“Food is the next frontier of 3D printing”

News: 3D printing expert Janne Kyttanen has produced prototype printed pasta, breakfast cereal and burgers to demonstrate how advances in 3D printing could transform the way we eat (+ interview + slideshow).

Kyttanen, co-founder of design studio Freedom of Creation and creative director of printer manufacturer 3D Systems, told Dezeen: “Food is the next frontier. We’re already printing in chocolate, so a lot of these things will be possible in the next few years.”

To illustrate the possibilities, Kytannen has 3D-printed models of pasta in plastic and cheese burgers in plaster. “I printed burgers just to create an iconic image and make people realise that one day we will be able to 3D-print a hamburger. And once you do, you don’t want to print a traditional hamburger; you can print the weirdest thing you can imagine.”

3D-printed food by Janne Kytannen

Kytannen believes it’s only a matter of time before technology enables us to print molecules in combinations that produce tasty meals. “At the moment the technologies that we use are very, very crude. So they solidify matter, either by powder or by liquid or extruded filaments and so forth,” he said. “But at the end of the day it’s just atoms and molecules, so [one day] we will have technology where you can just move molecules or you can move atoms.”

However, he concedes that we’re still a long way off downloading burgers to print at home and that only a viable market will push companies to pursue the technology. “If you can’t find a good business model for it, it won’t happen,” he says, suggesting that possible avenues for firms to explore would be fun items and novelty experiences, like having your own head scanned and printed in chocolate.

3D-printed food by Janne Kytannen

Kytannen also believes design can learn from food when it comes to copyright, hinting that the sharing of design ideas should as acceptable as sharing recipes. “I look at design and for me, it’s like food,” he says. “It’s very fast and everything I need is in my computer, and I can make whatever I want, whenever I want.”

“If you look at all the recipes on the internet, everything is free and everything is shared,” he continues. “Who’s going to come to your house, watch you make a pasta bolognese and say, ‘you know what, you can’t make that’?”

3D-printed food by Janne Kytannen

See our previous interview with Kyttanen in October, when he told us that 3D printing products at home is “cheaper than shopping”.

We’ve been closely following the rise of 3D printing and reporting on all kinds of uses for the technology, from a 3D-printed dress for burlesque dancer Dita Von Teese to printing plastic weapons – see all 3D printing.

Other unusual food we’ve featured includes an edible desk lamp and an aerosol spray that lets users enjoy alcohol without the risk of a hangover – see all food design.

3D-printed food by Janne Kytannen

Read the full interview below:


Ben Hobson: Tell me about the images you’ve sent us.

Janne Kyttanen: We have all these different avenues in which 3D-printing technology is moving. We’ve explored all different kinds of products and different materials, but everything is going in the same direction, which is really speed and disposability, whether it’s prototyping something or making an end product or something else. Food is the next frontier.

The images that I sent you are just conceptual things. The pasta is not made from pasta – it’s made from plastic. But I wanted to pinch people a little bit and make them realise that we are able to do these things. We’re already printing in chocolate, so a lot of these things will be possible in the next few years. I’m just conceptually trying to see what could happen, which is why I printed burgers just to create an iconic image and make people realise that one day we will be able to 3D-print a hamburger. And once you do, you don’t want to print a traditional hamburger; you can print the weirdest thing you can imagine.

Ben Hobson: How do you go from printing a burger in plastic to actually printing one you can eat?

Janne Kyttanen: At the moment, the technologies that we use are very, very crude. So they solidify matter, either by powder or by liquid or extruded filaments and so-forth. But at the end of the day it’s just atoms and molecules, so [one day] we will have technology where you can just move molecules or you can move atoms. At the end of the day we will be able to do that. And how and what [we will make] I don’t know. It will find its own shape, but I’m just more concerned to conceptually ask these questions.

Ben Hobson: What kind of future do you see for 3D-printed food? Will we all be printing out food rather than cooking with traditional methods?

Janne Kyttanen: I don’t think anything will be replaced. People always ask me, is 3D printing going to make all these Chinese mass manufacturing people unemployed? I don’t think so. I think these jobs will remain. Our technology is just one additional way of making things. It’s just a nice new thing.

3D-printed food by Janne Kytannen

Ben Hobson: What’s the timeframe for 3D-printed food? How long before it’s mainstream?

Janne Kyttanen: We are already printing chocolate. Any matter that you can put into an extruding nozzle you can already print in. You can make anything you want, whether it’s jelly or chocolate or some pastries or some marzipans or whatever, in principle you can make it. But there have been very few parties developing technologies towards this. We as a company [3D Systems] are moving ahead with this, but hopefully there are also others doing their own endeavours.

Ben Hobson: So how far off is a 3D-printed burger?

