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German Photographer Compares 14 Fridges And Their Owners Around The World
Show me your fridge and I‘ll tell you who you are. Wait, I think this saying was about friends. Actually, when you think about it, a fridge is quite a good friend, especially in lockdown. It‘s something you can rely on at least 3 times a day, and it never disappoints. And you would be surprised how much a fridge can reveal about you, even beyond your eating habits!
German designer, photographer, and gluten-free, healthy food lover Sandra Juncker decided to peek into people’s fridges around the world to find out how much the contents of a fridge can tell about their lives.
What does your fridge tell about you? Let us know in the comments!
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Germany, 2012
Since 2012, people from London, Cape Town, Pretoria, Istanbul, Madrid, Paris, and Berlin have opened their fridges to the whole world, and this is the result so far―a colorful archive of fridges and their proud owners. These people are of different personalities, nationalities, cultures, traditions, ages, and social statuses and Juncker tried to capture the link between these factors and the contents of these people’s fridges.
“So what does this tell us about the people who use these fridges? Do we have a special system filling it? What belongs in our fridges and what do we eat? Is there any difference or similarity between different cultures, countries, ages, or flat sharing? Do we keep leftovers and how do we store them?” These are just a few of the questions Juncker was interested in when she started the project.
Pretoria, South Africa, 2016
I would like to clarify things on behalf people living in south africa, we do not keep cake mix, corn flour, stock cubes, green tea, oats and a bunch of other things in this picture in the fridge. We do not know this woman and why she does the things that she does.
London, UK, 2017
Letting someone into your fridge can be a very intimate moment as it can reveal more than just how often you eat your fruit and vegetables. It can show how well-organized and tidy you are, if you are vegetarian or vegan, and speak about your lifestyle in general. It seems inaccurate to judge people based on the contents of their fridge, but when you look through the list and spot the little details, you can kind of guess to whom they might belong. The biggest fridge packed with all sorts of pre-cooked meals belongs to a grandma, a secret compartment with chocolate probably prepared to spoil grandchildren belongs to an elderly German couple, a minimalist man with long hair has a fridge full of broccoli and other goods, a young couple from busy Paris has barely anything inside. If you are curious about what's inside other people's fridges, this ongoing series is right up your alley, but being able to see fridge owners in their usual environment makes this social experiment so much more interesting.
London, United Kingdom, 2016
Just living for that kimono queen in the middle..I'd want to live here
Paris, France, 2017
The project called “Show Me Your Fridge” is particularly important to the artist as she has become very invested in the global topics of food, modern trends of responsible handling, and waste.
According to Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, around one-third or 1.3 billion tons of all food produced for human consumption is lost or wasted every year. Food waste in households often occurs due to poor purchase and meal planning, excess buying, confusion over “best before” and “use by” labels, and poor storage. Consequently, any food losses add up to water, land, energy, labor, and capital resources, whereas extensive and needless production causes global warming and climate change. We can do better, starting with our own fridges!
Paris, France, 2017
London, United Kingdom, 2016
Is the towel in the fridge some kind of neat tip or trick I haven't heard of yet?
If you like this idea, you can also check what’s inside people’s wallets, ladies’ handbags, and even vehicles of various emergency services!
Cape Town, South Africa, 2016
Cape Town, South Africa, 2016
Istanbul, Turkey, 2013
Paris, France, 2017
Berlin, Germany, 2018
Berlin, Germany, 2018
But dat moustache be on flek (idk how to spell it but you get what I mean)
Paris, France, 2017
"We have those people coming to take photos of the fridge today, should we clean it?" "No, no, let's leave it mostly empty with some old containers leaking juices all over the place"
This post has made me realise I eat more fresh fruit and vegetables than the vast number of people world wide.
Remember that post a while ago about how Americans are the only ones who put eggs in the fridge? Well, that is obviously not true
This was the most boring and useless post I think I have seen on Bored Panda
I was surprised more people didn't have leftovers in containers. My fridge is mostly ingredients, and glass boxes of leftovers :) Also surprised by all the damn plastic packaging...argghhh.
