Climate Dress

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The Climate Dress was designed in 2009 by Danish design company Diffus Design in collaboration with the Swiss embroidery company Forster-Rohner, the Alexandra Institute and the Danish School of Design.[1][2]

The Climate Dress is laced with hundreds of light-emitting diodes (LEDs) that responds to the level of carbon dioxide (CO2) in the nearby surroundings and are powered through the conductive embroidery by an Arduino Lily pad microprocessor and a carbon dioxide detector, resulting in patterns that range from slow pulses to rapid flashes depending on the concentration of the CO2.[3][4] The Climate Dress does not rely on wiring, soldering, or crimping, which is often the case with smart textile products. All functional elements are blended into the embroidery and exposed to the viewer.[5]

The Climate Dress was presented at the Cop 15 Climate Summit in Copenhagen in 2009, at the "Health Environment Climate" exhibition.

In 2011 the Climate Dress won first prize in the Design That Performs contest, hosted by Samsung.

References[]

  1. ^ Schoeser, Mary, Textiles: The Art of mankind, Publisher: Thames and Hudson, 2012
  2. ^ Pakhchyan, Syuzi "CO2 Dress — A Beautiful Pollution Sensing Dress", Fashioning Tech, December 16, 2009
  3. ^ Koch, Wendy LED "climate" dress monitors greenhouse gases, usatoday.com, December 30, 2009
  4. ^ Kim,Sara "Ready-To-Wear Milestones At The Fashion Institute of Technology", The Creators project, April 16, 2013
  5. ^ Buechley, Leah, Textile Messages: Dispatches From the World of E-Textiles and Education, Publisher: Peter Lang Publishing, 2013
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