Citations:cutensil


 * 1998 — Phil Patton, "Utensils Get Cute", The New York Times, 29 October 1998:
 * Cutensils have gone mass market, in such products as Urchin, a sort of molar-shaped vase, and Mano, a hand-shaped container designed by Roberto Zanon for Benza.
 * 2000 — Frank Gibney Jr. & Belinda Luscombe, "The Redesigning of America", Time, 26 June 2000:
 * Koziol's spaghetti forks with a smiley face, ice-cream scoops with eyes and the 'Tim' dish brush with legs are some of more than 300 'cutensils,' as they're known, that flew off shelves of American stores last year.
 * 2006 — Daniel H. Pink, A Whole New Mind: Why Right-Brainers Will Rule The Future, Riverhead Books (2006), ISBN 9781594481710, page 80:
 * Take the popularity of "cutensils" — kitchen utensils that have been given personality implants. Open the drawer in an American or European home and you'll likely find a bottle opener that looks like a smiling cat, a spaghetti spoon that grins at you and the pasta, or a vegetable brush with googly eyes and spindly legs.