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Collection of bowls and plates from eggs.
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Raw materials and updcycled product.
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Varition in bowl textures.
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Texture of expired egg shells and egg whites.
2020 Micro Steps for Macro Change
Eggs to Bowls

Bass Stittgen

egg
All dishes made for expired egg components.
Annually, an average of 6.4 billion hens lay 1.1 trillion eggs. Simultaneously one third of all food per year is lost or wasted which includes eggs that have short shelf life and whose fragile shell is not the most suitable protection against processing and transport.

From domestication over to industrialisation, the value of chicken and their eggs has progressively decreased, the shift in human interaction with animals went from cohabitation to first encountering them dead & dissected served on plates.

In the project ‘how do you like your eggs’ the content becomes container, an egg cup is produced from discarded eggs. It explores the extraordinary materiality of an ordinary item of consumption.

There is an ambiguity in the symbolism of the egg which embodies on the one hand the beginning of life and on the other became swallowed up in cheap consumption.

To address this shift of value and to generate awareness for the waste of eggs on many scales but also for the consumption habits of the individual, in the project ‘how do you like your eggs’ expired egg whites and shells are thermoformed into bio-plastic cups with zero additives. In today's context traditional non degradable plastics are highly problematic, especially because of our throw-away culture; opposed to that in this project a new, fully degradable bioplastic is used to create a narrative about consumption and waste. This can be seen as a novel approach of how plastic can be a conveyor of meaning rather than a pollutant.


Stittgen, Bass. “How do you like your eggs?” Studio Bass Stittgen, bassestittgen.com/eggs.html.