Plastic (pronounced plas-tik)
(1) Any of a group of synthetic (and usually hydrocarbon-based)
polymer materials which may be shaped when soft and subsequently hardened.
(2) In slang, a credit card, or credit cards collectively
(an allusion to the material typically used in their manufacture); money,
payment, or credit represented by the use of a credit card or cards.
(3) Something (or a number of things), made from or
resembling plastic (sometimes merely descriptive, sometimes as a slur
suggesting inferiority in quality).
(4) Capable of being molded or of receiving form; having
the power of molding or shaping formless or yielding material.
(5) In psychology, the quality of being easily
influenced; impressionable.
(6) In biology of or relating to any formative process;
able to change, develop, or grow; capable of adapting to varying conditions;
characterized by environmental adaptability.
(7) Figuratively and in slang, something superficially
attractive yet unoriginal or artificial; insincerity or fakeness in an
individual or group.
(8) A widely used combining form (plastic surgery, plastic
bullet, plastic explosive, chloroplastic, protoplastic etc).
(9) A sculptor or molder; any solid but malleable
substance (both obsolete).
In physiology, producing tissue (obsolete).
1625–1635: From the Latin plasticus (that which may be molded or relating to that which has
been molded), from the Ancient Greek πλαστικός (plastikós) (fit for molding, capable of being molded into various
forms; pertaining to molding), from πλάσσω (plássō)
(to mold, to form). In Hellenic use, in
relation to the arts, there was plastos
(molded, formed) the verbal adjective from plassein
(to mold) and from the Greek plastikós
was derived both plaster and plasma. Words
vaguely or exactly synonymous (depending on context) include elastic, molded,
synthetic, bending, giving, yielding, cast, chemical, ersatz, phony, pseudo,
substitute, ductile, fictile, formable, moldable, pliable, pliant, resilient,
shapeable, flexible & amenable. Plastic
is a noun, verb & adjective, plastically & plasticly are adverbs and plasticity
is a noun; the noun plural is plastics and the seventeenth century spelling plastick is long obsolete.
1968 Chevrolet Corvette L88 (left) &
1962 Trabant 601 Universal (station wagon) (right).
Materials with plastic properties were
attractive for car producers for different reasons. It made low-volume production runs viable
because the tooling costs were a fraction of the cost of those using steel or aluminum
and in some cases the light weight and ease of modification was an
attraction. In the GDR (German
Democratic Republic, the old East Germany), the long-running Trabant's bodywork
was made with Duroplast, a composite thermosetting plastic (and a descendant of
Bakelite). A resin plastic reinforced
with fibers (the GDR used waste from both cotton & wool processing), it was
structurally similar to fibreglass and it's a persistent urban myth that
Trabants were made from reinforced cardboard.
The notion of being "capable of
change or of receiving a new direction" emerged in 1791 and this idea was
picked up in 1839 when the term plastic surgery was first used to describe a
procedure undertaken to "remedy a deficiency of structure" is
recorded by 1839 (in plastic surgery). The most familiar use referring to the hydrocarbon-based
polymers dates from 1909 when the expression "made of plastic" gained
currency which remained literal until 1963 when the US counterculture adopted
it as slang meaning "false, superficial", applying it both the political
and consumer culture. The noun plastic (solid
substance that can be molded) however appears first to have been used in 1905
and was applied originally to dental molds.
Our plastic age can be said to have begun in 1909 when a US patent was
issued for Polyoxybenzylmethylenglycolanhydride (marketed as Bakelite), a resin
created by the reaction between phenol & formaldehyde. Chemists had for years been experimenting with
various compounds, much of the research funded by the petroleum industry which
was seeking some profitable use for its by-products but Bakelite was the first plastic
material which had characteristics which made it suitable for manufacture at
scale and adaptability to a wide range of uses.
Thus the first commercially available plastic made from synthetic
components which retained its formed shape if heated, it was developed by Belgian
chemist Leo Baekeland (1863-1944) while working in the US.
The “plastics” at lunch with plastic packaging on plastic
trays, Mean Girls (2004).
