TREND PUBLICATION (1)

32
Unorthodox Manipulation 1

Transcript of TREND PUBLICATION (1)

Page 1: TREND PUBLICATION  (1)

Unorthodox Manipulation

1

Page 2: TREND PUBLICATION  (1)

The future of technology and science will enlighten our minds to a futuristic innovative new world. A food crisis has hit as fresh produce has become too high risk and harming to the environment through greenhouse gases and emissions. Substitutions have being found in order to cope with the food disaster in our fast developing world. Meat and natural produce will be pharmaceutically produced and manipulated in order to meet the demands of the consumer as the appetite for meat is rocketing as the global population swells and the meat produce becomes more affordable. Sustainability is key. Preventing catastrophic warming is dependent on tackling our high consumption. We will use substitutes such as In-vitro meat production and this will become the reality of today. The population has hit its peak but technology has advanced to the point where it has become manageable. Our available land is shrinking and communities are becoming more connected, leaving one increasingly important global issue, food security. Technology will allow us to track and analyse how our food system works allowing us to track food waste and carbon emissions.

Unorthodox Manipulation

Manipulate, change, alter, reform, reconstruct, modify, evolve, inject, connect and measure.

OPPOSITE:Manipulation of meat produce

Are we going to accept the decision that the future solution is manipulation and experimentation or are we going to want organic untouched produce? Will we strive for natural production? What will be the consequences if we don’t agree with the unorthodox method of the future food industry?

2 3

Page 3: TREND PUBLICATION  (1)

ABOVE: Injecting preservatives for a longer lasting produce

ABOVE: In-vitro meat production

4 5

Page 4: TREND PUBLICATION  (1)

ABOVE: Takinng protein from meat produce and turning into capsules

PANTONE 264

PANTONE 528

PANTONE 633

6 7

Page 5: TREND PUBLICATION  (1)

ABOVE: Can we accept food manipulation and experimentation? What

happends if we rebel?

ABOVE: Pharmaceutically produced product

8 9

Page 6: TREND PUBLICATION  (1)

PANTONE 515

PANTONE 292

PANTONE 137

OPPOSITE:Combining science and technology will be the food solution we have

being waiting for

10 11

Page 7: TREND PUBLICATION  (1)

OPPOSITE:3d printing will be responsible for the majority of our food

production

12 13

Page 8: TREND PUBLICATION  (1)

ABOVE:Natural versus manipulated food produce

OPPOSITE:We will look to chnage the habits of the meat eater in order to help

improve the world crisis

14 15

Page 9: TREND PUBLICATION  (1)

OPPOSITE:Damage to the environment if changes are not made to our consumer

habits

16 17

Page 10: TREND PUBLICATION  (1)

ABOVE AND BELOWAll meat produce will be modified to ensure no further

damage will be made

OPPOSITE:Labs will continue to develop strategies to save the

environment

18 19

Page 11: TREND PUBLICATION  (1)

ABOVETechnology will continue to develop to help

control food waste

ABOVE AND BELOWScientists will become our new farmers

20 21

Page 12: TREND PUBLICATION  (1)

PANTONE 367

PANTONE 449

PANTONE 421

OPPOSITE:Labs will grow and develop new innovative methods to save the planet

22 23

Page 13: TREND PUBLICATION  (1)

OPPOSITEFood waste will no longer effect us due to

technological advances

24 25

Page 14: TREND PUBLICATION  (1)

OPPOSITE:Health, nutrition and organic produce will continue to rise and be the

priority for consumers

ABOVE: Will consumers reject the new way of life

26 27

Page 15: TREND PUBLICATION  (1)

ABOVE: 4 mm

ABOVE: Emerging scientific knowledge will improve the way we

look after the planet

ABOVE: The lines between nature and technology will become

a blur

28 29

Page 16: TREND PUBLICATION  (1)

OPPOSITE:What will we choose? Save the planet or our taste buds?

30 31

Page 17: TREND PUBLICATION  (1)

Sensory Exploration

32 33

Page 18: TREND PUBLICATION  (1)

OPPOSITE:Taste will be enhanced through dining experiences

Taste has become non-existent we are craving more. A journey and experience an adventure and a game. Consumers need for pleasure and excitement is at its peak. Perception will be altered and our brains will come alive through our senses. They will be provoked and teased. By engaging multiple senses we will experience more than imaginable. Taste will be stimulated by multisensory experimentation. Part of our everyday taste experience will be shaped by expectations and belief. Sound will spark taste, colours will emerge from flavours and textures will provoke our taste buds. How sweet, salty or sour something tastes can change depending on the background music, it will be an effect known as “sonic seasoning”. We will develop new cravings not only for taste but for an experience. Communications and perception will be manipulated and our cravings will be cured. Dining adventures will be at the forefront of the exploration, blindfolded tasting sessions to manipulate the senses will be of popularity. Inhaling food and drink will be involved to influence the senses and create confusion to the brain. No longer will we ask ‘what am I eating?’ but instead ‘What does this taste like?’ Sensory exploration will be the health kick of the future; the brain will be tricked into eating well and choosing the correct foods for their nutritional values instead of taste. Will sensory exploration be the end to bad health or will it purely enhance indulging in food, which way will it lead us?

Sensory Exploration

34 35

Page 19: TREND PUBLICATION  (1)

OPPOSITE:Will our health be improved by eating through different senses?

36 37

Page 20: TREND PUBLICATION  (1)

OPPOSITE:Inhaling food and drink will this be a sustainable future?

38 39

Page 21: TREND PUBLICATION  (1)

OPPOSITE:‘What does this taste like?’

ABOVE‘It sounds like a cocktail’

40 41

Page 22: TREND PUBLICATION  (1)

ABOVE:Senses will be enhanced

BELOW:Pleasure and excitement

42 43

Page 23: TREND PUBLICATION  (1)

OPPOSITE:Colours will spark flavours in our minds

44 45

Page 24: TREND PUBLICATION  (1)

PANTONE 213

PANTONE 396

PANTONE 711

OPPOSITE:Blindfolded dining experiences will offer adventure and excitement

46 47

Page 25: TREND PUBLICATION  (1)

ABOVE AND OPPOSITE:Perception will take over our tastebuds

48 49

Page 26: TREND PUBLICATION  (1)

OPPOSITE:Sensory stimulation through colour

50 51

Page 27: TREND PUBLICATION  (1)

ABOVE: Will colour effect our dning decisions?

52 53

Page 28: TREND PUBLICATION  (1)

OPPOSITE:Textured cutlery will effect our sense of taste

54 55

Page 29: TREND PUBLICATION  (1)

56 57

Page 30: TREND PUBLICATION  (1)

OPPOSITE:What does this taste like?

ABOVE:Touch and sound will be a stronger influencer

than taste

58 59

Page 31: TREND PUBLICATION  (1)

ABOVE: We will be able to identify food

without sight

PANTONE 506

PANTONE 488

PANTONE 152

60 61

Page 32: TREND PUBLICATION  (1)

62