1. The problem we were trying to solve is so that when we are drinking something hot, we can keep it warm for a long period of time.

2. So we first made a model and then we asked questions if the model or the “object” was going to be aesthetically pleasing, easy to use and also how easy it is to take off. then, we made our paper prototype which was supposed to look exactly the same as our final project (which it did).

3. we noticed that when my partner and I looked at the graph for the temperature probe, it looked like at the start of the process, it really made the temperature decrease really fast but then, towards the end, it was starting to balance out a little more. That is because when you look at our graph, it says at 4 minutes, the total loss was around 3 degrees. Also, when you look at our graph sometimes it says that it jumped back onto 81 but before it was 79, I think that is maybe because it was not really measured properly. I think that the reason why the temperature jumped back up is that, maybe for that minute, the temperature probe was touching the glass so the temperature was not very high.

4. I am proud that my paper prototype and my final project for the cup insulator was something similar so it didn’t look like that the paper prototype and my project looked very similar.

5. something I would do differently is that maybe instead of putting loads of masking tape, I can have put some foil inside the masking tape so then it would be a thicker base and it would make it keep warmer.

6. The hardest thing about the project was that to think of what the aesthetics would look like and thinking of how the fabric could keep warm for a long time.