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Müll.club rings are made of home plastic, such black containers and gold lids that create a marble effect.
Müll.club
The fine art graduate Charlie Rujin-Uelson was presented in similar Vogue magazines, and her partners include a luxury retailer Fortnum & Mason.
But its stands, rings and soap dishes are not made of precious metals and stones-Rudin-Uelson melted plastic containers such as shampoo bottles, empty pink baths from the disappearance of color and bright yellow milk cocktail.
Blue -shaped soap soap is called “Greek” made from yogurt and porridge store Müll.club Web site for £ 16 (about $ 21), and black and white disposable plastic cutlery and translucent food containers are raw materials for a pair of 14 pounds “take out” stands.
Rujin-Uelson, a former stability consultant of the television and film industry, said that he has been “obsessed with processing and wants to change the view of the plastic as a garbage for years.
“Part of the entire mission (Müll.club) is to change the perception of plastic waste and make it seem to be valuable material,” she said CNBC through a video call. Rujin-Uelson wants her design to be attractive as well as functional, she said. “There is a lot of color alchemy that goes on to make these products beautiful – and they work,” she said.
For the Rudkin-Wilson current approach to plastic disposal does not work. About 36% of all plastic made worldwide Program Programs. Stubborn – Waste and Resources Action Action program – described by the UK as “depend on” exports of plastic for disposal, and 47% plastic from British processing or export of the enterprise The last numbers. (The data is based on the waste disposal that firms are obliged to issue.)
Charlie Rujin-Wilson founded Müll.club to process home plastic in design home.
Müll.club
Rudkin-Wilson has started its business during the Coronavirus pandemic, originally like a physical store in London, which sold filing bottles with cosmetic and home products such as shampoo and laundry. She added the processing center, where she experimented with old plastic bottles in home items, the first-plate dish, which is now the best selling product müll.club.
“I wanted to see something beautiful, but it is properly drained that your soap does not stick,” said Rudin-Uelson. Together with the sale of a direct consumer through the site müll.club, the design of Rujino-Uelson is sold in independent shops and museum shops in the UK, as well as a handful in the US
Müll.club now works from a studio in Margate, a town on the English coast. When CNBC talked to her, Rujin-Uelson sat in front of a stack of large red and purple chocolates, coming out with chocolate chocolates and donated to members of the public who send plastic müll.club, which they would otherwise throw away. Online platform allows people to track the progress of their debris, including information about the weight of their donations and stored carbon emissions.
Such data helped müll.club attract large brands that seek to understand their environmental impact. Müll.club reworked more than 32 kilograms (70.5 pounds) plastic waste from the toilet company, which is gorgeous to make 2000 hair, and Rujin-Uelson works with a luxurious car brand to recover plastic calculations in the products after the automaker saw how it appeared on TV show ” (British version of “Shark Tank”).
Design Müll.club as this crest, soap and American American, presented in the Vogue magazine.
Müll.club
Fortnum and Mason provided müll.club with packaging waste such as a plastic network, in a distinctive turquoise company that Rujin-Uelson reworked into products such as trays and stands, while British vogue called Müll.club “Stylish Sustainability”. According to the publication on Instagram. “You can imagine that someone’s yogurt pot from which they ate is in fashion … Just in a different form?” -It said Rujin-Uelson.
Müll.club will soon move to a more spacious studio with equipment that can handle a large amount of plastic, and Rujin-Uelson wants to start building items such as sacrificed plastic furniture. It seeks to gather about £ 250,000 to help finance the expansion, as well as want to have a marketing budget that will help you buy new customers.
Rudkin-Wilson said she hoped that companies would start responsibility for their plastic waste-like production and after consumers are finishing using their products. “The industry will change, and more private innovative enterprises will appear, canceling the branch from traditional Kerbside processing,” said Rujin-Uelson CNBC by email.