#HTE

Another Plastic Reduction Technique: 3D Printing Using Orange Peels

A plastics-free future doesn’t seem possible, but we are seeing manufacturers cutting their percentage of plastic use by combining it with more natural, non-petroleum-based materials. As one example, Japanese toymaker Bandai is using Limex, an injection-moldable mixture of polystyrene and limestone. Now Italian design studio Krill Design is launching Ohmie, a lamp 3D-printed from discarded orange peels and an unspecified “biopolymeric base.” They claim the resultant material is “fully compostable.”

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The form of the lamp itself is sculptural and visually interesting, vaguely recalling a bust. It’s pleasant enough to look at, if a bit odd.

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What’s got me scratching my head is how they achieved the contrasting surface textures; you can clearly see the printed layer striations on the inside, yet on the outside they’ve convincingly achieved an orange peel texture.

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The Ohmie has been successfully Kickstarted, with 28 days left to pledge at press time. Buy-in starts at €72 (USD $86), and they’re expect to ship by November.

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https://www.core77.com/posts/109398/Another-Plastic-Reduction-Technique-3D-Printing-Using-Orange-Peels