Eleksen’s core technology is the touch-sensitive textile, ElekTex. With all the properties of fabric, it forms an innovative, versatile and durable control interface and is designed to transform soft-goods products into interactive devices.
www.eleksen.com


Recent inventions > smart textiles > wearable technology > Cutecircuit
http://www.cutecircuit.com/ see selected projects below:
Recent inventions > smart textiles > wearable technology > Kinetic dress

The KineticDress is sewn of an elastic textile embedded with sensors that follows closely the body of the wearer. The sensors are able to capture the wearer’s movements and interaction with others and display this data through the electroluminescent embroidery that covers the external skirt section of the dress. Depending on the amount and speed of the wearer’s movement the electroluminescent embroidery changes pattern, displaying the wearer’s mood to the audience and creating a magic halo around her.The algorithmic program that controls the KineticDress is designed to follow the pace of the wearer: a still pose, when sitting alone shows a black dress, when the wearer starts moving and interacting with others the dress slowly lights up with a blue-circles pattern that moving creates a magic halo around the wearer.
Recent inventions > smart textiles > wearable technology > Skirteleon
Skirteleon is a skirt that changes color in relation to the mood and activities of the wearer. Is made of a special smart and interactive laminated cotton fabric that is waterproof and was developed at CuteCircuit.
Recent inventions > smart textiles > wearable technology > ET

ET Is composed by an headset with sensors and a belt with embedded wireless network capabilities. While moving through a city or environment the person wearing the system receives audio files, that are dynamically adjusted in volume to create a tridimensional audioscape depending on the direction or objects they are looking at.The embedded Theatre system is composed of a garment containing a mobile device (like a PDA or cell phone), and headphones with an attached digital sensor. Through Wi-Fi triangulation the system understands the participants location in the environment, and the sensor understands the direction that the participant is looking. Using these two data sources in combination it is possible to create a fictional audio landscape, in three-dimensions, that corresponds exactly to real world objects and locations. For example, as a participant walks to the right of a statue, they may hear the statue whispering in their left ear, turning to look at the statue, the sound is now in front of them. Or the participant could hear a conversation in the street between two people that took place three hundred years ago.
Recent inventions > smart textiles > wearable technology > The Hug Shirt

The Hug Shirt is a shirt that makes people send hugs over distance! Embedded in the shirt there are sensors that feel the strength of the touch, the skin warmth and the heartbeat rate of the sender and actuators that recreate the sensation of touch, warmth and emotion of the hug to the shirt of the distant loved one.
Recent inventions > smart textiles > wearable technology > Epi-SKin

Epi-Skin. Marta Iwin
This jewelry is made from epithelial skin cells cultured in a lab and grown in a test tube.
Recent inventions > smart textiles > wearable technology > Airplane dress
Recent inventions > smart textiles > wearable technology > Contemporary Cloth

Contemporary Cloth by Minagawa Makiko
The texture of this stole was created using a technique where some areas
of the fabric shrink and others, painted with a protective solution, do not.
The result is a luxurious silk piece reminiscent of blue Iznik glass tiles. The texture of this stole was created using a technique where some areas
of the fabric shrink and others, painted with a protective solution, do not.
The result is a luxurious silk piece reminiscent of blue Iznik glass tiles.
Recent inventions > smart textiles > wearable technology > APOC
Issey Mikaye APOC (A Piece of Cloth)

Recent inventions > smart textiles > wearable technology > Nanotech
Wearable power: nanotechonlogy





Wearable power: nanotechonlogy
Weaving Batteries into Clothes
A new machine that makes nanostructured fibers could turn soldiers’ uniforms into power supplies.
take on active functions such as generating and storing energy.
New extruding technologies can produce fibers that combine multiple materials in distinct nanoscale patterns. Here are hair-thin fibers made from two components arranged in target-like cross sections. A more advanced three-component machine will be used by the U.S. Army to develop uniforms that can perform active functions, such as storing and generating energy.
To make extremely thin, nanoscale fibers, the researchers first extrude a fiber made of two materials (like the one at right, seen in cross section). One of the materials can be dissolved, freeing the fibers.
These fibers, which combine two materials, give a sense of the intricate patterns that extruding technology can produce. A new machine can combine three materials into even more complex structures.
Among the machine’s many potential uses is assembling fibers that act as rechargeable batteries.

The machine was featured last week as part of a workshop on wearable power held at the United States Army Research Laboratory…..
as foot soldiers come to depend more on electronic devices, from night-vision goggles and laser range finders to advanced radios and networked computers. Today, a typical platoon requires almost 900 batteries of up to seven different types for a five-day mission
