it's what happened when we took our original Lock and twisted it while the metal was still hot and flexible, still in a state of becoming. The result loops like a figure eight, a circle turning back upon itself. Sure, you could call it infinity. That is beautiful interpretation, but we think of it much more as iteration. Because nothing we make is ever really finished. It's just the current answer to an ongoing question. What happens if we push it? What happens if nudge it just off axis? What happens if we refuse to assume that the first version is the final version?
The DNA Lock is that question, made physical. It is everything we believe a lock should be — functional, beautiful and just a little bit subversive. With a twist. And, as always, filled with infinite ways to play.
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