This prosthetic leg grows with your child!

Prosthetics are expensive and if you have you start using them when you are young, it is an exponential cost that keeps increasing as you grow. It is not convinient or affordable to keep getting new prosthetics, so designer Snezana Jeremic has come up with a concept that grows with you! Ring is an adjustable, custom-made prosthetic leg designed specifically for transtibial amputee children in developing countries to help reduce costs while bettering their quality of life.

The conceptual prosthetic leg aims to make the otherwise rigid medical equipment more flexible especially to fit seamlessly in the life of a growing child. The user will wear the leg and it can be adjusted it as they grow to make sure the fit is always optimal and comfortable. “Ring achieves this thanks to an adjustable foot portion to ensure an optimal stride as well as the upper portion that can be paired with additional rings to suit the person’s body as they grow and develop,” says Jeremic.

Ring is a conversation starter that addresses the need for more modular healthcare equipment. Prosthetics like these make sure that individuals don’t need a whole new device every time they have a growth spurt!

Designer: Snezana Jeremic

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This roller-ruler is cooler than your regular ruler!

Titled the OO for the two circular discs at one end of the ruler, Snezana Jeremic’s piece of stationery is capable of measuring linear as well as non-linear surfaces, up to a stunning 99.9 centimeters! Using a clever gear system and two marked rolling-discs, the OO ruler can be rolled on surfaces, with a set of windows depicting the measurement based on how much the discs roll. The lower roller covers the millimeters, while the upper takes care of the centimeters, resetting every 100 centimeters, or one meter. Perfect for rolling down surfaces, the OO helps capture linear as well as non-linear measurements, while its straight-edge scale can be used as a conventional ruler too. Rather nifty, right? My only concern is needing to reset the roller-ruler to 0 every time you want to take a measurement from scratch!

Designer: Snezana Jeremic (Nemo)

Tires to Turbines

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Meet, Sam – a sleek electric vehicle designed with renewable energy in mind. It actually sports its own version of wind turbines to provide supplemental power.

Located in each wheel section, each time the wheels turn, the horizontal-axis turbines are activated. This produces electricity that can then be used to power other features like cabin lighting, entertainment systems, headlights and more. The energy created can also be harnessed and stored in the battery for enhanced range.

As far as looks go, Sam has an edgier aesthetic than your average pod-style EVs. You might even say it’s menacing! Its swept cockpit and near-seamless fender cladding make it as aggressive as it is aerodynamic.

Designer: Snežana Jeremić

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Snoozing Made Not-So-Easy

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If you’ve got a problem with snoozing way past your wakeup time, the NEMO alarm clock is for you! The design features an enclosed roller ball maze on top – in order to adjust the alarm, the ball must be moved to the blue space – to turn it off, it must be moved to the red. If you REALLY need to snooze, you gotta work for it… but by that time you’ll probably be wide awake from playing the maze game!

Designer: Snežana Jeremić

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Medicool!

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Medicinal Syrup bottles look daunting. Scary names, ominous looking liquid, and the bottle’s no-nonsense shape makes medicine consumption look like a scary ordeal. There’s also no standardized dosage system. People often confuse teaspoons with tablespoons, and vice versa. The Moj Syrup packaging does to syrups what blister packs did to pills. Singular doses sealed into elegantly designed spoon shaped blips not only makes for regulated consumption, but also makes the syrup look friendly and appealing. Let’s hope we see these on the shelves soon!

Designer: Snežana Jeremić

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Make Your Label Work For You

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When it comes to bottled beverages, it’s not just the bottle itself that accounts for material waste but also the label! This design, called the “Moj Sokic” label, images the label as a handle to encourage reuse of a juice bottle. Each white label is attached underneath the lid of a juice bottle and flips upwards to let users easily grip, hang or store their juice bottle wherever they see fit. The concept cleverly mimics the function of a carabiner clip often found on reusable water bottles, but executes the design in a cheap, marketable and disposable way! The easy-to-carry labeling is also minimal and simplistic in its design, and a simple cutout shape of each type of fruit easily conveys the product and reveals the contents of the bottle.

Designer: Snežana Jeremić

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