Because everyone should cook!

Cooking, like any art form requires skill and passion. Passion comes easy, skill doesn’t… and when one has the skill, being limited by physical capabilities can be quite disheartening. Oneware is a set of kitchen apparatuses for one-handed people who still want to or need to cook. The name also has an element of inclusion in it, one kitchen and one soul!

Oneware is designed to eliminate the need for a second hand. The chopping board comes with spikes on which one can fix the vegetables or fruits. Cutting them becomes easier when the fruits/veggies are held in place. The Oneware also has a dish-washing mat made of a high-friction elastomer. The mat’s textures help hold the dish in place while one hand scrubs it vigorously. Pores in the dish help drain the water out.

I’ve come to appreciate inclusive design efforts like the Oneware. They are most definitely perceived as medical products, but most times they just require envisioning life through the user’s eyes. A simple feature or hack can help make a product or technology accessible to everyone, regardless of their abilities!

Designer: Lim Loren

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When design met modern medicine

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Designing conceptual stuff is easy. Designing real world products that affect and improve lives is the real challenge. The Bend is a medical finger-splint with a revolutionary design. Finger bone fractures can be painful, however dislocations of bones isn’t just about pain, if not treated well, you could lose functionality of that finger for life. The bend makes use of a polymer’s tensile strength, and clever design to provide a medical solution that is not just effective, it’s non-invasive too. Deviating from current medical procedures that require surgery, the Bend just needs a long fingernail. A piece of thread is tied to the fingernail at one end, and the Bend splint at the other. The string is then wound around the splint, so that the finger is pulled into shape again, allowing the bones to align properly. The bend even allows for finger movement, letting the patient heal as well as recover from the injury as quick as possible!

Designers: Lim Loren, Russell Chew, Division of Industrial Design & Department of Hand & Reconstructive Microsurgery.

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