In industrial design, future-proofing strives to encourage people to acquire fewer products by creating objects that hold more value for the purchaser (Kerr 2011, 7). Kerr goes on to state that future-proof products should have a degree of atemporality. As a product wears and ages, its overall desirability is maintained (Blanco-Lion, Pelsmakers, and Taylor 2011). Ideally, desirability exemplifies a positive change; the product can fit into society’s paradigm of “progress” while simultaneously changing that paradigm (Kerr 2011, 9).