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Feast of the Four Spirits

Department of Industrial Design, National Kaohsiung Normal University

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We want to combine traditional culture with modern interests and design a product with traditional cultural imagery. The four legendary beasts are widely circulated, so we use them as doll images and combine them with incense burners that conform to traditional images to innovate the story and shape, so as to record the local customs and practices they encountered, and combine the shape with the story context. Let people immerse themselves in the story while lighting incense.

The Shenshou Kaiguo adds fun to the incense burner. The target group includes young people around 20 years old, and it can introduce people who have never experienced burning incense to start lighting incense and expand the customer base. The design of this product refers to various special-shaped pots, such as the mandarin duck pot, tic-tac-toe pot, chimney hot pot, patterned casserole, etc., combined with the concept of surrounding the stove, it displays the pots that each mythical beast likes in the story. When lighting the incense, the user can see the smoke coming out of the holes in the pot, visually enjoy the smoke rising from the pot, and feel the atmosphere of the hot pot with the mythical beast.

This picture shows the products of mythical beasts opening pots. The four mythical beasts are Azure Dragon, Vermillion Bird, White Tiger and Black Tortoise. Pour incense powder into the pot and light it, allowing the user to see smoke coming out of the central hole in the upper cover as the incense is being lit. Combine the incense burner with the story, and combine the shape with the story situation. Let people immerse themselves in the story while lighting incense. This picture shows the instructions for using the mythical beast pot-opening incense burner.

Dongda Mao table

Department of Product and Media Design, Fo Guang University

The design of this small tea table adopts the traditional mortise and tenon structure of the Tōdai-ji Bell Tower. It is precisely assembled using interlocking wooden joints without the use of nails or screws. The tabletop is made of glass, allowing a full top-down view of the intricate joinery beneath.

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