Toaster Project
When design student Thomas Thwaites set out to build a toaster from scratch, he discovered just how miraculous modern manufacturing truly is. Dismantling a cheap toaster revealed over 400 components made from copper, iron, nickel, mica, and plastic.
His quest took him to abandoned Welsh mines for iron ore, which he attempted to smelt using everything from 15th-century techniques to sacrificed microwave ovens. "I realized that if you started absolutely from scratch, you could easily spend your life making a toaster," Thwaites admitted. Despite heroic efforts—scavenging plastic from dumps, extracting copper through electrolysis, melting commemorative coins for nickel—his final creation looked more like "a toaster-shaped birthday cake" than an actual appliance. When finally plugged into the mains, it lasted just two seconds before failing completely.
The project reveals a profound truth: even our simplest technologies represent the culmination of thousands of years of human knowledge, specialized expertise, and global supply chains that no single person could possibly replicate.