studio jo meesters: pulp

studio jo meesters: pulp


'pulp' vessels

designed by dutch design studio jo meesters, 'pulp' is a series of vessels made entirely out
of paper pulp using discarded vessels as a mould. the collection started as a research looking
for alternative materials made out of paper waste.  by combining other materials with pulp
such as epoxy and polyurethane, a new material is born with its own characteristics leading
to a series of vessels made out of paper that can hold water.

a mixture of shredded newspaper, glue and water is applied in several layers on the surface,
dried, and finally cut into two removing it from the mould. the pieces are glued back together
before applying the last layers of the pulp mixture. the inside of the vessel is then treated with
an epoxy resin, leaving a strong and water resistant coating.


'pulp'

since 2008, studio jo meesters has been working on the project TESTLAB, experimenting
on the rejuvenation and the reuse of discarded materials. using the 'pulp' collection as
a foundation, studio jo meesters reinvented TESTLAB to create a series of paper furniture,
researching the potential of paper pulp for furniture applications by upcycling cardboard
panels and old newspapers. the 'pulp' furniture collection consists out of a table, a chair,
four pendant lamps and a cabinet. the material balances between structural and aesthetical
qualities generating a robust and highly tactile result.


'pulp' cabinet and chair

the 'pulp' collection will be presented during the milan design week 2010 at the dutch invertuals
exhibition and at the leolux stand in the fiera. the short film 'die ordnung' and an installation
about the process of 'pulp' will be shown at the in residence’s exhibition called ten small atlases.


'pulp' table


'pulp' vessels


'pulp' vessels

fiona db
04.12.10  
6
Holland is too small not to know the work of Debbie Wijskamp
http://www.debbiewijskamp.com/

This crosses the line of being dangerously close.
Messi   04.12.10
Nice presentation... However.
Debbie Wijskamp should read the book Cradle to Cradle by William McDonough before inventing what Mr. DcDonough calls "monstrous materials". As designers of the built environment, part of our responsibility is not only to bring about beauty and/or thought through our work but also to consider what the full life cycle of a product will be. An object does not stop existing when it has lived out the usefulness of it's current form. Nice design, nice presentation, rethink the materials.
dbenderg@ucalgary.ca   04.12.10
Why the presentation as deprivation chic? Have Puritans suddenly become symbols of sustainability and creativity? When is the repression and persecution of women a clever backdrop for new product placement? This stuff is seriously ugly.
cunninglilthing   04.12.10
really intersting materials and aesthetic, but I have to agree with dbenderg@ucalgary.ca.

Epoxy Resin and Polyurethane, what were these guys thinking? There are far better naturally derived bonding agents on the market. I'm surprised that given the puritan image, they used such a simplistic approach in relation to these synthetic additives.

How toxic would these vessels be? You wouldn't catch me drinking from them. Have these guys heard of Isocyantes? There's a big OH&S issue which is self-evident, where are the masks and gloves required for handling these materials?
kg   04.13.10
congratulations, beautiful boring posh crap!
xxx   04.13.10
I think this is a great project! Finally something refreshing with strong identity.
Nik   04.14.10

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