- Title:
- White wastepaper bin from 'Input' range
- Object name(s):
- Wastepaper bin
- Brief description:
- A white plastic cylindrical shaped bin
- Collection:
- Victoria and Albert Museum
- Associated concept:
- Product design
- Associated concept:
- Plastic
- Associated concept:
- Household objects
- Current reproduction location:
- https://framemark.vam.ac.uk/collections/2013GA5592/full/!100,100/0/default.jpg
- Location type:
- Thumbnail
- Dimension:
- Height
- Dimension measurement unit:
- cm
- Dimension value:
- 38
- Dimension:
- Diameter
- Dimension measurement unit:
- cm
- Dimension value:
- 25.5
- Material:
- acrylonitrile-butadiene-styrene copolymer
- Object history note:
- Winner of Design Centre Award in 1974.
- Object name:
- Wastepaper bin
- Object number:
- CIRC.101-1977
- Object production date:
- 1970-1975
- Date - association:
- made
- Date - earliest / single:
- 1970-01-01
- Date - latest:
- 1975-12-31
- Object production organisation:
- Conran Associates
- Organisation's association:
- designer
- Object production organisation:
- Crayonne Ltd
- Organisation's association:
- manufacturer
- Object production place:
- Britain
- Place association:
- made
- Physical description:
- A white plastic cylindrical shaped bin
- Reproduction number:
- 2013GA5592
- Responsible department/section:
- FWK
- Technique:
- Heavy-duty ABS resin containers.
- Text reason:
- Collections online record
- Text:
- In 1972 Airfix Plastics initiated a design programme which aimed to improve the image of plastics from cheap and disposable to high quality and desirable. The business approached Conran Associates, a design subsidiary of Habitat, to design a range of plastic products for the office or home. The Input range was launched in May 1973 and designed by Conran Associates for Crayonne, a newly established division of Airfix. The range consisted of 21 'containers' including bowls, dishes, trays, bins, vases, pots and an ice bucket which were all made from heavy duty ABS plastic, selected for its strength and scratch and shatter resistance. Gift boxed to elevate their appeal, they were initially produced in four colours: red, yellow, green and white. The containers were produced to be almost twice as thick as other ABS products through a particularly low rate injection moulding cycle. All the units in the range were based on the same diameter and height ratios to achieve an integrated appearance and were given identification numbers, rather than names. The Royal Free Hospital placed an order of the containers to be used as vases to bring colour and cheer to their wards. The range won a Design Centre Award and featured in the exhibition British Design 1948–2012: Innovation in the Modern Age at the V&A in 2012.
- Text reason:
- Summary description
- User's reference:
- Reference:
- 'Contract and Consumer Goods'. Design Journal editorial. Issue No. 304. April 1974. Pages 35-41.
Persistent shareable link for this record: https://museumdata.uk/objects/ba09adf0-dea7-3aa9-9a1d-d58a38a6d7d9
Use licence for this record: CC BY-NC
Attribution for this record: https://museumdata.uk/objects/ba09adf0-dea7-3aa9-9a1d-d58a38a6d7d9, Victoria and Albert Museum, CC BY-NC
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