Buy Fabric Fabric News Have you ever seen a smart dress? I was shocked after reading it!

Have you ever seen a smart dress? I was shocked after reading it!



In the real world, smart clothing is still synonymous with avant-garde, and most of them are still in concept. However, smart wear is already a trend, and smart clothing is getting…

In the real world, smart clothing is still synonymous with avant-garde, and most of them are still in concept. However, smart wear is already a trend, and smart clothing is getting closer and closer to us, and it will definitely change our lives one day. The editor has collected several smart dresses with futuristic concepts for everyone.

Concept Smart Dress

In the future, people will not dress the same as they do today. Those slightly weird tight-fitting suits may be able to automatically adjust temperature, intelligently monitor physiological indicators of the body, or have strong protective properties. They may also be integrated with holographic communication devices to communicate with others at any time. In the real world, smart clothing is still synonymous with avant-garde, and most of it is still in a conceptual state. However, smart wear is already a trend, and smart clothing is getting closer and closer to us, and it will definitely change our lives one day. The editor has collected several smart dresses with futuristic concepts for everyone.

1. Memories of Dress

Tae Gon Kim, an artist and designer from South Korea, designed the “Dresses of Memory” series. Using fiber optic fabrics and high-end custom tailoring, four luxurious dresses of different designs are designed to express a dreamy, flashing memory scene.

2. Butterfly dress

The butterfly dress designed by designers Ezra and Tuba received technical support from IBM and Intel and integrated Edison processors and sensors. The cool part is the fabric butterflies on its shoulders, which can flap their wings and even be released when someone is detected around them. It has a dramatic effect. You will definitely stand out in the crowd wearing this dress.

3. (No)where And (Now)here

The “(No)where And (Now)here” series of smart dresses brought by Ying Gao, a designer from Montreal, Canada, looks as mysterious and ethereal as the name of the series. To describe it in Internet language, it is “fairy”. Its highlight is the integration of luminous fiber, eye tracking and voice technology. When onlookers look at the clothes or speak, the clothes will react, showing the flow of light or changing patterns, thereby expressing the concept that clothes are also alive.

4. Tinkerbell

This Tinkerbell dress is a fiber optic dress collaborated by designer Richard Nicoll, Studio XO and Disney. It was shown at London Fashion Week. It uses lightweight power-supply fiber optic fabric and embedded high-brightness LED lights, which will make the wearer look like an elf at night, and it will look like a mobile street light when walking in the dark.

5. Air dress

The concept of The Air Dress is to make you like a chameleon, able to change color according to the surrounding temperature. Its fabric integrates chemical compounds and special nano-inks, which can sense environmental factors such as wind, humidity, ultraviolet rays, etc., and change color and shape accordingly.

6. Cognitive Dress

Just like its name, the focus of Cognitive Dress is “cognition”. It uses IBM technology and has built-in sensors that can monitor user emotions, including curiosity, joy, excitement, passion and encouragement, and display different colors through LED lights.

7. Katy Perry dress

The famous “Fruit Sister” Katy Perry once wore a smart dress to attend the Metropolitan Museum of Art Charity Ball in New York. The gown, custom-made by Cute Circuit, incorporates multi-colored LED lights that Perry can turn on via a hidden switch inside the bra. Obviously, Miss Fruit always dares to make bold innovations in dressing.

8. Cinderella dress

At this year’s Metropolitan Museum of Art Charity Ball in New York, Hollywood actress Claire Danes stunned the audience with her custom-made “Cinderella Dress” by Zak Posen. This dress uses a special fiber optic yarn that requires no power supply and will shine like Cinderella’s glass slipper in a dim environment, making it look stunning.

9. Fluid Dress

Designer Charlie Bucket uses a large number of flexible plastic tubes to weave a wonderful dress. By injecting gas and color into the tube, and supplemented by sensor monitoring, the color can change according to the wearer’s mood, aiming to express emotions.

Information source: Textile Herald

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Author: clsrich

 
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