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Monday, March 19, 2007

Illuminated Handbag by Wiedamark

Materials: A light-emitting fabric that blends optical fiber with other fibers.  Color/Finish: Red Type of Bulb: LED.  Other Info: Light-emitting fabric is activated by a tiny battery or direct current.

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Friday, March 16, 2007

Animated Retro Table Tennis Shirt

Simply pop two AAA batteries into the concealed pack, push a button and voila! Amazing animated glowing old skool gaming on your chest. The two automated computer players are very talented and never seem to miss a shot… but you might want to watch for several hours just to be sure.

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Thursday, March 15, 2007

Bracelet Phone Concept by Designer Tao Ma

This is one of the coolest concepts for a phone.  It’s a stylish bracelet that vibrates when you receive a call.  To answer, just unfold it and press the necessary “diamond”. 

Tao Ma Portfolio| Via Techmeme and Yanko Design


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Thursday, March 08, 2007

PCB007 - Wearable Technology - Where Fashion Meets Technology

The 1st WT congress “Where fashion meets technology” will be held parallel with the sports equipment and fashion trade fair ispo sport & style on July 8-10, 2007 in the International Congress Centre (ICM) Munich at the New Munich Trade Fair Centre.

Distinguished companies like for example Apple and Bluetooth will be also present with exciting, informative speeches. The congress will be supported by Bayern Innovativ, ESA European Space Agency, Innovention, ispo sport & style, Bitkom and Navispace.

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Sunday, March 04, 2007

Benedetto Vigna: The Man Behind the Chip Behind the Wii

An interesting article in IEEE about where the designer of the MEMS motion sensor in Nintendo’s Wii wants to take it next.

Vigna says the Wii has been the biggest application of all “because the MEMS chip is the core of the product.” (To be sure, the motion detector doesn’t do the whole job by itself; an infrared system helps, by setting the player’s initial position.)

In recognition of his work, ST recently made Vigna the general manager of its MEMS product division. That means he has to plan for the long term.

First he wants to make the sensor even smaller, even cheaper, even tougher. “I want it to fit in all kinds of places—shoes and textiles, for instance, where it might be useful for medical monitoring,” he says.

“Then I want to make a three-dimensional gyroscope, to measure rotation around three different axes. Today, such products are quite big, a cube 10 centimeters on a side. We want to do this in less than a 30-millimeter cube, to serve as an image stabilizer in cameras and to track a person’s position in the intervals when he can’t get a GPS signal.”

Better still, he adds, would be to throw in a magnetic detector, freeing the navigator from GPS altogether. It would be yet another marvel from Lilliput—the smallest compass ever sold.

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Saturday, March 03, 2007

Piezoresistive textiles and organic electronic fabrics

Many researchers such as Rita Paradiso in italy (Smartex company) are now developping interesting e-threads and e-yarns that are sensors or transistors. Piezoresistive sensors, fabric electrodes and textile connections are integrated. and knitted in one step process given rise to comfortable sensing garments. Some Electrically Conductive Elastomer composites show piezoresistive properties.

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Fibretronic Signs Agreement with Apple Computer

Fibretronic has announced the signing of a deal with Apple Computer securing entry into the ‘Made-for-Ipod’ licensing programme. This agreement enables Fibretronic to develop and market ready-to-integrate iPod control products for wearable electronics applications in garments, bags and other soft-goods.

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Friday, March 02, 2007

senSAVE (Sensor Assistance for Vital Events) Shirts for Medical Monitoring

Via medGadget

Six Fraunhofer Institutes in Germany have spent two years working on a system that can record the main cardiovascular functions 24 hours a day over a long period of time, even away from the doctor’s office, and enables communication with qualified medical staff.

The key components of the mobile health assistant were developed in a joint Fraunhofer project entitled senSAVE® (Sensor Assistance for Vital Events). Along with comfortable, easy-to-wear sensors that constantly measure all the necessary data and transmit them by radio to a PDA, the assistant has the necessary software to collect and analyze the flood of information and send it via Internet or mobile network to a telemedical support center, where trained staff can assess how critical the situation is, advise patients over the phone, and call a doctor if necessary.

It was a challenging task to find suitable electrodes for channeling the ECG readings, as they would need to be in permanent contact with the patient’s skin for days at a time. The Fraunhofer researchers developed a highly flexible dry electrode that can be woven into the elastic fibers of a sensor shirt. Potential wearers are fitted with their own tailor-made sensor shirt. The sheer pressure of the garment is sufficient to establish contact between the skin and the adhesive electrodes. A second layer of fabric covers the sensor wiring and the electronic circuit board.

SenSave


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Thursday, March 01, 2007

Solarjo - Power Purse

Via Crave

The bag is covered with small solar panels that can power cell phones or any other gadgets through a USB port built into its interior. MobileWhack says the ingenius purse was designed by a student at Iowa State University and marketed through Solarjo, “a company that produces unlikely items from something that looks quite ordinary.”

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Monday, February 26, 2007

Future dress code: Very smart (CNN International)

From micro-tags in bags to vibrating vests, computing is moving from our desktops and portable gadgets to a more integrated relationship with our lives—through our clothes.

