
"If you've been on a college campus in the last 30 years, you've likely come across red party cups. Made by brands like Solo and Hefty, the iconic cups are beloved by frats, crucial to drinking games like beer pong and very difficult to recycle because of the type of plastic they're made from. But Lauren Choi, an engineering student at Johns Hopkins University, saw an opportunity: she wanted to turn these problematic cups into fabric. In 2019, during her senior year, she led a team that built an extruder machine that could spin plastic waste into textile filaments."
"They partnered with campus fraternities to gather thousands of red cups that could serve as the raw material. Choi then took a weaving class at a Baltimore, Maryland, maker space so she could make a sample fabric out of those filaments. That became the foundation for The New Norm, a textile company that today transforms a variety of post-consumer recycled plastic into stylish sweatshirts and beanies."
"The company is a natural extension of Choi's longstanding concern about the dual climate and plastics crises and a deep connection to fashion. She had been sewing since she was a child, interned at a swimwear company earlier in college, and before teaming up with classmates spent a summer trying to build an extruder machine in her parents' garage."
Lauren Choi, an engineering student at Johns Hopkins, developed a process to convert single-use red party cups into textile filaments by building an extruder in 2019. She partnered with fraternities to collect thousands of cups and learned weaving to create sample fabric. The effort led to The New Norm, a textile company that manufactures sweatshirts and beanies from post-consumer recycled plastics. Choi's sewing background, a swimwear internship, and hands-on prototyping in her parents' garage informed product development. After graduating in 2020, grant funding enabled further development and transition from a passion project to an operating venture addressing plastic and climate challenges.
Read at www.theguardian.com
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