Member LoginMember Login - User registration - Setup as front page - Add to favorites - Sitemap Innovative former livestreamer assembles striking pieces of electronics art !

Innovative former livestreamer assembles striking pieces of electronics art

Time:2024-05-21 07:44:21 source:Culture Connection news portal

  A disassembled watch and a diamond ring created by Lin Xi for a client to commemorate a touching milestone. [Photo provided to China Daily]

Lin Xi, a 26-year-old entrepreneur engaged in electronic disassembly art has proved with her experience that no effort is in vain.

Lin's work is to tear apart used electronic products, such as phones, tablets, game consoles and computers, and then present the components in an artistic way.

"After being reassembled, the once dust-laden items will become exhibition pieces that remind the owners of their childhood experience, a period of hard work or a deep-rooted memory," she says.

Lin gained her popularity on short-video platform Douyin, the Chinese version of TikTok.

In 2020, she posted two videos introducing an iPhone 4 and a Play-Station Portable (PSP) console that she had disassembled.

Through her videos, many people realized, for the first time, that idle, but classic, electronic products can be framed like art.

People were also attracted by the smiling girl, who wore an apron, a pair of rimmed glasses and talked them through the process.

"The two videos quickly received more than 10,000 likes and then nearly 200 orders poured in, most of which were for the disassembly artworks of the iPhone 4 and PSP," Lin recalled.

Electronic disassembly is intricate work that needs both a delicate touch and aesthetic sensibility.

Lin has to check the condition of the items she receives, and she communicates with her customers to learn the stories behind each one and the type of presentation they prefer.

Then comes the disassembly."It's like performing surgery on digital products, with different types of screwdrivers and tweezers," Lin explains.

The components, after being carefully cleaned, will be laid out on a piece of white paper in the desired order.

The final step is to use graphics software to draw and print a base plate based on that layout and affix the components to it.

It took Lin around half a year to fulfill the initial batch of orders, but, as she continued to post new videos, orders kept coming.

In late 2020, she had to hire some helpers and opened a business in Weifang, Shandong province, to grasp the opportunity.

Now her company, with more than 10 employees, has an annual turnover of more than 3 million yuan ($446,500).

However, it was not luck that brought Lin her current success.

She first tried her hand at livestreaming in 2017 as a performer singing popular songs on Douyin. At the time she was a senior at Beijing Foreign Studies University majoring in Turkish and international journalism.

Being talkative with a natural on-camera demeanor, she quickly attracted more than 400,000 followers, earning more than 1,000 yuan a day from digital gifts and rewards. Most other college students at the time were only earning 150 yuan a day from their part-time jobs.

Related information
  • Celebrity birthdays for the week of May 26
  • Economy improving, with SOEs poised to lead
  • Chinese carriers allowed to operate more flights to U.S.
  • Profile: Xi Revives Culture, Spearheads Innovation for Modern Civilization
  • Why US Catholics are planning pilgrimages in communities across the nation
  • Autonomous driving vehicles start commercialized demonstration operation in S China
  • Xi Focus: Xi Calls on Jiangxi to Write Its Chapter in Chinese Modernization
  • AI governance should be on security agenda
Recommended content
  • Justin Timberlake set to bring his The Forget Tomorrow World Tour to Australia in 2025
  • Energy cooperation empowers Belt and Road
  • More than 85,000 freight train trips connect China to Europe
  • China Eastern Airlines to operate more C919 planes
  • Sweden beats France, Britain relegated after losing to Norway at hockey worlds
  • China's mega water diversion project benefits over 150 mln people