Janne Kyttanen: I wouldn’t be able to say that. A lot of these things are quite trivial. It matters what kind of equity, what kind of financial push you have – most of the time, that’s the driver. If you can’t find a good business model for it, it won’t happen. Like chocolate, for example; people have been printing chocolate for years but there hasn’t really been any boost in it. Maybe they haven’t found the right business model.

Ben Hobson: Are there any particular business models that you think are worth exploring?

Janne Kyttanen: Oh yes, for sure. If you’re talking about chocolate for example, there are a lot of expensive high-end chocolate makers out there, so I can imagine getting your own head scanned and then printed as a chocolate cake. It’s also a lot of fun.

There’s a lot of debate around “this is my design, you can’t touch it,” but I hope brands will start getting more open-minded. Let’s take shoe manufacturers, for example. People can already customise their own shoes, so how fun would it be if you could buy a pair of Nike sneakers, but you could also download Nike sneakers to your home and you can print them and eat them.

3D-printed food by Janne Kytannen

Ben Hobson: How would 3D printing with food differ from other sectors?

From the legal aspect, I’ve always been pro freedom and not so pro patent. So where are we headed in design? There’s always been debate about if I design something, I put it on the market and somebody will see me and they own the patent or they put it on the market before me, they have the copyright or IP or whatever.

But with food it’s quite interesting: I can design anything that I want and I can eat it, and when you talk about the forms and the shapes and the designs, you can design whatever you want and then it is gone.

I look at design and for me, it’s like food – it’s disposable. It’s very fast and everything I need is in my computer, and I can make whatever I want, whenever I want. And then you have the other crowd who are more worried about, you know, “this is my design, you can’t copy it, you can’t do this and this.”

So food really changes everything. If you look at all the recipes on the internet, everything is free and everything is shared. Who’s going to come to your house, watch you make a pasta bolognese and say, “you know what, you can’t make that”?

The post “Food is the next frontier
of 3D printing”
appeared first on Dezeen.

IV Decals by Little Love Medical: Bright designs spruce up stark hospital rooms

IV Decals by Little Love Medical

Inspired by her volunteer work at the Children’s Hospital of Los Angeles, designer Ashley Ludwin began dreaming of ways she could brighten up the wards and make sterile medical equipment look a little less intimidating. Last year she decided to focus her talent on redesigning the ubiquitous IV bag,…

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Coated 3D Structures

Focus sur Andrea Myers, une artiste américaine qui cherche à explorer la frontière entre la 2D et la 3D. Elle propose ainsi des œuvres où sculptures, peintures et impressions se mélangent et se confondent. Des travaux colorées et originales à découvrir en images dans la suite de l’article.

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Symmetrical Display of 1000 Roses

L’artiste Ottmar Hörl a imaginé cette belle installation publique intitulée « 1000 Roses for Zweïbrücken », une ville située en Allemagne, connue pour être la ville aux roses. Près de 1000 roses rouges en plastique ont ainsi été étalées à intervalles réguliers pour un rendu superbe. Plus d’images dans la suite de l’article.

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Projecto Nuvem

Avec son projet Projecto Nuvem, l’artiste argentin Eduardo Coimbra nous propose de marcher à travers les nuages grâce à une superbe installation. Proposant une interaction avec les curieux s’approchant, cette création composée de 5 « lightboxs » de 4,7m de hauteur est à découvrir en images dans la suite.

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Rough & Smooth collection by Tom Dixon

Product news: British designer Tom Dixon’s latest collection, launching at MOST in Milan next month, includes solid brass champagne buckets and faceted furniture inspired by gemstones (+ slideshow).

Rough & Smooth collection by Tom Dixon

Above: Gem lights

Tom Dixon’s Rough & Smooth collection includes Gem, a family of angular lights, tables and mirrors inspired by gemstones and sand-cast from nickel-plated aluminium.

Rough & Smooth collection by Tom Dixon

Above: Gem tables and mirrors

The Spun champagne bucket and tables are made from sheets of hand-spun solid brass polished to a mirror finish.

Rough & Smooth collection by Tom Dixon

Above: Gem lights

The Flask light combines a ridged sphere of hand-blown glass with a smoked glass hood, while the Cell light is inspired by the growth of cells and made from layers of etched and polished brass.

Rough & Smooth collection by Tom Dixon

Above: Spun champagne bucket and tables

The Bell floor lamp and table lamp have chrome-plated dome for a shade and another dome as a chunky base.

Rough & Smooth collection by Tom Dixon

Above: Flask pendant lamps

An extension of the earlier Fan chair, the Fan dining chair, stool and table are formed from machined wood spindles.

Rough & Smooth collection by Tom Dixon

Above: Cell wall lamp

The Mass coat stand, book stand, dining table and console table are chunky pieces of furniture clad in brass, which will develop a natural patina over time.

