Material Matters with Grant Gibson

Elaine Yan Ling Ng on egg shells.

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Episode notes

Elaine Yan Ling Ng is a Hong Kong-based designer and innovator, who founded her own studio, The Fabrick Lab, in 2013, after stints working with the likes of Nissan and Nokia. 

Trained initially as a textile designer and weaver at London’s Central Saint Martins, her work encompasses traditional craft and cutting edge technology, with clients and collaborations ranging from Danish textile manufacturer Kvadrat to crystal company Swarovski, via UBS and a group of traditional artisans in the Guizhou area of southern China. 

Most recently, she has been working with design brand, Nature Squared, on CArrele, a range of tiles made from waste, or to be more precise, egg shells. 

Elaine is a TED Fellow and has a fistful of design awards, including The Emerging Talent Award from Design Anthology, GGEF’s Eco Innovator Award, Swarovski’s Designer of the Future Award and Tatler’s Gen T Award.

In this episode we chat about: making tiles from egg shells (not surprisingly); learning to sew at the age of three; her ten pin bowling champion father; learning to love weaving; how maths and data feeds into her work; designing student pieces with shape memory alloy; taking jobs at Nissan and Nokia; the changing design culture in China; setting up her own studio; how winning an award from Swarovski transformed her career; and bridging the gap between craft and industry. 

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