Shown on the floors of CES last week, products can raise or lower your body temperature and make walking more comfortable.
Janna Karel
Janna Karel joined the Las Vegas Review-Journal in 2016 as a web producer, shooting videos and managing social media for Features. In 2018, she became a Features reporter for the RJ. She previously worked as a travel writer for both a local magazine and television show. She studied education at UNLV.
New items at the exhibit at Luxor, which opened nine years ago, include 20 that have never before been shown.
In the first year that CES is permitting sex tech companies to show their products, one company went a step further by hosting workshops where small groups could build those products themselves.
More than 4,000 exhibitors are presenting new products at CES in Las Vegas this week. And many of them know how to draw crowd.
Cameras, mirrors and apps are getting a tech boost to help consumers better visualize and understand their skin.
Active, fun attractions are drawing attention on the first day of the CES convention in Las Vegas.
For the fifth year, the museum is calling for entries for one artist to draw inspiration from the collection as an artist-in-residence.
If you haven’t yet made it to see ‘Lost Vegas: Tim Burton @ The Neon Museum,’ there’s even more time to view the acclaimed filmmaker’s collection of weird, quirky and familiar artworks.
While few details are known about Meow Wolf’s second permanent exhibition, a visit to Santa Fe offers an idea as to what Las Vegas locals can expect when it opens at Area15 next year.
By the time of its grand opening, Area15 will feature a zip line that suspends riders from the ceiling, an airplane fuselage and the return of celebrity chef Todd English.
Clay Arts became one of the first art businesses in the Arts District in downtown Las Vegas and an early participant at the monthly First Friday event.
Re-imagined Fremont Street motel has center amphitheater, small-business spaces in former rooms-for-rent, restaurants.
Whether one looked straight ahead, up at the sky or down at their feet, dancing lights, dazzling LEDs and phantasmagoric video were on view at the inaugural Intersect Festival.
In its 34th year, Cowboy Christmas and its more than 300 exhibitors take over more than seven and a half football fields worth of the Las Vegas Convention Center.
The collection by the famed street artist, who garnered worldwide attention when his “Girl With Balloon” self-destructed at an auction last year, is on view on the Las Vegas Strip for the first time.