Disposable Tin
Disposable Tin
From the process of observing human behavior in the space of a home kitchen, I chose to focus on a particular action that is familiar to all of us, cutting vegetables.
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Cutting and peeling vegetables in the kitchen usually consists of cutting and peeling (of course), then taking a simple plastic bag, putting it on the counter and throwing the leftovers and the garbage into it. This is where my project was born.
I conceptualized a disposable tin for use in the kitchen. The disposable tin comes in a roll much like a sandwich bag. Each tin is to be ripped off, opened, filled up and thrown in the trash.
The inspiration for the product came from the world of paper folding, with one simple and clear action for using the product. The product optimizes the cooking process in the kitchen, making it cleaner, more convenient and faster. The one-time tin is made of biodegradable material, which replaces the wasteful and environmentally harmful plastic bag.
From the process of observing human behavior in the space of a home kitchen, I chose to focus on a particular action that is familiar to all of us, cutting vegetables.
​
Cutting and peeling vegetables in the kitchen usually consists of cutting and peeling (of course), then taking a simple plastic bag, putting it on the counter and throwing the leftovers and the garbage into it. This is where my project was born.
I conceptualized a disposable tin for use in the kitchen. The disposable tin comes in a roll much like a sandwich bag. Each tin is to be ripped off, opened, filled up and thrown in the trash.
The inspiration for the product came from the world of paper folding, with one simple and clear action for using the product. The product optimizes the cooking process in the kitchen, making it cleaner, more convenient and faster. The one-time tin is made of biodegradable material, which replaces the wasteful and environmentally harmful plastic bag.
Industrial Designer
Industrial Designer
NONA- Rolling Bags
When you think of a foldable shopping cart, probably for most people the first image that will appear in our mind; An elderly man, on his way to the market with a checkered foldable shopping cart.
Exactly from the point of having one clear and narrow image when we talk about the third age, the project began.
The products around us also carry stigmas and images, which dictate our social affiliation.
Nona came to disrupt the stigma and offer a new, young and colorful alternative for a foldable shopping cart we all know.
Nona's design is based on origami folds, for an easy flat folding and storage.
Choosing the Tyvek as the bag’s material was almost naturel as I was searching for a material that can contain the origami folds just as paper, be strong enough to carry weight and be lightweight.
Design has the power to change the sensations, the way we use and desire to use a product. Just like design has the power to stimulate rethinking, about the same stigmas and images in our society.