<p>Katrina Cobain unwraps a parcel and removes its precious contents, slowly and delicately as if she were handling an ancient scroll of papyrus.</p>.<p>But the items she places on the table of a makeshift studio in an old tobacco pipe factory in the east end of Glasgow are rather more mundane -- plastic carrier bags.</p>.<p>Yet, to many, they are considered historical items, representing the consumer excesses of the 20th and 21st centuries.</p>.<p>For Cobain, 24, every plastic bag tells a story of the modern age and so, two years ago, she became a collector and plans to start a museum.</p>.<p>"The original idea started because I felt that landfill sites could be archaeological digs of the future and for our civilisation, they would be filled with plastic," she told AFP.</p>.<p>"They reveal so much about our lifestyle in the last 60 years in terms of consumerism and social history.</p>.<p>"They can document or reveal key shifts in our lifestyles, key historic events and also changes in graphic design styles."</p>.<p>When Cobain put the word out that she intended to start a museum she was inundated with bags from around the world.</p>.<p>Her growing collection includes ones from New York and the old Soviet Union.</p>.<p>Others commemorate the supersonic passenger jet Concorde, and even the marriage of Queen Elizabeth II's eldest son and heir Prince Charles to Lady Diana Spencer in 1981.</p>.<p>"Why they were making bags commemorating the royal wedding, I don't know," said Cobain.</p>.<p>"It shows you the level of production of plastic bags at that time that such events were being printed onto bags."</p>.<p>Cobain's most prized bag is one she bought from a Woolworths store where as a child she would buy CDs.</p>.<p>She remembers "Woolies", which once had more than 800 stores in the United Kingdom, completely disappearing after the credit crunch in 2008 and classes it as a key moment in her life.</p>.<p>Cobain's plans to hold an exhibition were scuppered by the <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/coronavirus-live-news-covid-19-latest-updates.html" target="_blank">coronavirus</a> pandemic, prompting her to move online.</p>.<p>The lockdown proved an ideal time to photograph her collection, build a website and to launch plasticbagmuseum.com. A physical exhibition is still in the pipeline.</p>.<p>Despite her affection for plastic bags, which are increasingly attracting charges for use, Cobain is looking forward to a time when they are consigned to history.</p>.<p>"They are obviously very damaging for the environment," she said.</p>.<p>"Photographs show how many bags there are in the oceans and how disruptive they are for other natural habitats for animals and so on.</p>.<p>"And they are just incredibly unsustainable to produce and use.</p>.<p>"So by making a plastic bag museum, it kind of helps people along to the idea that these are objects that do belong in the past."</p>
<p>Katrina Cobain unwraps a parcel and removes its precious contents, slowly and delicately as if she were handling an ancient scroll of papyrus.</p>.<p>But the items she places on the table of a makeshift studio in an old tobacco pipe factory in the east end of Glasgow are rather more mundane -- plastic carrier bags.</p>.<p>Yet, to many, they are considered historical items, representing the consumer excesses of the 20th and 21st centuries.</p>.<p>For Cobain, 24, every plastic bag tells a story of the modern age and so, two years ago, she became a collector and plans to start a museum.</p>.<p>"The original idea started because I felt that landfill sites could be archaeological digs of the future and for our civilisation, they would be filled with plastic," she told AFP.</p>.<p>"They reveal so much about our lifestyle in the last 60 years in terms of consumerism and social history.</p>.<p>"They can document or reveal key shifts in our lifestyles, key historic events and also changes in graphic design styles."</p>.<p>When Cobain put the word out that she intended to start a museum she was inundated with bags from around the world.</p>.<p>Her growing collection includes ones from New York and the old Soviet Union.</p>.<p>Others commemorate the supersonic passenger jet Concorde, and even the marriage of Queen Elizabeth II's eldest son and heir Prince Charles to Lady Diana Spencer in 1981.</p>.<p>"Why they were making bags commemorating the royal wedding, I don't know," said Cobain.</p>.<p>"It shows you the level of production of plastic bags at that time that such events were being printed onto bags."</p>.<p>Cobain's most prized bag is one she bought from a Woolworths store where as a child she would buy CDs.</p>.<p>She remembers "Woolies", which once had more than 800 stores in the United Kingdom, completely disappearing after the credit crunch in 2008 and classes it as a key moment in her life.</p>.<p>Cobain's plans to hold an exhibition were scuppered by the <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/coronavirus-live-news-covid-19-latest-updates.html" target="_blank">coronavirus</a> pandemic, prompting her to move online.</p>.<p>The lockdown proved an ideal time to photograph her collection, build a website and to launch plasticbagmuseum.com. A physical exhibition is still in the pipeline.</p>.<p>Despite her affection for plastic bags, which are increasingly attracting charges for use, Cobain is looking forward to a time when they are consigned to history.</p>.<p>"They are obviously very damaging for the environment," she said.</p>.<p>"Photographs show how many bags there are in the oceans and how disruptive they are for other natural habitats for animals and so on.</p>.<p>"And they are just incredibly unsustainable to produce and use.</p>.<p>"So by making a plastic bag museum, it kind of helps people along to the idea that these are objects that do belong in the past."</p>