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The Luxury Oddments project was developed as the practical part of my doctoral dissertation, focusing on sustainable design and the meaningful reuse of existing materials and objects.

The initial impulse came at a moment when we were clearing out the basement of a research institution. Among items destined for disposal, we discovered an extensive collection of laboratory glass - test tubes, capillaries, and other glass components that had lost their original function and were marked for disposal. These forgotten, dust-covered fragments became the starting point for a new design approach: transforming discarded material into a collection of luxury lighting objects.

From the very beginning, the aim of the project was not only to create visually striking and valuable products, but above all to highlight the potential of reuse and recycling of materials that have already lived one life. Unlike conventional design processes, this project was shaped from the outset by a strict constraint, the found fragments themselves. Their shapes, proportions, and imperfections directly defined the character of each individual light object.

Transforming waste into luxury is not a common practice. It is precisely through this contrast, however, that the project demonstrates how materials perceived as obsolete or worthless can acquire new value, meaning, and aesthetic quality. This principle can be applied not only to objects, but also to forgotten, unused, or neglected architectural structures and spaces.

One of the key outcomes of the project was The test tube chandelier, which gained considerable popularity and was later introduced into custom production. It was created, for example, for The Moon Club in Prague, designed by Formafatal studio.

The Luxury Oddments project is closely connected to our long-term interest in sustainable design, both as a professional discipline and as a personal attitude. Rather than continuously producing new objects, the project advocates rediscovery, reinterpretation, and respect for material quality and craftsmanship. In many cases, older materials and objects surpass contemporary products in both durability and quality of execution. Rediscovering their value can bring a deeper and more lasting sense of joy, further enhanced by the environmental benefits of reuse.

The project also includes a documentary film by Klára Jakubová, which captures the process of transforming discarded laboratory glass into lighting objects.

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Realisation 2015

Designer Anna Marešová
Product designer Sergej Kuckir, Lukáš Blažek
Graphic designers Jiří Beran
Photo & video Klára Jakubová, BoysPlayNice
Production Anna Maresová designer

Developed with the support of the Faculty
of Art and Design, UJEP, Ústí nad Labem

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