It’s more than just incorporating an Mp3 player into a jacket. Engineers working in the field of pervasive computing are aiming to create smart fabrics, embedded with computer chips and sensors that will enhance and possibly even save our lives.

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Dott 07 (Designs of the time 2007) Our Cyborg Futures: Me, or Machine?

Dott 07 (Designs of the time 2007) is a year of community projects that explore how design can make a positive difference to our daily lives.

An initiative of the Design Council and the regional development agency, One NorthEast, Dott 07 enables communities and individuals in North East England to collaborate with designers in real-life situations. These projects are small but important examples of what life in a sustainable region might be like.

It culminates in a twelve day Festival in NewcastleGateshead in October 2007.

Our Cyborg Futures: Me, or Machine? looks at the shrinking divide between us and the technology we use. From prosthetic body parts, to smart textiles and wearable computing, a range of technologies is penetrating the different ‘skins’ we surround ourselves with - from our biological skin, to the clothes we wear, the buildings we live in, and the communication networks we connect through.

The Cyborg show will range from robots designed to help elderly people, through state-of-the-art devices for health, care, fashion and sport, to devices that connect our minds to communication networks.

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Wednesday, February 21, 2007

Microscopic chain-mail could link wearable gadgets

Microscopic chain mail made from miniscule metal links has been made by US researchers. It could ultimately be used to create textiles with sensors and other electronics built in.

Jonathan Engel and Chang Liu at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, made their chain mail using manufacturing techniques borrowed from the microchip industry.

The fabric could be used to make smart clothing, says Liu. “We are interested in perhaps using it as a flexible textile or fabric that has properties like sensing or heating.”

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Deadline extended!  CTIA’s 2nd Annual FIM Scholarship Program

The deadline has been extended to March 5, 2007 so there’s still time to submit! 

CTIA is proud to bring you the 2nd Annual FIM Scholarship Program – open to Technology and Fashion University and College Students. The focus of this project is to combine wireless technology & fashion and produce visions of the future in Wearable Wireless Communication Technology.

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Tuesday, February 20, 2007

La Perla Launches Attraxionbra at CTIA’s Fashion in Motion Technology Fashion Show

Visit the CTIA Fashion in Motion technology fashion show in Orlando, Florida, USA in March 2007 to see a world exclusive preview of La Perla’s Attraxionbra.  The Attraxionbra was developed by The La Perla Science Department in collaboration with Alexandra Fede, the European scientific researcher who is at the forefront of the integration of fashion, technology and science. 

The objective of this project is to create a new underwear concept that will allow those who wear it to extend their communicative impact and influence interpersonal relations in a positive way. Concepts such as “femininity” and “seduction”, which have always belonged to La Perla’s system of values, can acquire new meanings through the use of technology at the service of emotions.

CTIA’s technology fashion show, Fashion in Motion, is a collection of the most innovative and creative products and prototypes in the wearable wireless arena.  This couture style fashion show features the latest wireless devices, accessories, technical textiles, smart fabrics, and fashions available today, along with the futuristic visions of tomorrow.


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Made With Molecules

Designs inspired by nature by Raven Hanna (above image from 2007 AAAS meeting in San Francisco).  Includes such items as the serotonin necklace, neurotransmitter earrings, and estrogen jewelry.  Each item includes a card describing the science that inspired it. 

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Check out the videos posted on the stylefuture group at YouTube.

Videos

Modern Marvels Digital Tech - Wearable Computing (History.com)

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High-Tech Smart Clothes (CBS News)

Students at Virginia Tech are creating “smart” clothes with special electronic devices weaved into the fabric that can predict how you would walk. Rachel DePompa reports.

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Developing Intelligent Fabrics (Oct 2006)

Researchers are hard at work developing textiles with optimal functionality : tights that apply moisturizers, garments that absorb odours and regulate perspiration, fabrics capable of protecting themselves from spots.

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Female Geek Fashion (by eirikso)

SIGGRAPH fashion show

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Light up the catwalk (Medialink, Sept 2006)

Attention-seeking divas and fashion-forward designers are calling it a bright idea! Clothes made of fabrics with light-emitting diodes (LEDs) will be the most innovative garments on runway models this season.

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Tech Wear:  High-Fashion High-Tech (CBS News, March 2005)

Gizmorama.  CBS News Technologist Digital Dan Dubno tries on some wearable technology.

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No-Contact Tazer Jacket

New Jacket by No-Contact. Tazer in a jacket. Turn it on, no one can touch it. Body armor against humans. Womens only to prevent men from using it as an offensive weapon.

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Rag trade goes techno (BBC News)

If you want to stand out from the crowd there is an increasing array of futuristic gear out there to choose from. With smart fabrics and new integrated technology, fashion is becoming more cutting edge. David Reid reports from Italy.

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Technology and Fashion Join Forces (Sky News)

A London designer and French jeweller have created what they call “motion dresses”. By using mechanical pulleys and microchips embedded in the clothes, you can go from a full length dress to a mini-skirt in a matter of seconds.

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Light-Emitting Shirts by Philips at IFA 2006


High Tech Fashion Show on ZDTV from 2006


Make Podcast: Fashion Meets Technology

From the 2006 Maker Faire in San Mateo, California.


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