Showing posts with label Wearable Tech. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wearable Tech. Show all posts

Friday, June 21, 2013

Spray-On Clothing Opens Door For Next-Level Tech


Spray-On Clothing Opens Door For
 Next-Level Tech 



When news broke a few years ago that an experimental spray-on liquid fabric could become wearable clothing, people were wowed by what sounded more science-fiction than fact. Fast forward a few years and that same technology is on the cusp of being introduced into our daily lives in the form of a host of applications that could very well change the face of art, consumer products, and even conservation.
 
The company behind this technology is called Fabrican. Developed by clothing-designer-turned-chemist Dr. Manel Torres, who was originally looking for a faster way to produce clothes, the idea came to the self-proclaimed fashion doctor when he went to a friend’s wedding and saw someone getting sprayed by silly string, the popular 90s-era toy.

That’s when Torres got his “aha” moment and decided to pursue an instant, nonstick fabric. The result was the creation of instant garments you can remove and even wash.
 
But the real value goes far beyond fashion. Commercial applications stretch to household products, factories and industry, healthcare, transportation and art. Right now, the first Fabrican aerosol cans, aimed at arts and crafts consumers, are on their way to being marketed to consumers.

Los Angeles based artist Aaron Axelrod calls the cans a mobile studio. Axelrod, who’s done installations for The Tonight Show, Coachella and Disney, says he wished he had a tool like this years ago. Instead, he’s had to use less malleable products such as tile, plastic, paint and cotton, often heavy to carry and time consuming to apply.

“I wish I had that for those projects,” he says. “I’m always looking for a universal material that I can do many different things with, and compact too, where I don’t have to lug around lots of material in a car. I basically get this one material that I can do so many things in one… it’s a studio in a can.”
Beyond art, it’s possible this substance will soon be in hospitals and emergency service vehicles. That’s because the cans are sealed and sterilized, and could work as bandages or as a spray-on cast for broken bones. Welcome to the first-aid kit of the future.

With the addition of nanotechnology, the spray could also become an instant nicotine patch, an oral inoculation or vaccine. Carrying other elements in the fabric is also an option, meaning UV protection, mosquito repellent, vitamin supplements, medication, all could be in the cards. With additives, the fabric could even be fire-proof. And fragrances can be built in, giving this yet another function in the world of fashion.

Right now Fabrican is working on crafting seat covers for the automotive and aircraft industries. The company is also testing an industrial-sized compression device that could be used to contain and clean up oil-spills. A fast acting, light, cheap liquid forming fabric could be a huge impact on that market if it in fact succeeds.

“Obviously we need better ways of cleaning up spills,” says Richard Heinberg, senior fellow-in-residence at the Post Carbon Institute. He thinks the introduction of this tech would be a positive, “assuming the fabric doesn’t create its own pollution problems,” which include extraction of raw materials, making of product, deployment, disposal.

Fabrican’s Torres says since the fabric is made from all natural ingredients, this shouldn’t be an issue. But until more tests are done, it’s still very much an unknown.

Meanwhile, Torres has big plans for his first love, fashion. Torres sees his invention on the streets, in the form of pop-up spray-booths that could create custom clothes for anyone.

“They could then purchase aerosol products that would allow them to further customize, adapt and mend their garments, as the mood takes them,” Fabrican representatives told Mashable.

Wearable technology has been getting increasingly popular of late, and with so many applications, the market could be poised to explode as products like these get more commercialized. And licensed. Torres is excited for those prospects.

“Fabrican is an excellent carrier technology for carbon nanofibres and conductive materials. It’s very much in tune with this trend.”