Plastic explosive (explosive material with a putty-like
consistency) became familiar to the military only in the Second World War and
more generally in the 1950s but the first use of the term dates from 1894. Earlier uses include describing the creative
or formative processes in art generally as plastic, an echo of the use which
sometime prevailed in Hellenic culture but this faded after a few decades
during the seventeenth century although the noun plasticity (capability of
being molded or formed; property of giving form or shape to matter) endured after
first being noted in 1768. A nineteenth
century adoption was in the biological sciences in the sense of “organisms capable
of adapting to varying conditions; characterized by environmental adaptability
and in the same era, in engineering it came to mean “of or pertaining to the
inelastic, non-brittle, deformation of a material”.
The success of Bakelite triggered a rush of development
which produced the early versions of the numerous substances that can be shaped
and molded when subjected to heat or pressure. Plastics gain their plasticity because they
consist of long-chain molecules known as polymers which flex but don’t break
their bonds when subjected to all but extreme stresses. They’re almost always artificial resins (but
can be made from some natural substances such as shellac) and the best known
are Polyvinyl chloride (PVC) and polystyrene.
Useful as it is, plastic (with a life measured in some cases in
centuries) has emerged as a significant environmental threat, both as visible
waste (and thus a threat in many way to wildlife) and as micro-plastic, microscopic-sized
fragments which exist in the environment including the human food chain.
Bella Hadid, Coperni show, Paris Fashion Week, October
2022.
Although many in the industry prefer to talk about natural fibres like
silk or linen, it’s plastics like nylon or polyester which make possible both the
shape and behavior of many modern garments and their mass-production. One possibility offered by plastics was
illustrated at the 2022 Paris Fashion Week in October when as the concluding
set-piece of the Coperni show, Bella Hadid (b 1996) appeared on the catwalk wearing
only G-string knickers. There she paused while for
about a quarter hour, two men sprayed her body with what appeared to be white
paint. Once done, a woman emerged to cut
a thigh-high asymmetric slit and adjusted things slightly to render an
off-the-shoulder look. Essentially a free-form
exercise in 3D printing, the spray-on dress was left deliberately unfinished so
as not to detract from the performance; had such a creation been built behind
closed doors, either on a human or mannequin, re-usable and adjustable formwork
would likely have been used to catch overspray and allow things like hems, straps
and splits more precisely to be rendered.
On the night though, the fraying at the edges was just part of the look and Ms
Hadid looked wonderful, a thinspiration to the whole pro-ana community. The term “sprayed on” had long been used to describe
skin-tight clothing but the Coperni show lent it a literalism new to most.
On the catwalk, spray-painting a model had been done
before, two robots used in Alexander McQueen’s spring 1999 show to adorn Shalom
Harlow (b 1973) after the fashion of those used in car assembly plants but that
was literally just paint onto a conventional fabric whereas Ms Hadid’s dress
appeared over bare (though presumably some sort of lotion was used to suit the properties
of the plastic) skin. The spray-on
material is called Fabrican, created by Dr Manel Torres who first demonstrated its
properties in 2006. It’s a liquid fibre,
bound by polymers, bio polymers and greener solvents which evaporate on contact
with a surface (like Ms Hadid’s skin and including water). As a fabric, it’s said to have a similar texture
to suede and can be manipulated like any other but the feel can be altered
depending on the fibers (natural or synthetic) used in the mix and the shape of
the nozzle used on the spray device.
Although an eye-catching example of the technology, Fabrican’s
place in fashion business is likely to be as an adjunct device rather than one
used to create whole garments. It would
be invaluable for Q&D (quick and dirty) solutions such as effecting repairs
or adding something but it’s been demonstrated as long ago as 2010 at London
Fashion Week without demand emerging though it may yet find a niche. What more likely beckons is a role in
medicine (perhaps especially for military medics in the field) as a sterilized
(perhaps even an anti-bacterial) bandage-in-a-can. Indeed, the style of dress created in Paris
is known as the “bandage” dress.
Bella Hadid, Coperni’s 2023 show, Paris, 2022
Shalom Harlow, Alexander McQueen’s spring show, London, 1999.