Nerithsilicone

Silicone Cookware,Bakeware,Kitchenware,Giftware,Ice Cubes...

Leaf Shaped Silicone Pocket Cup

2013-10-27 11:49:42 | 日記

Nerith Silicone Giftware,Leaf Shaped Silicone Pocket Cup

The leaf shaped pocket cup is a small silicone foldable cup that you can fit in your pocket, purse, backpack, or fanny pack, that you can take out whenever you need a drink of milk, assuming you also carry around milk.

Nerith Silicone Giftware,Leaf Shaped Silicone Pocket Cup

 

To use the leaf shaped cup, just take it out of your fanny pack, squeeze the leaf so that it opens, fill with liquids, and consume. No more wasting tiny cups that hold 1/2 gulp of liquids, no more killing mother nature, stop being an Earth hater. The leaf shaped silicone pocket cup can be cleaned by turning inside out and throwing in a dishwasher, or boiling water, and are great for people enjoy drinking liquids on the go.

Nerith Silicone Giftware,Leaf Shaped Silicone Pocket Cup Nerith Silicone Giftware,Leaf Shaped Silicone Pocket Cup


4 Things You Should Know About Silicone

2013-10-20 08:39:41 | 日記

 Nerith Medical silicone parts

  1. Medical silicone can be made radiopaque by the addition of compounds such as titanium oxide and barium sulfate. These medical silicones are even available in restricted implantation grade (short term/ twenty-nine days or less) and unrestricted implantation grade (long term/indefinite). 
  2. Silicone hardness is measured and classified as the durometer of the silicone. The standard tolerance for durometer fluctuation in industry is +/- 5. This means that Shore A 60 durometer silicone could have a durometer as low as 55 or as high as 65.
  3. Colorants may be added to silicone to improve part visibility and marketability. These colorants can be matched to a pantone color or an existing part (this can be particularly useful for preserving your own unique brand by color matching silicone parts to the company logo).
  4. Injection molded silicone parts can be processed in such that their cycle times are as fast as those of injection molded plastic parts.

Why is a medical silicone molded part more stable than a thermal plastic part?

2013-10-04 13:32:02 | 日記

Nerith medical silicone molded part

Question: Why is a medical silicone molded part more stable than a thermal plastic part?

Answer: Molded medical silicone parts are actually more stable in three different respects of the word, so I would like to provide three different answers to your question.

In the first respect silicone molded parts are more stable than plastic parts due to the fact that molded plastic parts have inherent stresses molded into them.  These high stress regions can be viewed by holding a molded plastic part up to a light source and looking through a polarizing filter.  It is not an uncommon practice to anneal plastic parts after molding them to remove these molded in stresses and create a stronger, more stable part that is less likely to crack under pressure.  Silicone parts do not exhibit these inherent molded in stresses due to the way that silicone parts are molded.   Silicone parts are molded by injecting “cold” (55°F – 70°F) liquid silicone material into a heated mold, this allows the silicone to already be in its desired shape before curing.

Nerith medical silicone molded part

In the second respect silicone is more stable as a medical device due to the bio-inert nature of silicone material.  In fact, molded silicone parts are nonreactive with just about everything; it takes some pretty aggressive cleaning agents to remove dissolve fully cured silicone, chemicals designed to remove paint, corrosion, and powerful industrial adhesives.  On the other hand, plastics are frequently in the media headlines and shrouded in scares regarding toxicity in materials that people eat off of and interact with every day, BPA, Teflon, and PVC to name a few.  These polymers have received attention for leeching into foods and even drinking water, under the right conditions.

And in the third respect of the word silicone is more thermally stable than thermoplastic.  While thermoplastics and TPEs have come a long way in terms of temperature resistance, to put it simply, they will eventually reach glass transition point at elevated temperatures and at further elevated temperatures they will melt.  Once silicone has been fully cross-linked it can’t be returned toliquid form.  Molded silicone rubber behaves more like wood when exposed to extreme temperatures and will eventually smolder and burn, however these temperatures are considerably greater than those at which plastic will reach liquid state.


Design Meets Cookware: Silicone Steam Roasting Bowls

2013-09-29 09:41:20 | 日記

Roasting something with steam sounds like a contradiction in terms. And maybe it is. Even so, we think this flexible silicone bowl designed by Compeixalaigua Designstudio for Nerith has some serious potential.

In its open form, the bowl can be used for mixing and preparing ingredients. Then the bowl folds in half and hooks to close at the top, creating a kind of hammock for food that can go straight in the oven.

We saw this design and immediately thought, “Wow.” The bowl itself has the kind of simple and elegant design to which we always feel drawn. We also really love this “prep table to oven to dinner table” concept.

At the same time, we’re a little dubious about its functionality. Silicone is notorious for interfering with the browning process in the oven, so we have trouble imagining that food would really get as crusty or roasted as these pictures would have us believe. We also wonder how stable the bowl would be in the oven. Doesn’t it look like it might easily tip over?

What do you think? Has anyone cooked with one of these before?


Design Meets Cookware: Silicone Steam Roasting Bowls

2013-09-29 09:40:31 | 日記

Roasting something with steam sounds like a contradiction in terms. And maybe it is. Even so, we think this flexible silicone bowl designed by Compeixalaigua Designstudio for Nerith has some serious potential.

In its open form, the bowl can be used for mixing and preparing ingredients. Then the bowl folds in half and hooks to close at the top, creating a kind of hammock for food that can go straight in the oven.

We saw this design and immediately thought, “Wow.” The bowl itself has the kind of simple and elegant design to which we always feel drawn. We also really love this “prep table to oven to dinner table” concept.

At the same time, we’re a little dubious about its functionality. Silicone is notorious for interfering with the browning process in the oven, so we have trouble imagining that food would really get as crusty or roasted as these pictures would have us believe. We also wonder how stable the bowl would be in the oven. Doesn’t it look like it might easily tip over?

What do you think? Has anyone cooked with one of these before?