Making Mends

Visibly Mending the Circular Economy

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.54337/plate2025-10326

Keywords:

Repair, Visible mending, Product-life extension, User agency, Circular Economy

Abstract

This paper introduces the Making Mends Workshop, a workshop format centering on the practice of visible mending as a means to explore broader notions of repair and care in the context of the Circular Economy. The workshop is structured into three parts: a reflective exercise that encourages participants to consider the practical and conceptual meanings of mending, a brief lecture and practice session that provides basic knowledge and skills of visible mending, followed by the participants repairing a personal item. Findings suggest the potential impacts of the visible mending workshop as a catalyst for fostering user agency through skill acquisition and meaning-making. The workshop highlights visible mending as a communal repair practice supporting the Circular Economy by extending product life and preserving material and emotional value. The notion of Mending for Others was identified as a valuable addition to communal repair, where repair strategies benefit from social interactions that involve sharing knowledge and skills, care, and joy, ultimately leading to durable repairs.

Author Biography

Danika van Kaathoven, Kyoto Institute of Technology, Japan

Danika van Kaathoven is a PhD student at Kyoto Institute of Technology in Kyoto, Japan. Her main research interests include design for a circular economy, zero waste design, repair and visible mending, and participatory design. She forms one half of Studio A-lot-of-things: design+research studio hosting hands-on and creative events, workshops and research projects related to sustainability, circular design and design education.

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Published

24-06-2025

How to Cite

van Kaathoven, D., Huffman, E., & Mizuno, D. (2025). Making Mends: Visibly Mending the Circular Economy. Proceedings of the 6th Product Lifetimes and the Environment Conference (PLATE2025), (6). https://doi.org/10.54337/plate2025-10326

Issue

Section

Track 4: Repair, Care and Maintenance – Research Papers