Soap made with a single hair from someone you kind of know. Porcelain vessels that seem to bubble up with anxiety from the inside. A blanket made from surveillance footage of an intimate moment on a car. When we use these objects, it’s hard to say if we’re touching another person or not, or if they’re sensual or synthetic. This book presents a collection of domestic objects titled Really Clean No Problems At All. This collection focuses on post-digital culture’s increasingly dissociative relationship with bodiliness, intimacy, and hygiene. This collection alters objects that live in our deep memories — things that we’re so accustomed to that they define our concepts of home, of interiority. ‘Sensual synthetics’ describes the dissonance betw...