These Egg Carton Sneakers Are Ridiculous (And Kind of Genius) - Yanko Design
Briefly

These Egg Carton Sneakers Are Ridiculous (And Kind of Genius) - Yanko Design
"My second thought? I kind of want a pair. Before you start envisioning yourself strutting down the street in shoes made from last Sunday's brunch leftovers, let me clarify. These aren't meant for your morning jog or grocery store runs. Each pair is handcrafted entirely from recycled egg cartons, transforming 100% packaging waste into the recognizable silhouette of contemporary footwear."
"The concept comes from designer Vadim Kibardin, who apparently has a thing for making beautiful objects out of materials most of us toss in the recycling bin without a second thought. Egg Box Sneakers extend his ongoing exploration of cardboard, paper, and packaging as mediums for design, with over two decades of his practice focused on rethinking the value of discarded materials."
"What makes these sneakers particularly fascinating (besides the obvious weirdness factor) is their construction. Using only two types of carton egg boxes, the project investigates the structural and aesthetic potential of limited resources. The result looks exactly like what you'd imagine if sneakers and egg cartons had a design baby. The soles resemble an egg tray flipped upside down, the uppers layered like cracked armor. It's weird. It's sculptural. It's the kind of thing that makes you stop scrolling."
Kibardin Design's Egg Box Sneakers are handcrafted entirely from recycled egg cartons, transforming 100% packaging waste into a recognizable contemporary footwear silhouette. The project uses only two types of carton egg boxes to explore structural and aesthetic possibilities within limited materials. The soles mimic an inverted egg tray while uppers are layered like cracked armor, producing a sculptural, wearable-art aesthetic rather than functional footwear. The concept continues Vadim Kibardin's two-decade practice of reimagining cardboard, paper, and packaging as design mediums, emphasizing upcycling and questioning the potential value of discarded materials.
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