I'm really surprised to see I'm above the average concerning the amount of fruits and vegetables. And I KNOW I don't eat enough of these....
Any one else scrolling through these trying to find the fridge stocked most similarly to their own? :)
Most of these fridges in the UK look like dorm fridges. Is the standard there really tiny fridges?
The "world" according to German Photographers: Germany, France, UK, Turkey South Africa...
I am nosy by nature and I love these posts. It allows me to nose around without being intrusive. Next one should be what people keep in their medicine cabinets lol
Actually fairly tedious. A few were organized and functional the rest not clear enough to identify specific items.
I would like to see a collection of fridges during the quarantine.
This is an interesting article because it lets you see what people do with their groceries around the world. I have always felt weird because I make sure I have plenty to drink in my refrigerator, but now I don't because appears to be normal. I would love to have dinner with all the broccoli eaters. They have good taste in vegetables.
I wonder if those who have bare fridges--do they mostly eat out? Or do they just buy fresh foods on a more daily basis?
So, this artist is very exclusive in the types of people she speaks with. She could have picked two groups (wanky college gits and fringe extremists - well, that's almost one group, really) and the obligatory black dude and summed up her entire experience of people, and their fridges, plus one.
This will sound like bragging but I really don’t care. My fridge is filled with fresh vegetables and fresh fruits at all times. And what happened to left over foods? Doesn’t anyone cook at home anymore? Some of these fridges are really sad looking. The worst are the ones filled with cans and processed foods.
This doesn't show anything useful about different cultures or countries. You could show different fridges within the same city and have these discrepancies. My fridge is totally different to my own mothers. If going to compare around the world, better to compare the same demographic eg a couple in their 20s on muddle income with 3 kids. No use in seeing rich bachelor in Capetown compared to student digs in London.
These pics are not a good representation of people's fridges 'around the world', e.g. many pics from South Africa, all different. I am from South Africa and there are food brands in the pics that I haven't heard of.
CAN WE JUST TALK ABOUT HOW CLEAN AND ORGANIZED MOST OF THESE FRIDGES ARE!??
As an American I found this absolutely 100% fascinating. First of all is clear that people in the photo essay featured countries have a lot more plant-based diet, shop more on a daily basis, don't waste food, and are not accustomed to the ridiculous plethora of options and acquisitiveness inherent in American life. I'm pretty inspired to downsize our fridge. Fantastic job on the photo essay! I particularly loved that the people whose refrigerators were pictured also were included. Amazing!
None of these fridges look appetizing. They all look like they are owned by mice that like condiments. Didn't look like a real eater in the bunch. PS: most of those condiments don't even need to be refrigerated.
Fridges And Their Owners "Around The World" - Germany, London, South africa and France. That is not around the world at all :D
Sad fridges, with nearly no fresh food. The picture labeled as Madrid 2018 must be wrong as the products are not Spanish brands, and neither is the language. However there is a fridge from somewhere else with Spanish brands so I would say that it was mixed up.
American refrigerators are generally double this size, at least. We shop for a week or two at a time because many people don't have a "corner market"
Where's the pics of the fridges in the USA?? I can imagine them being full of sugar and candy and processed junk because we are all slobs.
What happened with south america? Argentina, brasil..?? If the article says "around the world"!!!
There are three main themes here: the very little food that many people have in a fridge (which is very inefficient regarding space and energy), that lots of people think they have to keep all manner of things in a fridge that are perfectly safe in a cupboard, despite the apparent care that food won't spoil they can't be bothered cleaning!
They are the size of hotel fridges. Glad I'm American, I have 26 cubic feet of chill food to enjoy.
"We have those people coming to take photos of the fridge today, should we clean it?" "No, no, let's leave it mostly empty with some old containers leaking juices all over the place"
This post has made me realise I eat more fresh fruit and vegetables than the vast number of people world wide.
