SCAD Students Rising to the Challenge

  • blankDecember 16, 2015
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SCAD Students Rising to the Challenge

Yavne, Israel, December 16, 2015

Highcon invited students at the Savannah College of Art and Design to take part in a 3D Paper Product Design Challenge. Students from all years, and from all of SCAD’s locations (Savannah, Atlanta, Hong Kong and students studying online) majoring in Graphic Design, Industrial Design, Jewelry, Illustration, Fashion Marketing and Management were invited to form teams to participate.

The aim of the challenge was to produce the most innovative, feasible, and applicable product that they could design, in a way that would demonstrate clearly the amazing benefits of the Highcon digital cutting and creasing technology. Different projects and ideas were well researched and implemented on substrate supplied by Iggesund Paperboard and digitally finished on the Highcon Euclid.

62 teams and over 140 students participated in the challenge and submitted original designs.

Eshchar Ben-Shitrit, VP Marketing at Highcon said: “The SCAD students showed not only creativity but also a keen sense of design for the real world. We could see how their imagination and originality enabled the creation of products with a strong “wow effect” but also an applicable use case determined by a market need. The winning products will be displayed on the Highcon booth at drupa – the print and packaging show to be held at the end of May 2016. “

Professor Trudy Abadie-Mendia, SCAD Professor of Graphic Design said “The Highcon 3D Paper Design Challenge was a wonderful opportunity for our students to collaborate in designing unique paperboard solutions in a short amount of time. This was a cross-campus collaboration using our online platform as the main form of communication. For many students, this was a first. We are quite impressed with the results of this Challenge!”

1st Place – Twisted Tea

A multi-functional tea package design that includes a box for the individually wrapped teabag, whose wrapping is used to remove the tea from the mug, a box to hold all the teabags and a tear-off strainer.

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By Ariana Akmal, a Senior in Advertising & Vanessa Khattar, a Graduate of Luxury & Fashion Management.
2nd Place – Joyful vitamin box for children

A package for daily vitamin tablets for children that is not only educational but also interactive and fun to collect and play with. Each individual pack folds into a character. The packaging was designed so the child looks forward to finishing the tablet in order to play with the character and add to his collection.

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by Kanchan Dawani, a Sophomore in Fashion Design, and Neha Mardi, a graduate of Industrial Design
3rd Place – Galaxy Lightbulb

A custom package for single LED light bulbs. The inset of the bottom panel floats and protects the bulb and acts as a base to stand on display shelves. It also leaves the bulb threading exposed to allow consumers to screw the bulb into light sockets without removing it from the packaging. Pinholes in the shape of different constellations, pierced on each panel, projects a starry night when lit in a dark room.

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by Ken Macalino, a Junior in Industrial Design and Madison Gross, a Senior in Graphic Design.
Two other runners-up tied for 4th place for designs with great potential – a highly imaginative shoe box and a light puzzle projector.

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Kyra Donka, Madison Muhlbaier, Anton Arvidsson, Freshmen in Interior Design, Fashion Marketing & Mgt & Interior Design

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Mark Murphy, Mohini Khadaria, Juniors in Advertising and Graphic Design

 

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