Rough & Smooth collection by Tom Dixon

Above: Cell pendant lamps

The collection will be shown from 8 to 14 April at MOST in Milan’s National Museum of Science and Technology, an exhibition set up by Dixon last year as he explained in a filmed interview with Dezeen.

Rough & Smooth collection by Tom Dixon

Above: Bell floor and table lamps

Other products by Dixon we’ve featured include a set of iridescent stoneware pendant lamps and a light that casts geometric shadows on surrounding surfaces – see all design by Tom Dixon.

Rough & Smooth collection by Tom Dixon

Above: Fan dining chair, stool and table

Here’s some more information from the designer:


This year we take visitors through two contrasting environments – Rough and Smooth. Celebrating the joy of contrast, this year we are highlighting the opposite qualities of our new products. Rough because this season we have worked on even more textural honesty and material weight in our production. And smooth because we are still fascinated by extreme polished surfaces, sharp lines and modern manufacturing.

Rough & Smooth collection by Tom Dixon

Above: Mass dining table

Follow a rollercoaster journey through the rough and tumble of our warehouse where fresh stock is unloaded and unpacked fresh from the manufacturing process and on through tearooms and shop windows into our spanking new show space which we furnish with our latest lighting and furniture, ranging from the textured sand-cast nickel- plated aluminium to the ultra-polished chromed pressed steel.

Rough & Smooth collection by Tom Dixon

Above: Mass coat stand, book stand and console table

The post Rough & Smooth collection
by Tom Dixon
appeared first on Dezeen.

Heinz Beanz Flavour Experience by Bompas & Parr

Food designers Bompas & Parr have come up with a musical spoon that you listen to through your mouth and a set of handmade bowls to match five new flavours of Heinz baked beans.

Heinz Beanz Flavour Experience by Bompas and Parr

For the Heinz Beanz Flavour Experience, design duo Bompas & Parr matched five flavours of baked beans with a handmade bowl and a spoon with a tiny MP3 player inside it. The music is inaudible until the diner places the spoon in their mouth and gently bites down, causing sound vibrations to travel through the jawbone to the ear.

Heinz Beanz Flavour Experience by Bompas and Parr

For the Cheddar cheese variety, they created a yellow wax bowl that looks like a wheel of cheese, and loaded the spoon with a melody inspired by Elgar and played with a cheese wire.

Heinz Beanz Flavour Experience by Bompas and Parr

The garlic and herb flavoured beans have a bowl shaped like a bulb of garlic and a soundtrack made from the sound of rustling garlic skins and tin cans knocking against each other.

Heinz Beanz Flavour Experience by Bompas and Parr

The fiery chilli beans have a sharp and spiky bowl made of stainless steel and wood, with a soundtrack that uses high frequency noises to reflect the searing heat of a chilli.

Heinz Beanz Flavour Experience by Bompas and Parr

For the barbecue flavoured beans the designers charred the outer surface of a limewood bowl to give it a smoky smell and paired it with blues music and the sound of sizzling.

Heinz Beanz Flavour Experience by Bompas and Parr

Finally the curry flavoured beans come with a bowl inspired by tall piles of spices and a percussive bhangra soundtrack composed from the sounds of tin cans filled with different spices and seeds.

Heinz Beanz Flavour Experience by Bompas and Parr

The five Heinz Beanz Flavour Experiences will be available in limited numbers from department store Fortnum & Mason in London.

Heinz Beanz Flavour Experience by Bompas and Parr

Sam Bompas and Harry Parr (above) met as schoolboys and founded their studio in 2007 after graduating from University College London and The Bartlett school of architecture respectively. In 2008 the duo organised a competition to make architecture from jelly, with entries including a miniature Madrid-Barajas Airport by Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners.

Other unusual food we’ve featured includes an edible desk lamp and an ice cream cake shaped like the moon – see all food on Dezeen.

Here’s more information from Heinz:


Have you ever wondered why fish and chips never taste as good as the time you ate them by the seaside out of paper? The reason for this is that our taste buds are intrinsically linked to our other senses – it’s not just about what we taste, but also what we see and touch. Our surroundings, shape, texture and even sound, can all affect our experience and enjoyment of food.

With this in mind, the nation’s favourite beans brand, Heinz, has teamed up with renowned food architects Bompas & Parr. Celebrating the launch of new Heinz Flavoured Beanz, the gastronomic duo have designed the ultimate flavour experience.

The Heinz Beanz Flavour Experience

Combining contemporary design with the brain power of top boffins, the Heinz Beanz Flavour Experience includes a handcrafted bowl and a mind-blowing magical, musical spoon, displayed in an exclusive case. Created to tap into all five senses the ‘Flavour Experiences’ marry sound, taste, touch, sight and smell, to provide the ideal sensory environment in which each dish should be eaten.

