Toothbrush, as in "Objectified"

  Of all the objects in the documentary "Objectified", by Gary Hustwit, I chose to remodel the toothbrush. my model is not a replica of the modular toothbrushes in the documentary, nor is it a statement in three dimensional rendered sculpture. It is simply, honestly, a toothbrush. 

Of all the items explicitly designed within the span of the documentary, or alluded to having been, the toothbrushes stuck out to me for a very simple reason. Gary Hustwit - or at the very least, his editors - dedicated nigh on twenty minutes of the film to toothbrushes, and the designing of them by a professional firm. Not only have I never seen the toothbrush designed by said firm outside of this documentary, I've also not once seen something like it. I found that to be a bad thing. Analogue, modular, semi-replaceable toothbrushes are simply not popular. Modular and replaceable electric toothbrushes are much more commonplace, and the old fashioned single-piece oral hygiene machine is as mass-produced as ever, but the 'revolutionary' design put forth by this firm seems to have fizzled. I cannot find it in my heart to pity them for their apparent failure, however. Despite the firm's ecstatic employees, I had found the whole segment of toothbrush designing to be rather bland, if not mildly ridiculous at the time of watching. The entire purpose of the project was to cut down on the waste produced by their toothbrushes becoming obsolete, ignored, or replaced. They 'fixed' that by designing a toothbrush whose entire functional model produces additional waste endlessly. It seemed more than just counterintuitive, and quite frankly a waste of R&D funding... but I have never worked in a turn-of-the-millenium design firm, so perhaps the creative minds of a pre-recession metropolis had less to justify with their business choices. 

Regardless, my toothbrush: