Living fashion printing from a zip this is not new to the fashion house and can be folded as seen in video below. Chinese fashion
designer Yin Gao, for instance has also made clothing that moves and lights up
when people look at it. Creator Behnaz Farahi 3 d printed fur shirt dubbed the ogling shirt. This is a demi
fur jacket; this winter fur became a first 3D printed outfit that tracks eyes
and moves appropriately. This outfit changes shape when men stare at it. It has
a hidden camera detects onlookers using face-tracking algorithm. This
can detect an onlooker's gender, age and viewing direction. The clothing then
moves the fur as a spine in line with where onlookers are staring.
This is an outfit that attracts attention - and one that can stare back. Fitted with a range of gadgetry, this fabric is covered with smart fibres that can expand and contract depending on the person to where people tend to look at it. By detecting how old they are and whether they're men or women, it knows just how much to respond. The smart shirt uses cameras to detect when it is being stared at - and smart fibres in it move to stare back. It can even detect the age and gender of onlookers. Hidden camera detect use face-tracking algorithm to detect onlooker's gender, age and viewing direction.
This is an outfit that attracts attention - and one that can stare back. Fitted with a range of gadgetry, this fabric is covered with smart fibres that can expand and contract depending on the person to where people tend to look at it. By detecting how old they are and whether they're men or women, it knows just how much to respond. The smart shirt uses cameras to detect when it is being stared at - and smart fibres in it move to stare back. It can even detect the age and gender of onlookers. Hidden camera detect use face-tracking algorithm to detect onlooker's gender, age and viewing direction.
These fabrics move in
line with where onlookers are staring. Made with the help of a flexible 3D-printed material.
Those features may not make 'Caress of the Gaze,' as creator Behnaz Farahi
calls it, creep-proof, but it certainly lets them know something's clocked
their gaze. Beneath the garb's spotted spikes lie a hidden camera and
micro controller.
This uses an algorithm to spot onlookers and determine exactly where they're looking, twisting around the wearer to match where they're glancing. 'What if our outfit could recognize and respond to the gaze of the other?' Farahi writes on her website. 'This is an interactive 3D printed wearable, which can detect other people's gaze and respond accordingly with life-like behaviour.' It's not the first kind of clothing to change according to its surroundings—Chinese fashion designer Yin Gao, for instance has also made clothing that moves and lights up when people look at it. But when it comes to Farahi's garment, its sophisticated ability to identify viewers and move exactly in line with their gaze set it far apart. Another reason: its futuristic material, designed to flex like skin, was made by special 3D printer.
This uses an algorithm to spot onlookers and determine exactly where they're looking, twisting around the wearer to match where they're glancing. 'What if our outfit could recognize and respond to the gaze of the other?' Farahi writes on her website. 'This is an interactive 3D printed wearable, which can detect other people's gaze and respond accordingly with life-like behaviour.' It's not the first kind of clothing to change according to its surroundings—Chinese fashion designer Yin Gao, for instance has also made clothing that moves and lights up when people look at it. But when it comes to Farahi's garment, its sophisticated ability to identify viewers and move exactly in line with their gaze set it far apart. Another reason: its futuristic material, designed to flex like skin, was made by special 3D printer.
Hidden camera
detect use face-tracking algorithm to detect onlooker's gender, age and viewing direction it 'allows the fabrication of
composite materials with varying flexibilities [and] densities,' Farahi
said. It was 'Inspired by the flexible behaviour of the skin itself. Here
is a fur warm outfit that’s new therefore exhibits different material
characteristics in various parts of the body ranging from stiff to soft. 'Farahi
isn't an ordinary designer—she's an architect and interaction designer working
toward her Ph.D with the University of Southern California. Tiny motors inside
the design allow it to move the plastic 'tentacles' and this isn't her first
foray into printed attire -her previous projects include a flexible collar and
helmet. But 'Caress of the Gaze' is the first to directly respond to
outside observers. She made it during Pier 9 artist residency at Autodesk,
getting support from non-profit Madworkshop. While it may not be coming to
stores anytime soon, it's certainly showing what novel technology can do for
fashion in a incredible efficient way.
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