Hiya! How’s tricks? Thanks for clicking by today. As always, you’re right on time. Coffee’s brewed and the VTs are straight out of my virtual oven so help yourself! Good story today about an enterprising group of Dutch students...
A team of six undergrads in the Netherlands have come up with a brilliant use for wasted fruit – they’re converting it into leather!
The eco-friendly project – titled ‘Fruitleather Rotterdam’ involves transforming rotten fruit into a durable, malleable, leather-like material. It started off as a school assignment at the Willem de Kooning Academy in Rotterdam, in which design students were supposed to set up a flash retail event. After brainstorming, this particular team decided to tackle the problem of food wastage as well.
“The academy gives us a perfect view over Binnenrotte Square in Rotterdam, where they have a market each Tuesday and Saturday,” said Hugo de Boon, one of the students involved. “We saw how the square would be completely littered with food waste (at the end of the day), so we realised this was a problem we would want to solve from a designer’s point of view.”
After some
research, they figured out that over 7,000 pounds of food were being
wasted each day at the market, and lots or stand owners were dumping the food
illegally to avoid paying for proper disposal. So the kids started collecting
leftover fruit directly from the vendors – mangoes, oranges, nectarines,
apples, and more – and used it to manufacture a leather-like material.
They’ve refused
to reveal the exact manufacturing details, calling it a “group secret”, but de
Boon broadly explained the process: they start by deseeding the fruit and
mashing it all up. Then they boil it to kill bacteria and prevent it from
rotting. After cooling it, they spread the paste on a “specific surface” that
is “crucial in the drying process”. Once dried, the Fruitleather is ready for
use.
For starters,
the team created a bag completely out of fruitleather, to showcase its various
properties. But according to de Boon, the versatile material can be used to
make furniture, accessories, and clothing as well. “Many people make the
mistake that we are currently just making bags,” he said.
“We used the bag as a visual for the public to show that
products can be made out of the material, but it is the material itself that we
produce.”
Fruitleather has
garnered lots of interest from various manufacturers. A car seat maker has
already contacted the students about buying their product, but they’re now
focused on improving their manufacturing process for more output and better
quality. “The production process will need to increase for the demand as well,
but before making that step, we first want to answer the questions that we as a
team have about the material,” de Boon said.
“What we want to
achieve with this project is to create awareness for the problem that is food
waste, and show that there is a solution,’ the Fruitleather Rotterdam official
website states. “Food isn’t trash, you just need to find a different purpose
for the resisting material. We used our design background to come up with a
solution.”
And, if you get
tired of it or stuck in an elevator, you can always eat it, right?
See ya, eh!
Bob
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