Feature

The New Plat du Jour: Leftovers

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RECYCLING, THE PROCESS OF PUTTING waste materials to new uses, has been a common practice for most of human history; Plato advocated it way back in 400 BC. But it became a central and urgent concern in the modern world in the late 1960s and ’70s because of the massive amounts of waste that industrial economies were producing. Soon, just recycling wasn’t sufficient. In the 1990s William McDonough and Michael Braungart began preaching the doctrine of cradle to cradle. It wasn’t enough to reuse; they proposed a closed loop, creating products that may be continually reused and recycled. Today, that concept has morphed into the now-popular circular economy, a business philosophy that aims to move industry from a take-make-dispose model to one where materials are continuously repurposed. New technology has been essential. But designers from around the world have seized the moment and are taking the concept into new territories.

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A New Fabric-ation
Label/Breed also collaborated with designer Christien Meindertsma and natural fiber manufacturer Enkev to create a material that combines wool and flax with strong bioplastic fibers made out of PLA (polylactic acid, derived from renewable resources, such as corn, cassava root, or sugar-cane). The material can then be heat-pressed into a wide range of shapes. It is hard and strong and completely recyclable. The Flax chair is composed of four layers of woven flax and five layers of dry-needled felted flax, all mixed with PLA.
christienmeindertsma.com / labelbreed.nl

The Flax chair by Christien Meindertsma for Label/Breed, 2015, is made from wool, flax, and polylactic acid, a bioplastic derived from plant materials. Courtesy Label/Breed

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