This sleek food processor was designed for Gen Z & includes a wireless charging dock!

Food processors are traditionally bulky and something that we hide away in a cabinet most of the time. This concept reimagines it as a smart, space-saving, sleek kitchen appliance design instead – meet Kenn, a food processor to fit the modern-day home environment.

Apartments continue to get smaller which means kitchen space is also being reduced. The new interior trend blurs the rigid zones into a singular multifuncational space. The pandemic has also encouraged many of us to become avid home chefs. When you combine all of the three factors, it shows us a gap where there is need for appliances that work for the space and the user equally rather than becoming a cumbersome, unattractive objection that ends up in the back of their cabinets. Kenn is specifically designed for the younger generation but its minimal aesthetic gives it a universal appeal in my opinion. The CMF were inspired by modern artwork, ceramics, and soft forms. The handle is one of the main elemets of Keen, it features a curved grip and two pops of orange that align it with the Kenwood brand. It also comes with various accessories and each of them were created to fit into the product.

” I used CAD to ideate and visualize the initial ideas, as well as to find the right proportions of the product. Each model took minutes to make, complementing the fast pace of sketches. 3D printing some of the best initial idea CAD models at 10% of the original size helped finalize the proportions and helped to observe how the light hits the object. Kenn was designed to gently reflect light without drawing too much attention to itself. The texture on its base was inspired by modern ceramics and vases that would be placed around the home,” says Burrell as he describes his proccess.

The funnel faces inwards unlike the current food proccessors on the market in which it faces outwards – this tweak was made to reduce visual impact and help the product retain its soft form. One of the coolest integrations is the wireless charging base and and docking station which can be used for keys, headphones, etc. It not only helps to support the proccessor but also gives the product a new dimension of functions that go beyond food prep – and as you know, we need our phones in the kitchen for the recipes and the cooking music. This added function coupled with its modern form lets you place Kenn anywhere in your home, not just your kitchen.

Designer: Joseph Burrell

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Go Old-School in the New Year!

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The Muscle, the Gear and the Carrot is a food processor concept designed in reaction to today’s hyper-sophisticated domestic appliances. Modern kitchen equipment is often so task-specific that they are often cumbersome and difficult to appropriate for other uses. This project ditches electricity and optimizes old kitchen solutions with modern knowledge. In doing so, it returns to the qualities of manual tools without sacrificing utility and comfort of use over time. Better yet, it reduces the need for multiple electric units and frees users from unsightly cords and power cables.

Here, the food processor was re-imagined as a multifunctional manual mill that is attached to the wall. When the wooden lever is activated, the movement of the equipment is multiplied tenfold by a visible flywheel mechanism. Different types of attachments can be fixed to the main body to fulfil different functions – a chopper for vegetables, a grinder for seeds and coffee beans, a salad spinner to dry salad leaves, a blender to whip up a quick drink, a dough hook for kneading bread, a whisk for beating eggs, a paddle for general mixing purposes, etc.

Designers: Antoine Pateau & Jean-Francois Dingjian

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The food processor’s successor

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No. Adding internet capabilities isn’t always the best way to update a product. Sometimes you can do something paradigm shifting through design. This Food Processor by Dustin Lee shakes things up. For starters, it’s upside down. Well, literally! The motor’s been made lightweight, and has been shifted to the top of the device, allowing it to integrate completely with the device’s form, and moreover, it is a whole lot safer, since you’d have to detach the motor/lid to access the food compartment, there’s no way the blade will be spinning when you do.

Appliances can be upgraded technologically without being given IoT capabilities. The food processor comes with a slick display and a rotating dial that allows you to determine the settings for the device. You can use the processor to chop, pulse, puree, knead and much more just at the simple turn of a dial. The display in the center is large and at eye level, which means readability, and a most definitely seamless user experience!

Designer: Dustin Lee

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