By examining the key flavours in each of the five varieties of Heinz Flavoured Beanz, Bompas & Parr have created five unique Flavour Experiences, each inspired by the look, feel and taste of the different beans. Ensuring we can experience beans like never before, these include:

» Heinz Beanz Curry Flavour Experience
» Heinz Beanz Fiery Chilli Flavour Experience
» Heinz Beanz Barbecue Flavour Experience
» Heinz Beanz Cheddar Cheese Flavour Experience
» Heinz Beanz Garlic & Herbs Flavour Experience

Bringing magic to mealtimes

Unlike normal spoons MP3 players have been fitted inside the spoons that play soundtracks specially composed to enhance the key flavours of each of the Heinz Flavoured Beanz varieties even further. Inaudible until placed in the mouth, these unique themes can be heard when gently biting on the spoon. To enhance the Heinz Beanz Curry Flavour Experience, sounds of typical Punjabi Bhangra have been composed. Those enjoying the taste of Heinz Beanz Fiery Chilli will have their dining experience enriched with the sounds of up-tempo Latin samba, whilst the Heinz Beanz Barbecue Flavour Experience draws a cultural reference to the Deep South, playing gentle blues accompanied by soft sizzling sounds.

The textures and colours of the bowls have been designed and handcrafted to further signify flavour associations. The Heinz Beanz Cheddar Cheese Flavour Experience includes a circular bowl made of cast yellow wax, based on the form, texture and colour of a traditional round of cheese, whilst the Heinz Beanz Garlic & Herbs Flavour Experience bowl draws on the organic shape of a garlic bulb, made from 96 layers of 750 micron thick card, giving it a soft, natural appearance.

Honouring the store that first stocked Heinz Beanz in 1886, the five Heinz Beanz Flavour Experiences are available exclusively from iconic London retailer, Fortnum & Mason. A limited number have been produced to trial amongst consumers and will be available from 25th March for £57 RRP.

Creating a new way of enjoying food

Sam Bompas, of Bompas & Parr, comments: “Harry Parr has synesthesia[1] and is using this alongside his architectural training to project himself (intellectually if not physically) into the Heinz Beanz Flavour Experience. The bowls and spoons give the diner a total sensory experience fully exploring the taste, haptic[2] and sonic aspects of Heinz Beanz. The project is geared to get people to look again at what is on the end of their spoons. As they eat their Beanz they can wonder at the world of flavours that contributes to everyday culinary sensation. Ultimately the project is designed to showcase the various flavours of Heinz Flavoured Beanz and touch people’s most sensitive organs…their bellies.”

Katherine Broadley, Heinz, comments: “Quick, convenient and delicious, Heinz Beanz has long been a popular speedy serve for shoppers across the country. However with the nation’s tastes evolving and becoming more sophisticated, Heinz Flavoured Beanz have been introduced to offer a new taste experience, whilst remaining true to the flavours of the beans we know and love.

“Through our latest work with food architects Bompas & Parr, we hope to continue to elevate Heinz Beanz’s iconic status, offering beans lovers a new and exciting way in which to experience their favourite flavours. Harnessing the power of new technological developments we have created the Heinz Beanz Flavour Experience to challenge perceptions of how we eat and change the way in which we consume food.”

The Nation’s ‘Flavourite Beanz’

The Heinz Flavoured Beanz range includes Heinz Beanz Cheddar Cheese, Heinz Beanz Curry, Heinz Beanz Fiery Chilli, Heinz Beanz Garlic & Herbs and Heinz Beanz Barbecue. All varieties are naturally high in fibre, a natural source of protein and naturally low in fat. And with a portion of each variety delivering one of your five-a-day, beans lovers can be sure to receive a daily portion of goodness as well as a hit of flavour that packs a punch.

Heinz Flavoured Beanz are available now in 390g cans from leading supermarkets, RRP 84p.

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by Bompas & Parr
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Marvel Tribute

Le studio de production français Blackmeal a voulu rendre hommage à Marvel et son univers composé de super-héros, avec cette belle vidéo d’animation. Proposant de partir d’une simple forme circulaire pour lui donner ensuite les couleurs et spécificités de Captain America, Iron Man ou encore Thor.

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Motorville with Google Maps

Coup de cœur pour le dernier projet de Patrick Jean intitulé « Motorville » et produit par Iconoclast. Après son excellent film Pixels, cette vidéo utilise les codes graphiques de Google Maps pour les détourner et nous raconter l’histoire d’une carte d’une ville américaine partant à la recherche d’essence.

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Cool Hunting Designer Master Classes in Milan: Present your latest work for critique on stage during this year’s design fairs

Cool Hunting Designer Master Classes in Milan

This year, in addition to our annual coverage of Milan’s Design Week, we’ve teamed up with Heineken to hold a series of Designer Master Classes on 9, 10 and 11 April 2013 at The Heineken Magazzini in Milan’s Zona Tortona. In order to give our readers access to some…

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