bioMATTERS combines mycelium, clay and industrial waste to 3D print vessels and bowls
Briefly

bioMATTERS aims to create biodegradable products with the entrance of its new series named MYCO-CLAY, adopting novel bio-fabrication workflows that combine mycelium, or fungal networks of entangled hyphae filaments, with earthenware clay, a natural sedimentary material with high plasticity.
bioMATTERS developed the vessels first. They used computational design decoding growth algorithms which gave them different morphologies for the design. Feeding the 3D printer with the generated design, the outcome recalls archaic, cavernous and petrologic vessels sprung to existence using modern 3D printing and computational technologies.
Read at designboom | architecture & design magazine
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