Old Clothes Never Die, They Just Become Flower Pots

Most of us have a box. Or a bag, or a corner of the closet where clothes go to wait for a fate we haven’t quite settled on yet. Not trash, not donation, just quietly pushed aside. The jeans that stopped fitting but once made you feel unstoppable. The sweater that pilled after three washes but somehow survived four more years. Parting with clothes is harder than it sounds, and the fashion industry has largely treated that emotional gap as a non-problem.

ByBye, a concept designed by Gyeong Wook Kim, Sooa Kim, Gayeon Kim, and Mingyeong Shin, disagrees with that approach in the most literal way possible. It’s a countertop-sized machine that takes your worn and discarded garments and transforms them, through a process of grinding, compression, and heat, into flower pots. Real, usable, actually beautiful flower pots.

Designers: Gyeong Wook Kim, Sooa Kim, Gayeon Kim, Mingyeong Shin

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I want to sit with that idea for a second, because it’s a genuinely clever reframe of the problem. The designers describe ByBye not as a disposal system but as a “system of reform.” That language matters. When we throw clothes away, the garments disappear. When we donate, we hand off the moral weight to someone else. But ByBye asks you to stay present for the transformation and gives you something physical to show for it.

The mechanics are straightforward but impressively considered. You feed garments into the top opening, which uses a sliding rail mechanism to regulate input and automatically closes once the designated weight is reached. Inside, a shredder breaks the fabric down into fine particles. Those particles are then fed into a flower pot mold, compressed by a pressing plate, and hardened through high-temperature treatment. The finished pots rise up from the molding mechanism. The whole process takes about ten minutes per piece, and a companion app tracks fabric weight, the number of pots produced, and total production time.

What comes out of the machine is genuinely surprising. The pots carry a terrazzo-like texture from the mixed fibers, soft and speckled in muted blues, pinks, and greens depending on the fabric input. They look like something you’d find at a design fair, not something born from a pile of worn-out t-shirts. That aesthetic outcome feels important to the whole concept. If the result were dull or utilitarian, the emotional payoff wouldn’t land. Instead, you end up with an object that holds some trace of the original garment, and then holds a plant on top of that.

The project raises questions I keep turning over. Can the machine handle all fabric types, including synthetic blends that behave very differently under heat and compression? What’s the upper limit on pot durability when working with processed textiles? These feel like the natural next steps for a concept this promising, and I genuinely hope the team is pushing toward them.

What ByBye gets absolutely right is the emotional architecture of the experience. The name alone, a gentle play on “bye bye” and “by” as in made by, signals that this isn’t designed to make you feel guilty about your wardrobe. The copy throughout the project, “Hello? Nice to Wear You,” “Let Your Clothes Begin Again,” reads more like an invitation than an environmental lecture. That tone is rare in sustainable design, which has a tendency to lead with shame rather than possibility.

The designers put it plainly in their project statement: “Not a system of disposal, but a system of reform where clothing is seen again, and made anew.” That’s a design philosophy worth paying attention to. Fashion produces staggering amounts of textile waste every year, and while no home appliance is going to fix that alone, concepts like ByBye shift the conversation in a useful direction. They make the ending feel less like a loss and more like a beginning. Parting with clothes is still going to feel like something. But now it might feel like planting something too.

The post Old Clothes Never Die, They Just Become Flower Pots first appeared on Yanko Design.

This non-toxic Dutch Oven helps you craft culinary masterpieces with ease and confidence

Cooking should be an enjoyable and satisfying activity, and while that might be the case for some, it isn’t always true for everyone. Some deplore the multiple steps involved, especially when it comes to cleaning up the mess afterward. Others are also wary of cookware options available, not just in terms of design or performance but especially when the safety and cleanliness of cooking equipment are concerned, which affect both the taste and safety of the food. Not all cookware puts this feature as a priority, focusing more on convenience or appearances at the expense of people’s health. Fortunately, there are exceptions to the rule, and this do-it-all Dutch Oven brings safety, convenience, and taste together in one uncompromising cooking tool.

Designer: HK Kim

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It’s too easy to take for granted how the kind of pot or pan we cook our food in can actually affect the quality of the dish. Some pans might not heat evenly, for example, while others have a coating that could change the taste of the food in some manner. Worse, however, is how toxins for metals or their coating might be released into the food thanks to the heat, poisoning it and your body little by little. This kind of safety isn’t always at the top of manufacturers’ lists, but the Hesselbach Dutch Oven actually makes it its number one priority.

PuraSteel™ – PuraSteel™ combines the heat retention of cast iron with the rust-free resilience of stainless steel—all while being non-toxic.

PuraCotta™ – Offers a non-toxic, non-stick surface that enhances the flavor of your food.

The pot is made from a proprietary PuraSteel material and coated with PuraCotta to deliver the same kind of durability and performance you’d expect from similar cookware, but with the dangers of toxins and poisons that can be found in heavy metals like iron as well as by-products from hard anodization. Even the lid doesn’t have a screw for the handle, ensuring that no rust will ever fall on your delicious dish. With this focus on safety, you can cook to your heart’s content, knowing that you and your loved ones will be eating scrumptious and clean meals every time.

The Hesselbach Dutch Oven’s special materials also means that it has exceptional heat retention, ensuring that the pot heats up quickly, spreads evenly, and keeps a consistent temperature for long periods of time. This makes the Dutch Oven great for searing and frying, and it can keep the food warm longer even after you’ve removed it from the stove. And because food is cooked more evenly, food naturally tastes better, especially when there’s meat involved.

Of course, these aren’t the only feats that this exceptional Dutch Oven is capable of. Whether you’re simmering or baking, its unparalleled heat distribution makes sure that no part is undercooked or overcooked. With its versatile performance, you can switch from flame to oven to induction without missing a beat. And when the cooking and the eating are finally done, the ultra-pure ceramic surface makes it easier while using less soap. And, yes, you can even put it inside a dishwasher for an even more effortless time.

Hesslebach Founder – Driven by love and necessity, HK Kim channeled his mastery of metals into pioneering a culinary revolution for health.

This non-toxic Dutch Oven isn’t just a safe and versatile piece of cookware, it’s also quite the looker, too! With a modern and sophisticated design, you can start serving directly from the pot, making it the centerpiece of your dining experience. With its uncompromising safety, exceptional performance, and elegant aesthetics, the Hesslebach Dutch Oven promises a safer and cleaner cooking experience so that you can enjoy making the dishes you love to share and eat with the people you love.

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