With the lack of solid snowfall this year so far, celebratory holiday moods in Routt County might seem a bit subdued. Yet, multiple New Year’s Eve events are planned for those who want to lift their spirits and go out to celebrate the end of…
Author: admin
-

The biggest dining trends of 2025, from pop-ups and chef collabs to traditional Irish produce
A personal bugbear of years has been the often mindless usage of certain premium ingredients, as if luxury cachet alone is sufficient to elevate a dish with little thought given to just how well it works with other components. Good caviar is…
Continue Reading
-

Panasonic in 2025: Great New Full-Frame Cameras and Lenses
2025 was an excellent year for Panasonic’s full-frame Lumix S system and an eerily quiet one for Micro Four Thirds. The year was headlined by the Lumix S1 II, a dynamite full-frame hybrid camera, and the S1R II, the long-awaited…
Continue Reading
-

The 13+ Best Deals to Shop
Beauty lovers, this one is for you: Sephora’s Sale on Sale event is here to help you ring in the new year. Sephora Beauty Insiders can now save an extra 20% off sale items, including skin care, hair care and makeup, using the code BONUS20. The…
Continue Reading
-

Northern Colorado company creating eco-friendly black ink for major brands like Patagonia, Nike
A Northern Colorado company, based in Berthoud, is helping major brands around the world produce more eco-friendly packaging and products. Living Ink Technologies, founded by Colorado State University graduates, is continuing to grow its operation in the region.
CBS
“Living Ink is a waste-to-value company. So, we take biomass waste, we do our thermal treatment, and we make an alternative to carbon black,” said Scott Fulbright, CEO and cofounder of the company.
Carbon black is found in most products and packaging that contain black ink. Fulbright said carbon black requires petroleum to create and is less eco-friendly than the alternative ink they are creating.
To create an alternative option, Living Ink has found a method to create black ink from waste created by other companies and humans, via biomass.
“Biomass like algae, like spent yeast from breweries and things like that,” Fulbright said.
Living Ink Technologies has partnered with companies like those that produce Budweiser beer. The company sends Living Ink their spent yeast, and then the team in Berthoud helps flip the product into a sustainable and reliable black ink.
CBS
Living Ink’s product has already been used in major brands like Nike and Patagonia.
Currently, Fulbright admits that his product does come at a more expensive cost than carbon black ink. However, he said they are working on a trajectory that would make it more affordable and appealing to companies beyond their branding of being eco-friendly.
“We do think we can compete, and potentially undercut traditional carbon black, as we use these different waste streams in our process,” Fulbright said.
Fulbright said his team has moved around Colorado, but found home in Berthoud thanks to the talent pool in the region.
“We ended up in Berthoud because there is a great talent pool in Fort Collins, and there is a great talent pool in Denver and Loveland,” Fulbright said.
Fulbright said his company hopes to one day be able to work, in part, out of the Budweiser facility in Fort Collins. He said, by working directly in the facility, they could make a more cost-efficient way of flipping the company’s spent yeast and turning it into the ink on their packaging, all in-house.
CBS
“So, we are working with their Fort Collins facility right now, and we are taking some of their spent grain and yeast from their process as our feedstock,” Fulbright said. “Ideally, making them more profitable and sustainable in their overall manufacturing cost.”
Continue Reading
-

Part of Antarctica’s ice sheet collapsed 9,000 years ago under similar climate conditions as today
About 9,000 years ago, part of Antarctica’s eastern ice sheet collapsed astonishingly fast, driven by warmer ocean water. The study focuses on the East Antarctic Ice Sheet, a vast body of land ice in East Antarctica.
Altogether, Antarctica’s…
Continue Reading
-

Maize & Blue to Head to Oregon for Resumption of B1G Action
ANN ARBOR, Mich. — The No. 6-ranked University of Michigan women’s basketball team (10-1, 1-0 Big Ten) will head to the state of Oregon for the first time, traveling to Eugene to face Oregon (12-2, 0-1 Big Ten) on Monday evening (Dec. 29) at…
Continue Reading
-

Spinosaurus relative longer than a pickup truck stalked Thailand’s rivers 125 million years ago
Two young spinosaurids hunt a juvenile Phuwiangosaurus in Cretaceous Thailand. A large adult spinosaurid (not the newly unveiled Sam Ran spinosaurid) rests in the background beside a body of water, while two feathered Kinnareemimus are… Continue Reading
-

At 15, Belgian researcher earns a PhD in quantum physics with ambitious long-term goals
At 15 years old, Belgian researcher Laurent Simons earned a PhD in quantum physics from the University of Antwerp. He says the degree is a means to a larger goal: building longer, healthier lives by enhancing human biology.
Simons research…
Continue Reading
-

Social behavior in bees is controlled by a ‘begging gene’
A gene called fruitless controls about 1,800 brain cells that allow male honeybees to beg worker bees for food inside the hive, according to new research.
The study comes from Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf (HHU) in Germany, and the results…
Continue Reading


