PRA June-July 2015 Counrty Focus

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Country Focus

Italy’s show hatches new ideas At the May-held Plast show in Milan, Italy, apart from the usual prospects, the exhibition highlighted a new business incubator initiative known as the Start Plast. Termed as a “seedbed for new projects”, the exhibition space was given free to some 30 start-up companies, run by young entrepreneurs, with a focus on 3D printing and biomaterial products, to regenerate the flagging Italian plastics manufacturing sector.

The triennially-held Plast was held in May this year but will take place 26-30 September 2017, so as not to overlap with other exhibitions in 2018

Revitalising the wine-in-pouch concept One of the exhibitors included Italian/ Dutch design agency Reverse Innovation that has innovated a wine pouch. With current flexible packaging for wine having a mediocre image of the quality of the wine filled in it, Reverse Innovation Amsterdam (a spinoff of the Italian agency Reverse Innovation) wanted to overcome the negative image of wine sold in pouches or as a "bag in a box". It also set out to target the wine packaging segment that is Reverse Innovation’s traditional and not open to changes. plastic wine pouch

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The design was born from a partnership with wine maker Gigante and Dutch packaging firm Dackla Pack. The result is a graphic and structural pack that reinterprets the classic Bordeaux bottle. "The contours of the bottle shape are emphasised with gold foil while the terroir of the wine is retold through the use of blind embossing and UV varnish to reproduce the specific shape of the vine leaf which is characteristic of the area," said Mirco Onesti, Reverse Innovation's Creative Director/Partner. "Our intention was to create a high quality product, in order to offer an unconventional and alternative pack for the wine sector.” Wine bottles are intended to be touched and handled so consideration of the aesthetic, tactile and functional experience was essential. Thus, a simple black pouch is wrapped in a paper sleeve that defines the shape of the product. The patented plastic pouch is made of METPET (metallised films coated with aluminium) and BOPP. It has already been in the market for a year, according to Onesti. "We are 95% ready to launch it." Onesti said the company was speaking to some Australian wine makers and also olive oil producers. "The benefits are easier handling since the packaging is light and easier to ship as well as produce since a standard filling machine can be used." When asked about the life span of the wine filled in the pouch, Onesti said it would be two years. "Basically, our intention is to target higher quality wines that range up to EUR15 currently and make them more marketable as well as the transition of bottled products to flexible pouch solutions in other sectors." Already, the wine pouch has won five international design prizes. Orthopaedic therapy made easier Launched a year ago, Siena-located Proteo has been busy promoting its solution for producing customised orthopedic braces, for the hand and wrist, through digital fabrication. According to co-founder Federico Papi, "We offer custom solutions (platform win/iOS, instruments) with b-2-b software and hardware solutions for orthopaedic devices that involve 3D scanning and printing.” He explained that the customised hardware helps a technician to realise better scanning, adding that the technician is usually not an Proteo’s hand wrist expert in operating CAD modelling device that is fabricated and thus, Proteo has made it easy by 3D printing


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