Bramston, David and Maycroft, Neil (2013) The generation of new products through upcycling. In: Materials experience: contemporary issues in materials and product design. Elsevier Science & Technology. ISBN UNSPECIFIED (In Press)
Full text not available from this repository.Abstract
Concern about the over-use of irreplaceable resources increases as the global population increases. A global divide between and within societies results in many communities living in extreme poverty. These communities are consequently forced to create many wares from waste materials, broken, and abandoned objects. Where survival needs predominate, basic objects are being produced from the waste of others. The need to create items from waste is setting an unexpected and ingenious example to more prosperous societies and one can see the emergence of a global community of designers and other enthusiastic advocates who point to the significance of such vernacular innovation. The development and increasing visibility of a generation of designers that is embracing the need to upcycle is addressed here. The aim is to demonstrate how ingenuity, circumstance, and the guiding hand of design can work together to change perceptions of the value of both materials and making practices.
| Item Type: | Book Section |
|---|---|
| Additional Information: | Concern about the over-use of irreplaceable resources increases as the global population increases. A global divide between and within societies results in many communities living in extreme poverty. These communities are consequently forced to create many wares from waste materials, broken, and abandoned objects. Where survival needs predominate, basic objects are being produced from the waste of others. The need to create items from waste is setting an unexpected and ingenious example to more prosperous societies and one can see the emergence of a global community of designers and other enthusiastic advocates who point to the significance of such vernacular innovation. The development and increasing visibility of a generation of designers that is embracing the need to upcycle is addressed here. The aim is to demonstrate how ingenuity, circumstance, and the guiding hand of design can work together to change perceptions of the value of both materials and making practices. |
| Keywords: | Upcycling, Reuse, Sustainability, Waste, Product |
| Subjects: | W Creative Arts and Design > W240 Industrial/Product Design |
| Divisions: | College of Arts > Faculty of Art, Architecture & Design > Lincoln School of Art & Design |
| Depositing User: | Neil Maycroft |
| Date Deposited: | 11 Nov 2012 20:57 |
| Last Modified: | 11 Nov 2012 20:57 |
| URI: | http://eprints.lincoln.ac.uk/id/eprint/6773 |
Actions (login required)
![]() |
View Item |
