Human-Bin
Venice Design 2019
Human Bin is an active outerwear collection that challenges the disconnected relationship between people and the waste they produce in the public system. It is a platform that encourages meaningful micro-interactions between the wearer, the wider public and the built environment.
Despite council effort and popular wishful belief, only 10% of street litter is recycled; yet unfortunately, public concern on waste treatment often ceases at the level of putting something in the rubbish/recycling bin. In collaboration with knitwear designer Lingxiao Luo, Taiho Shin has designed a garment that enables micro-interactions in the public space. Through the educational exchange between the wearer and the public, it urges its interactors to rethink our relationship and responsibility with rubbish beyond the bin, onto a much larger waste disposal system.
PLAYFUM
RCA Project for
IFF(International Flavors & Fragrances)
Playfume is a brand new type of perfume product. It’s made with 3D printing technique, which can keep the perfume liquid inside. With the little hole on the surface, customers can easily get a tiny amount of the fragrance out of the packaging each time. Also, compare to the traditional perfume producing, the producing process with 3D printing is fast, cheap and without material wasting.
The Future of Street Football in London
RCA//Adidas 2016/17
Considering the weather variations, modern lifestyle and the future city planning in London, I decided to design a football shoe with multifunctional pieces. I replaced the brand’s signature white stripes into flexible Lego bricks which were 3D printed directly on the knitted shoe. So that the user can change the soles or other functional accessories easily and enjoy the football culture in any kinds of occasions.
Collectors Coat
Inspiring Children Through Design//Across RCA
Mission Statement Collectors Coat is an interactive, travel-friendly raincoat for children who are on the go and intrigued by the world around them while having fun on the way to school or home. Taking inspiration from the children's designs and prototypes, with the main themes of problems they wanted to solve being - travelling fast, eco-technology and taking and having your belongings with you.
Materiality and Features The coat is made up of a coated plastic material and carries small pockets all over the coat with primary coloured taping down each side. The hood has a feature to change and personalise different characters ears and masks for the face. Within some of the pockets, there are built-in plants to connect with a face mask. This will allow children to physically breathe into the plants to create oxygen and keep the plants alive, teaching sustainability, biology and about the environment.
Aim Our aim within creating the Collectors Coat was to get children interacting with the world around them and getting them to think about the environment in a fun and personalised way.