
"Shared calendars scatter across phones, sticky notes live on the fridge, and whiteboards never quite get updated. Most attempts to centralize family logistics involve smart displays that look like tablets or small TVs bolted to the wall, clashing with the rest of the room. A shared calendar deserves to be visible, but not at the cost of turning your kitchen into a control room with glowing screens and exposed cables."
"Skylight's 27-inch Calendar Max is a digital calendar that starts from the wall, not the app. It is a large wall-mounted touchscreen designed to be a central family hub, but the industrial design leans toward a floating frame rather than a black rectangle. The goal is to feel like part of the decor while still being big and clear enough to see from across the room."
"The display sits slightly off the wall, casting a soft shadow that changes with the light, so it reads more like a floating object than a mounted monitor. Magnetically attached frames in aluminum, wood, or plastic let you pick a look that matches your space and swap them later if the room changes, without replacing the hardware. It mostly just means the calendar feels deliberate instead of tacked on."
The Skylight 27-inch Calendar Max is a wall-mounted touchscreen designed to centralize family scheduling while blending with home decor. Color-coded events, lists, and meal plans display prominently and sync with existing phone calendars to present the day's plan at a glance. The device reads like a floating frame with magnetically attached aluminum, wood, or plastic frames that can be swapped to match changing rooms. A dedicated wall plate routes cables for a clean installation, and packaging and instructions make mounting similar to hanging a picture rather than installing AV equipment. The design reduces reliance on phones, sticky notes, and whiteboards.
Read at Yanko Design - Modern Industrial Design News
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