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Search Result for “reuse”

Showing 1 - 10 of 13

THAILAND

Turning waste into objects of art

News, Suwitcha Chaiyong, Published on 13/03/2025

» Growing up with parents who reused materials around them inspired artist Wishulada Panthanuvong to value all materials.

LIFE

Green inventions

Life, Suwitcha Chaiyong, Published on 19/02/2025

» Awareness of environmental issues has driven the trend of producing environmentally-friendly products. Following in this light, Thailand Inventors' Day 2025, which was organised by the National Research Council of Thailand and held from Feb 2-6, showcased eco-friendly products made to save the environment. Here are three outstanding products that were on display.

LIFE

Waste warriors

Life, Suwitcha Chaiyong, Published on 21/11/2023

» While working as a Bangkok Metropolitan Administration waste collector, Nampu Toka often gets injured by sharp sticks, fish bones, needles, broken glass, tiles and other hazardous trash. He also encounters the unpleasant task of handling discarded items that should have been properly bagged or wrapped up in paper such as diapers and waste from patients.

LIFE

Refuse accepted

Life, Suwitcha Chaiyong, Published on 01/03/2023

» Born and raised in Songkhla, Narongyot Thongyu liked to collect trash from beaches and turn it into toys in his youth. With those childhood memories in mind, Narongyot has created a collection of hanging sculptures resembling quirky toys, each made from discarded objects such as balls, sandals, helmets and bottle caps likewise collected from beaches.

LIFE

Engine of creativity

Life, Suwitcha Chaiyong, Published on 22/02/2023

» When Aroonkamol Thongmorn was a student at the Faculty of Painting, Sculpture and Graphic Arts, Silpakorn University, she spent her time during summer break working at an auto parts manufacturer to earn money towards the purchase of a new mobile phone. It was the first time she'd seen auto parts in that context, and she was impressed with their unusual shapes and forms. The experience inspired her to create artworks for her master's degree thesis.

LIFE

Cutting down on fast fashion

Life, Suwitcha Chaiyong, Published on 22/11/2022

» More people have become aware of the negative impact of fast fashion on the environment, such as polluted water, use of water and energy, greenhouse gas emissions, textile waste in landfills and microfibre debris in oceans. To save the environment, some people decide to buy fewer clothes.

LIFE

Turning trash into treasure

Life, Suwitcha Chaiyong, Published on 12/10/2022

» When artist and social activist Wishulada Panthanuvong was asked to display her art at Volvo Studio Bangkok in Iconsiam, she decided to showcase her unique designs including a 100,000 baht dress made from used computer keyboards, a couch made from two broken chairs, and a sculpture made of used fan covers, bottle caps and straws.

LIFE

The high cost of fast fashion

Life, Suwitcha Chaiyong, Published on 11/10/2021

» When Natthapat Wangvanichaphan, one of the founders of The Geen, a waste management company, was disposing unused items in her house, she noticed that her old underwear was made from non-biodegradable plastic such as nylon or polyester. Natthapat realised if she threw her underwear in a rubbish bin, they would end up in a landfill. Nylon takes 40 years to decompose while polyester takes more than 200 years.

LIFE

Not all trash is equal

Life, Suwitcha Chaiyong, Published on 08/10/2021

» People know recycling is the process of converting waste into reusable material. But as they assume that recycling is a solution to waste pollution, they do not pay much attention to how much waste they throw away in the first place.

LIFE

A country unmasked

Life, Suwitcha Chaiyong, Published on 04/05/2020

» A volunteer garbage collector in Prachuap Khiri Khan, Suthep Naktang spotted a lot of used surgical masks left on beaches in the province, which added to piles of trash he and his volunteer group collects everyday. The same happened in the northern province of Kamphaeng Phet, where people found discarded surgical masks, used tissue paper and disposed medical gloves littering Sirijit Park. Even in Bangkok, a street sweeper reportedly said she found up to five discarded surgical masks on the street every day.