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This Impossibly Intricate Dress Was 3-D Printed In A Single Go

Imaging Visualization & Navigation March 4, 2016

Nervous Systems is a generative design studio founded by MIT alums known for merging the natural world with 3-D printed fashion. For its latest project, the studio teamed up with Boston’s Museum of Fine Arts to create a fairy-like party dress made up of thousands of delicate nylon petals.

As beautiful as the so-called Kinematics Petals dress is, though, the most impressive part isn’t how it looks. It’s how it’s made.

Intricate Dress

Nervous Systems is a generative design studio founded by MIT alums known for merging the natural world with 3-D printed fashion. For its latest project, the studio teamed up with Boston’s Museum of Fine Arts to create a fairy-like party dress made up of thousands of delicate nylon petals.

As beautiful as the so-called Kinematics Petals dress is, though, the most impressive part isn’t how it looks. It’s how it’s made.

Inspired by petals, feathers, and scales, the dress is made up of 1,600 distinct pieces, which interconnect through 2,600 hinges. Although these interlocking petals are individually rigid, they behave like a rippling, flowing textile when joined together. This is possible due to Nervous Systems’ “Kinematics” technology, which turns any three-dimensional shape into a flexible structure using 3-D printing. Though they’ve tested the tech on smaller projects, the design team is finally scaling up the system to create a full-scale garment.

The Kinematics system let the studio do something seemingly impossible: print the dress in a 3-D printer smaller than the dress itself. The system folded up the full dress pattern into an optimized shape that could fit into a 3-D printer’s small bed—only once it was printed did the team unfold the tightly packed dress into its full, final form. This wasn’t done on any old Makerbot, though. Instead of using a conventional printer that squirts out filament dollop by dollop, it was 3-D printed in a special machine that uses a laser to melt together thin layers of powder from a solid block of nylon dust.

Read More & Watch the Video – Source: This Impossibly Intricate Dress Was 3-D Printed In A Single Go | Co.Design | business + design

by JOHN BROWNLEE

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