Outdoors

Origami reusable water bottle smashes down to pocket size

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The Origami Bottle holds 25 fl oz of water, then folds away to pocket size when empty
DiFold
DiFold plans to integrate its folding construction into other product styles in the future
DiFold
Beyond bottles, DiFold imagines its design being useful for various types of containers and packaging
DiFold
DiFold hopes its Origami Bottle will be a more convenient everyday water container
DiFold
While it folds easily when pushed from the side, the Origami Bottle is designed to be freestanding and sturdy
DiFold
The Origami Bottle holds 25 fl oz of water, then folds away to pocket size when empty
DiFold
The Origami Bottle includes a sizable stainless steel mouth for easy filling, sipping and cleaning
DiFold
A few folds and the Origami Bottle virtually disappears
DiFold
Pack the Origami Bottle away in your purse and forget about it until it's time for a refill
DiFold
The Origami Bottle in various colors and stages of fold
DiFold
With its metal loop, the Origami Bottle easily attaches to bags, backpacks, belt loops and more
DiFold
Whether it's sports, gym or everyday commuting use, the Origami Bottle is designed to be a more convenient reusable water bottle
DiFold
Stash it in a pocket or carry it on your belt loop
DiFold
DiFold imagines the Origami Bottle keeping loads of plastic out of landfills and water bodies
DiFold
View gallery - 13 images

We've seen various collapsible water bottles in the past, from crushable flasks to fillable accordions. Bulgarian startup DiFold believes it has an even better version, creating a brand-new bottle that relies on the ancient art of origami. Its Origami Bottle holds and serves 25 fl oz (750 ml) of water as effectively as any solid water bottle, but after emptying the last drop it quickly folds down via integrated creases, packing small enough to throw in a pocket or purse.

DiFold puts single-use sustainability at the core of its pitch (i.e. fewer disposable water bottles, less plastic in landfills and water bodies), but it's convenience that really seems likely to clear Origami Bottles off shelves. Because instead of having to lug this bottle around by hand when it's empty, you can simply pack it down in seconds and put it in a messenger bag, backpack compartment, jacket pocket or other places a full-size hard bottle simply wouldn't fit.

The key to the Origami Bottle is no secret — like the paper artwork that lends its name, it's all about folds. A series of pre-folded creases that wrap around the body and run diagonally downward quickly fold the body down from over 8 inches (20 cm) tall to just over 2 inches (5 cm) tall.

A few folds and the Origami Bottle virtually disappears
DiFold

Interestingly, while the Origami Bottle collapses with easy, it maintains a strong, stable form when not actively collapsing, standing in place and holding up to pressure. To break down, owners apply pressure to the sides; the bottle is designed to hold strong against vertical pressure applied to the top or bottom.

While it folds easily when pushed from the side, the Origami Bottle is designed to be freestanding and sturdy
DiFold

DiFold uses a BPA-free thermoplastic elastomer in the Origami Bottle's construction. It claims the material is odorless, tasteless and recyclable. It can be cleaned using a brush and is also dishwasher-safe.

We've always liked the idea of using collapsible water bottles for running, snow sports and other activities in which a bottle tends to become growingly inconvenient in direct proportion to the length of time it sits empty in a hand, pack or pocket. It seems we're not alone because the Origami Bottle wrapped up a successful $137,000 Kickstarter last week. Interested parties who missed it there can now find it on Indiegogo OnDemand for pledge levels starting at $32. DiFold plans to begin shipping the Indiegogo units in January 2021.

Further down the line, DiFold intends to apply its collapsible design to other space-saving, reusable product and packaging styles.

Source: Indiegogo

View gallery - 13 images
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3 comments
Alastair
$32 for a plastic bottle! So it's BFA free - that should almost go without saying these days. Adding BPS free to BPA free would be more note worthy - but $32, my goodness, I'm in the wrong industry!
Signguy
...and how do you clean it when it gets dirty?
ljaques
Gullible Travels. Thirty two bucks, indeed. ;)