Contact Us: Submission #18998

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Submission Number: 18998
Submission ID: 21761
Submission UUID: c60f98cc-003f-4a7a-a6a8-ca0f31787e54
Submission URI: /contactus

Created: Wed, 11/06/2024 - 9:15am
Completed: Wed, 11/06/2024 - 9:15am
Changed: Wed, 11/06/2024 - 9:15am

Remote IP address: 146.70.181.235
Submitted by: Anonymous
Language: English

Is draft: No
Webform: Contact Us
Submitted to: Contact Us
First Name WilliamoridoGA
Last Name WilliamoridoGA
Email Address aleksandrabdullaev33913@mail.ru
Your Message Meet the artist transforming tennis balls into furniture
<a href=https://blacksprutbsgl.net>blacksprut</a>

In the last two years, tennis has taken over our closets (court-appropriate garb can be found everywhere from Skims to Miu Miu), our screens (who could forget Zendaya’s turn as the tennis protoge-turned-elite-coach Tashi Duncan in “Challengers”) and now — our living rooms.

At least that is the hope of Belgian eco-designer Mathilde Wittock, who fashions bespoke furniture from discarded tennis balls. Wittock’s sleek, modernist chaise longues are entirely cushionless — save for the padding of 500 precisely arranged tennis balls. Her one meter-long benches are similarly sparse, with some 270 balls being both stylish and structurally substantial.

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“It takes around 24 different manufacturing steps to (make) a tennis ball, which is around five days. Then it has such a short lifespan,” Wittock told CNN in a video call from Brussels. “I was looking into tennis balls because I played tennis myself, so I know there is a lot of waste.”
Around 300 million tennis balls are produced each year — and almost all of them end up in landfills, taking over 400 years to decompose. The US Open, which ended at the weekend, goes through around 70,000 each year, with Wimbledon not far behind at 55,000. Wittock estimates the lifecycle of a ball stands at just nine games, depending on the level of tennis being played. “Even if they are contained in their box, if the box has been opened the gas inside the tennis balls will be released over time,” she said. “(Eventually) they will get flat and you’ll have to throw them away.”