An overhead photographic view of the boundary line between Merewether ocean baths and the open sea, with a translucent overlay of a patent-style technical sketch for an innovative marine safety product. The diagram appears etched onto the water’s surface, aligned with the natural currents and lanes that lead toward Dixon Park beach. Diffused early-morning light softens the waves and concrete pool edges, giving a calm, focused atmosphere. The Newcastle coastline stretches into the distance, slightly hazy. Composition uses strong leading lines from the pool wall and surf, drawing the eye from observation space to conceptual design, symbolizing the moment of invention and the structured thinking behind a product patent.

A Universal shark repellent pheromone

Pheroshark began on the concrete edge of Merewether ocean baths, watching local swimmers carve a freestyle line to Dixon Park Beach and back. That simple desire to join them sparked a patented concept for safer, smarter ocean adventures. Methodology of good design minimizes risk that swimmers are at odds with in open water ecology. It is an ethical use of odors that can repel and attract sharks in an emergency situation. It works through sensory overload of pheromone technology and can steer Sharks away from people swiftly and safely. The chemical compound can be administered in an environmentally sustainable fashion by Drone surveillance technology. Pheroshark brings to light a culture of coexistence and cohabitation with deep ecology in an anthropological world. It is a GMO compound of pheramones specifically designed to affect the migrations and movements and patterns of sharks to promote safe aquatic life and recreation – Aquarian.

Patent Information:


IP CLASS 28
etc.

A highly realistic close-up of an abstract, shark-inspired product prototype resting on a smooth, wet rock at the edge of Merewether ocean baths. The device has a refined, matte graphite body with a subtle dorsal fin profile, fine hydrodynamic grooves, and precise geometric seams that suggest engineered functionality. Behind it, softly blurred waves roll toward Dixon Park beach under a pale blue Newcastle sky. Cool, overcast lighting creates gentle reflections on the product’s surface and tiny water droplets, enhancing texture and sophistication. Captured from a low, three-quarter angle, the composition frames the prototype against the horizon, evoking both the raw ocean environment and the thoughtful engineering that led to the patent.
A long, cinematic photographic shot along the Newcastle, NSW coastline from Merewether ocean baths toward Dixon Park beach, with the conceptual outline of a patented ocean-safety product subtly integrated into the shoreline. The product shape appears as translucent, glass-like contours following the swell patterns, hinting at its function without literal detail. Warm sunrise light bathes the scene, casting elongated shadows across the baths’ concrete edges and highlighting the foam-tipped waves. The atmosphere is quietly dramatic and sophisticated, suggesting the spark of an idea emerging from observing ocean conditions. Shot from a slightly elevated angle with sharp focus throughout, the composition balances natural beauty with an almost architectural precision, reflecting the origin story of the patent.
A clean, modern photographic still life of a design workspace overlooking Merewether ocean baths through a large glass window. On a smooth, dark timber desk lie neatly arranged patent drawings of a shark-inspired ocean safety device, high-quality drafting tools, and a single small, polished scale model of the product in matte black. Outside the window, the turquoise pool, rocky headland, and distant curve toward Dixon Park beach are subtly blurred. Soft, late-morning coastal light floods the room, creating refined highlights on paper and model edges. Captured from a slightly elevated angle, the composition feels ordered and sophisticated, visually narrating the transition from observing local ocean swims to formalizing the idea into a product patent.
Photo by Alan Kabeš on Pexels.com

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