Ingredients Facts



Nowadays, more and more people are aware of everything they surrounded should be healthy and eco-friendly. These are two great examples showing how people begin to corporate ideas of eco-friendly with our daily objects, and also combine something interesting and easy to be recognized.

If you ate this cookie quickly enough, you might not notice how bad it is for you. Art and design team Andrew Andrew specializes in printing edible photographs (and company logos) onto cookies to put accurate nutrition labels onto the cookies themselves with icing top in edible ink (cost: $25 for a set of 2).
Similarly, a cotton t-shirt with all the clothing facts printed on it, here used to demonstrate an eco-friendly printing procedure: no sweatshops, no harsh chemical dyes, just cotton & water-based inks.

1 comment:

sammy said...

It'd be cool if they printed this information where the tag goes in the inside of the collar, so it's not necessarily in your face, but it's there for people that want to read it. It would be awesome if it was manditory for companies to label whether their products were sweatshop free or not, and how many materials and how much of each it took to create the garment. With time people would know the difference between what's wasteful and not and could gauge their purchases on something like this. Great idea.