Originally from Devon, Sammie says the name The Plastic Coast reflects her connection to the Jurassic Coast, where she grew up spending time by the sea before moving to Âé¶¹¹û¶³´«Ã½ more than a decade ago.
After beginning her career as a healthcare assistant at Royal Sussex County Hospital, Sammie has spent the past decade studying and working through multiple stages of professional development at the University of Âé¶¹¹û¶³´«Ã½, progressing from a foundation degree to nursing qualification, and now postgraduate clinical training.
Alongside her clinical career, her artwork has developed a growing international audience through social media, with beach cleaners, friends, and followers now sending her plastic debris from coastlines around the world – including a recent package of beach plastic from Borneo.
Among her most memorable discoveries are pieces of pre-decimal packaging dating back to before Britain’s currency reform, a toy figure believed to be from a 1930s or 1940s model car set, and a Smarties lid from the 1970s – evidence, she says, of just how long plastic pollution has persisted in the environment.