Group name:
A magazine for several senses.
What we have done:
We decided to work into two directions, namely a cooking magazine and a gardening magazine. We brainstormed ideas about what we can do in the magazine (reuse pages as seasoning, having seed paper, meltable ‘paper’) and did internet research on these ideas trying to answer questions such as: how can you change the aggregate state of materials? What kind of edible paper is already out there? What materials can you use to create edible paper? In connection to this we started looking into molecular gastronomy for example and talked to a chef and a chemistry student.
We also set up a structure for interviews we want to conduct and divided the different fields of interest for further research. These include chemistry, printing technologies, printing industry, future consumers and the seed industry respectively the food industry.
What we will do:
Our next step is to conduct the interviews and also trying to get experimental with making some kind of prototype.
Problems encountered:
Talking to people made us realize that a lot of the people wonder about the hygiene issue with our product, since you can’t really give the product to someone else who might be interested in an article since you want to use/consume this page later on.
Changes in the project:
We still like the idea of the reusable cooking magazine and will continue to do research in this field but we decided to go a second way as well namely the gardening magazine. We will gather information in both fields and later on decide which would be the better option to go with. This is because of the above mentioned critique that we got from several people addressing the hygiene question and other.
Other:
Here are a few examples of what we stumbled upon when searching the internet for inspiration.
Jello Origami -
http://designtaxi.com/news/351359/Jello-Origami-Lets-You-Eat-Your-Paper-Cranes/
Disappearing Transparent Ravioli -
http://www.molecularrecipes.com/techniques/disappearing-transparent-raviolis/
Hello Kitty Seaweed
You should check this out, printed smell.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.wired.co.uk/news/archive/2012-07/26/postcard-aroma