel, a piece of paper, a material for a craft project, or even food. Want your EDC to serve more of a purpose, a glass bead breaker on the top of the Prule lets you strike to shatter through reinforced glass, making the Prule perfect for regular or emergency scenarios.The choice of Gr5 titanium wasnt arbitrary. Known for its durability and lightweight properties, it ensures the Prule holds up under pressure without being cumbersome to carry. The magnetic fold, sleek and compact, transforms it into a pocket-sized powerhouse thats as easy to store as it is to deploy. It fits neatly into your workflow, whether youre a designer tracing lines, an architect marking dimensions, or a DIY enthusiast crafting your next project.Opening it reveals more than a simple measuring tool. The hinge serves as a precise protractor, locking smoothly into set positions for common angles. The click as it snaps into place feels deliberate, almost mechanical, and makes quick work of drawing or measuring angles. Paired with laser-etched scales in both metric and imperial, reading measurements becomes effortless. Every mark is crisp, visible even in dim light, thanks to the tritium slots built into the design.Using the Prule feels intuitive, but its design is anything but simple. The angled surface, for instance, aligns perfectly with your line of sight, making measurements more comfortable. The grip feels natural, the thickened edges adding stability during use. These arent afterthoughts; theyre deliberate choices made to ensure the tool fits seamlessly into your hand and your tasks, no matter how intricate.The knife might play a small part in the Prules working, but its pretty much the star of the show. Designed to slip right into the Prule when not in use, it stays sheathed to keep your hands protected from its sharp scalpel blade. The blade, made from surgical steel, can cut through everything from paper to soft materials like leather or plastics. Its the perfect craft knife there when you need it, gone when you dont.Plus, the fact that the Prule uses a scalpel blade makes it infinitely reusable. When the blade dulls or breaks, you dont need to sharpen it (as you would with most regular knives). Just ditch the old blade for a new one and youre good to go. Scalpel blades come cheap and in packs of 5 or 10. In the end, its a lot more sustainable to replace a blade than to ditch an entire knife because its dull or broken. Moreover, throw the blade away before you travel and the Prule is suddenly TSA friendly too!The name Prule, however, is a portmanteau of its two distinct features the protractor, and the ruler. With a folding design, the Prule either sits shut at 10cm in length (3.9 inches), or opens up to measure 20cm long or 7.8 inches. In the process of opening, the Prule reveals its function as a protractor. Etched markings on its pivot joint let you hit 15 increments with a fair amount of accuracy, making it perfect for measuring angles, making schematics, drawing perspective diagrams, etc. Whether youre an architect, designer, engineer, woodworker, or any sort of creative/craftsperson, this comes in fairly handy.Of course, the Prule comes with both imperial and metric markings, making it fairly universal. Its slim design makes it easy to measure depth too, simply by inserting it into objects like you would a depth rod on a set of calipers.From its foldable design to its versatility as a depth-measuring tool, the Prule adapts to its user. Its ceramic bead breaker adds a layer of emergency preparedness, while its customizable featureslike slots for luminous vials and optional engravingmake it uniquely yours. Whether clipped to a lanyard or carried loose, it becomes a constant companion, ready for anything from precision tasks to unplanned challenges.It isnt common to see EDC and stationery collide so perfectly, although it does feel like a match made in heaven with the Prule. Use it in a workshop, a classroom, a studio, outdoors, or even in an emergency. Having a ruler/scale, a knife, a protractor, and a glass breaker all in one tool feels like a motley crew of tools that can either serve their individual purposes well, or come together to form something thats greater than the sum of its parts. The Prule starts at a discounted $69, and ships globally with a set of 10 spare scalpel blades.Click Here to Buy Now: $69 $99 (30% off) Hurry, only 40 hours left!The post Meet Prule: The All-in-One Titanium EDC and Stationery Crossover thats a Game-Changer first appeared on Yanko Design.
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