The Kinematic Petals Dress features interconnected elements articulated as imbricating shells

The Museum of Fine Arts Boston commissioned Nervous System to create a new dress for the exhibition #techstyle which runs from March 6 through July 10, 2016. The exhibition explores the synergy between fashion and technology and how it is not only changing the way designers design, but also the way people interact with their clothing. Inspired by petals, feathers and scales, they developed a new textile language for Kinematics where the interconnected elements are articulated as imbricating shells. Like their previous garments, this dress can be customised to the wearer’s body through a 3d scan, and additionally, each element is now individually customisable: varying in direction, length, and shape.

Petals protrude from the underlying framework of tessellated triangular panels, sheathing the body in a directional landscape of overlapping plumes. Each interlocking component of the dress is rigid, but, in aggregate, they behave as a continuous textile. The dress is 3D-printed in durable nylon plastic by Selective Laser Sintering. While the design is composed of more than 1600 unique pieces interconnected by more than 2600 hinges, it emerges from the 3D printer fully assembled and ready to wear. Nervous System employed a smart folding strategy to compress Kinematics garments into a smaller form for efficient fabrication. By folding the garments prior to printing them, they were able to make complex structures larger than a 3D printer, that unfold into their intended shape. To make this dress possible, they developed new design software and simulation tools. The overlapping petals necessitated a new strategy for compressing the garment for efficient 3D-printing.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Info and images © Nervous System

Photos © Steve Marsel

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