This pastel electric tea kettle features water controls and temperature regulators to reduce energy wastage!

80% of the traditional electric kettle’s environmental impact occurs when in use. In just the EU alone, an estimated 117-200 million kettles are in use. Jacob Alm Andersson and Alexandra Fransson found that the excess energy that comes from the overuse of electric kettles in one day is enough to power all the streetlamps in England for an entire night. That’s a lot of energy. In designing an electric kettle that discourages users from overusing it and in return wasting less energy, Andersson and Fransson created The Blue Project, featuring an electric tea kettle that provides users with feedback to help promote sustainable use.

To keep users from overfilling their kettles, The Blue Project’s electric kettle features a water controller that forces its user to settle on a predetermined measure of water before filling the kettle up with water. In addition to the water controller, Andersson’s and Fransson’s tea kettle comes equipped with a temperature regulator that increases in resistance as the kettle’s user increases its temperature, providing a tangible source of feedback to show the increase in resources needed for higher temperatures.

Reminiscent of the tea kettle’s whistle, The Blue Project’s tea kettle comes attached to a device that physically shakes to signal when the kettle is being overworked, making it difficult for the user to ignore. Finally, along the bottom of the tea kettle’s base structure, a date reveals when resources for the kettle’s manufacturing have been compensated, an indication that marks the sustainability of any given product.

The Blue Project features an electric kettle that addresses three main concerns in regard to the excessive use of electric appliances: how we interact with controllers, the hidden nature of renewable resources, and the short lifespan of most products. Noticing that people could benefit from some constructive feedback and a sense of agency to change their habits that negatively affect the environment, visual regulators and controllers fill out The Blue Project kettle to help users use less energy when handling electric appliances like a tea kettle.

Designers: Jacob Alm Andersson and Alexandra Fransson

Most appliances are overused due to habitual and mindless user-product interaction.

By marking products with lifecycle indicators, brands might feel prompted to make more sustainable products.

The Blue Project’s tea kettle works in a similar fashion to the conventional electric tea kettle, with additional water controllers and regulators.

The more water measured before use requires a taller overall product, which works to discourage users from overfilling it.

The tea kettle’s default measure is one cup.

As the temperature is increased for heating, the temperature regulator nob increases in resistance.

Like the whistle of a stovetop tea kettle, The Blue Project’s tea kettle features an attached device that indicates overuse.

A date marking reveals when the resources used in manufacturing the tea kettle have been replenished.

Bugatti’s modern electric tea kettle is designed to maintain the exact ideal temperature for your tea!

When it comes to coffee and tea, a lot goes into making the perfect cup. Water temperature, steeping time, and water flow all play a part and, if you drink coffee or tea as much I do, you can taste the difference. Selecting the right tea kettle for brewing pour-overs or steeping loose leaf tea can become overwhelming when there are so many options available. With integrated smart technology, the Jacqueline tea kettle, ‘The Jackie’ for short, from Italian lifestyle brand Bugatti, offers both style and efficiency when in need of that cup of tea that’s just right.

Shaped like a stainless steel handbag, Jacqueline is an electric tea kettle that comes with Bluetooth connectivity, allowing users to monitor and set the perfect heating conditions for boiling water. Unlike typical electric tea kettles that require just a measly flip of a switch, Jacqueline is laden with smart technology to assure users that a flavorful, hot cup of tea is always just a few moments away. Ditching the light switch, for a smart handle, Jacqueline comes with an interactive, digital display screen that indicates each brew’s water temperature and level as well as a signal that shows whether or not the kettle’s been turned on. In addition to this display screen, Bugatti boasts that Jacqueline can pair with your smartphone or tablet through Bluetooth, allowing users to operate Jacqueline from a distance through Bugatti’s accompanying app, Bugatti B Chef. Whether you’re reading for hours on end in bed or heading home from a day spent in the cold, with Jacqueline a hot cup of tea can always be waiting for you.

Most of the IoT technology found on Jacqueline is located on the tea kettle’s handle, which is constructed from PCT Tritan. There, users can find Jacqueline’s temperature regulator, which can be adjusted for either Celsius or Fareignheight temperature scales, as well as the kettle’s ‘Keep Warm,’ function which maintains a consistent simmer for as long as three hours. In addition to the kettle’s ‘Keep Warm’ feature, Jacqueline includes a ‘Baby Food/Water,’ setting that cools boiling water down to a temperature suitable for babies. With a body sculpted from 18/10 stainless steel, Jacqueline is as elegant as stainless steel kitchen appliances come, making it appropriate for any modern kitchen. Drawing inspiration from the classic ceramic teapot, Jacqueline strikes the ideal balance between refined contemporary luxury and tried-and-true teamaking tradition.

Designer: Bugatti

This Electric Heated Coaster is a time traveling, turntable-inspired design for every vintage fan!

Who else goes for the mug in the cabinet first thing in the morning? I know I’m not alone when I say that I wish my first cup of coffee could last forever. Maybe not forever, but longer than it usually does. Coffee and tea are the sorts of drinks that should be enjoyed at just the right temperature because as soon as they get cool, that’s a wrap. Thankfully, heated coasters are relatively easy to find with a quick web search, but most ditch the charm and character we’ve come to expect from classic coasters, instead opting for bulkier, more mechanical aesthetics. Heated coasters like the Retro Heated Coaster offers the technological, modern-day luxury of electric heat while maintaining the charismatic quality of intricately decorated coasters of yesteryear.

The Retro Heated Coaster was designed to resemble a groovy household item you’d expect to see in a home during the early 60s, but its heating function brings it up to date and allows you to enjoy your cup of coffee or tea for as long as you’d like. Designed to appear as a record player, The Retro Heated Coaster dons art-deco tones of pristine pink, scarlet red, emerald green, and parlor blue, and the coaster’s knobs and display screens are reminiscent of a turntable’s cartridge or tonearm. The imitative cartridge on the coaster works as a dial for the product’s timing feature which aids in operating an electrical heater similar to that of an electric tea kettle.

When in use, electrical energy travels through a circuit that’s fully-integrated inside the tea kettle’s base, translating electrical energy into heat energy, which then warms up the base’s surface. The Retro Heated Coaster also has an embedded thermostat and timer that ensures the electric heat stops flowing once the preferred amount of time for heating is used up. The heat can reach a temperature of up to 55℃ (131℉) and can maintain that temperature for as long as six hours. The Retro Heated Coaster is also compatible with all flat-bottomed mugs that can be safely warmed. So, with winter quickly approaching, a hot drink will likely be a daily occurrence for most of us and nothing sounds cozier than bundling up with a warm cup of coffee, tea, or hot chocolate on a cold winter night while music (and your mug) spins on the turntable.

Designer: Xian Xiaoming