Remember that post a while ago about how Americans are the only ones who put eggs in the fridge? Well, that is obviously not true
This was the most boring and useless post I think I have seen on Bored Panda
I was surprised more people didn't have leftovers in containers. My fridge is mostly ingredients, and glass boxes of leftovers :) Also surprised by all the damn plastic packaging...argghhh.
I'm really surprised to see I'm above the average concerning the amount of fruits and vegetables. And I KNOW I don't eat enough of these....
Any one else scrolling through these trying to find the fridge stocked most similarly to their own? :)
Most of these fridges in the UK look like dorm fridges. Is the standard there really tiny fridges?
The "world" according to German Photographers: Germany, France, UK, Turkey South Africa...
I am nosy by nature and I love these posts. It allows me to nose around without being intrusive. Next one should be what people keep in their medicine cabinets lol
Actually fairly tedious. A few were organized and functional the rest not clear enough to identify specific items.
I would like to see a collection of fridges during the quarantine.
This is an interesting article because it lets you see what people do with their groceries around the world. I have always felt weird because I make sure I have plenty to drink in my refrigerator, but now I don't because appears to be normal. I would love to have dinner with all the broccoli eaters. They have good taste in vegetables.
I wonder if those who have bare fridges--do they mostly eat out? Or do they just buy fresh foods on a more daily basis?
So, this artist is very exclusive in the types of people she speaks with. She could have picked two groups (wanky college gits and fringe extremists - well, that's almost one group, really) and the obligatory black dude and summed up her entire experience of people, and their fridges, plus one.
This will sound like bragging but I really don’t care. My fridge is filled with fresh vegetables and fresh fruits at all times. And what happened to left over foods? Doesn’t anyone cook at home anymore? Some of these fridges are really sad looking. The worst are the ones filled with cans and processed foods.
This doesn't show anything useful about different cultures or countries. You could show different fridges within the same city and have these discrepancies. My fridge is totally different to my own mothers. If going to compare around the world, better to compare the same demographic eg a couple in their 20s on muddle income with 3 kids. No use in seeing rich bachelor in Capetown compared to student digs in London.
These pics are not a good representation of people's fridges 'around the world', e.g. many pics from South Africa, all different. I am from South Africa and there are food brands in the pics that I haven't heard of.
CAN WE JUST TALK ABOUT HOW CLEAN AND ORGANIZED MOST OF THESE FRIDGES ARE!??
As an American I found this absolutely 100% fascinating. First of all is clear that people in the photo essay featured countries have a lot more plant-based diet, shop more on a daily basis, don't waste food, and are not accustomed to the ridiculous plethora of options and acquisitiveness inherent in American life. I'm pretty inspired to downsize our fridge. Fantastic job on the photo essay! I particularly loved that the people whose refrigerators were pictured also were included. Amazing!
None of these fridges look appetizing. They all look like they are owned by mice that like condiments. Didn't look like a real eater in the bunch. PS: most of those condiments don't even need to be refrigerated.
Fridges And Their Owners "Around The World" - Germany, London, South africa and France. That is not around the world at all :D
Sad fridges, with nearly no fresh food. The picture labeled as Madrid 2018 must be wrong as the products are not Spanish brands, and neither is the language. However there is a fridge from somewhere else with Spanish brands so I would say that it was mixed up.
American refrigerators are generally double this size, at least. We shop for a week or two at a time because many people don't have a "corner market"
Where's the pics of the fridges in the USA?? I can imagine them being full of sugar and candy and processed junk because we are all slobs.
What happened with south america? Argentina, brasil..?? If the article says "around the world"!!!
There are three main themes here: the very little food that many people have in a fridge (which is very inefficient regarding space and energy), that lots of people think they have to keep all manner of things in a fridge that are perfectly safe in a cupboard, despite the apparent care that food won't spoil they can't be bothered cleaning!
They are the size of hotel fridges. Glad I'm American, I have 26 cubic feet of chill food to enjoy.