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With all the exploration of recycled materials in green design these days, the work of artist Chris Gilmour seems like a logical and amusing next step in terms of upcycling and eco-friendly art processes. Gilmour, an English artist based in Italy, re-creates objects and machines from our everyday lives using only packing cardboard and glue. Industrial cardboard is typically used only once for shipping materials and then wastefully discarded....<br><br><a href='https://inhabitat.com/recycled-cardboard-sculpture-by-chris-gilmour/'>READ ARTICLE</a>1
With all the exploration of recycled materials in green design these days, the work of artist Chris Gilmour seems like a logical and amusing next step in terms of upcycling and eco-friendly art processes. Gilmour, an English artist based in Italy, re-creates objects and machines from our everyday lives using only packing cardboard and glue. Industrial cardboard is typically used only once for shipping materials and then wastefully discarded....<br><br><a href='https://inhabitat.com/recycled-cardboard-sculpture-by-chris-gilmour/'>READ ARTICLE</a>2
With all the exploration of recycled materials in green design these days, the work of artist Chris Gilmour seems like a logical and amusing next step in terms of upcycling and eco-friendly art processes. Gilmour, an English artist based in Italy, re-creates objects and machines from our everyday lives using only packing cardboard and glue. Industrial cardboard is typically used only once for shipping materials and then wastefully discarded....<br><br><a href='https://inhabitat.com/recycled-cardboard-sculpture-by-chris-gilmour/'>READ ARTICLE</a>3
With all the exploration of recycled materials in green design these days, the work of artist Chris Gilmour seems like a logical and amusing next step in terms of upcycling and eco-friendly art processes. Gilmour, an English artist based in Italy, re-creates objects and machines from our everyday lives using only packing cardboard and glue. Industrial cardboard is typically used only once for shipping materials and then wastefully discarded....<br><br><a href='https://inhabitat.com/recycled-cardboard-sculpture-by-chris-gilmour/'>READ ARTICLE</a>4
With all the exploration of recycled materials in green design these days, the work of artist Chris Gilmour seems like a logical and amusing next step in terms of upcycling and eco-friendly art processes. Gilmour, an English artist based in Italy, re-creates objects and machines from our everyday lives using only packing cardboard and glue. Industrial cardboard is typically used only once for shipping materials and then wastefully discarded....<br><br><a href='https://inhabitat.com/recycled-cardboard-sculpture-by-chris-gilmour/'>READ ARTICLE</a>5





