Arts Thread

RACHEL BROWN
Product Design BA (Hons)

Edinburgh College of Art

Specialisms: Product Design / Interaction Design / Design Research

Location: Edinburgh, United Kingdom

rachel-brown ArtsThread Profile
Edinburgh College of Art

RACHEL BROWN

RACHEL BROWN ArtsThread Profile

First Name: RACHEL

Last Name: BROWN

Specialisms: Product Design / Interaction Design / Design Research

Sectors:

My Location: Edinburgh, United Kingdom

University / College: Edinburgh College of Art

Course / Program Title: Product Design BA (Hons)

About

I am an introspective and intuitive designer, deeply engaged in thoughtful questioning, and speculative spaces. Through a unique blend of hands-on prototyping, research-led design, and social engagement, I develop speculative tools, assistive technologies, and interactive experiences. My work challenges conventional approaches design for wellbeing, advocating for more human-centred, socially responsive solutions that inspire meaningful change.

flo mattress: pressure sore alleviation and movement facilitation

Flo is a pneumatic bubble mattress with a multi-functional performance, both sensing and actuating, to assist the moving and manual handling of immobile individuals thereby enhancing the symbiotic nature of the carer-patient relationship. Developed through a critical lens, Flo uses soft robotics to speculate on the future of care and how new material cultures could re-shape our relationships with support systems. Flo aims to create an interaction that feels intuitive and embodied, where users are not just being acted upon by the material, but rather they are engaged in a reciprocal relationship with it. The material responds, moves, and breathes alongside them; shifting the experience from a conscious act of control to something more rhythmic, fluid, and intertwined with the act of living. Flo’s materiality is intentionally provocative, asking: What is the future of care? How should we move, touch, and handle bodies and are we comfortable with these interactions? Silicone, with its uncanny, lifelike qualities, became central to this exploration. Its breathing, almost skin-like properties evoke both comfort and discomfort, sparking the very conversations about care, ethics, and touch that this project seeks to initiate.