Trade Resources Industry Views MakerBot Announced That It'S Time to Unveil a 3D Printed Fashion Garment at NYFW

MakerBot Announced That It'S Time to Unveil a 3D Printed Fashion Garment at NYFW

It’s Fashion Week in New York this week, and for MakerBot, the global leader in desktop 3D printing, that means it’s time to unveil a 3D printed fashion item and talk about an exciting new product in the world of filament.

The Verlan Dress, designed in the New Skins: Computational Design for Fashion workshop led by designer Francis Bitonti of the famed Dita Dress, and held at the Pratt Institute’s DAHRC, is the first creation to ever use MakerBot Flexible Filament, a new adaptable filament material made out of polyester. MakerBot Flexible Filament, which will launch to the public soon, has a soft, flexible feel, and is even pliable when exposed to hot water (it can be reshaped and form-fitted).

“I was pleasantly surprised with how easy the MakerBots were to use”

“We are very excited about the development of MakerBot Flexible Filament,” said Bre Pettis, MakerBot’s CEO. Pettis noted that MakerBot Flexible Filament is a 1.75mm filament that flexes and moves after it is extruded into a 3D print.

The material was commonly used for sutures in the medical field, mouth guards, prosthetics and non-woven fabrics. It is so versatile that it can be repurposed from its origin. Non-toxic and fully biodegradable, the MakerBot Flexible Filament provides a smooth finished surface and works well for form-fitted or personalized 3D prints.

Pettis went on to say, “MakerBot Flexible Filament is different than traditional 3D printing filaments that are solid and stiff after extrusion; with its flexibility and suppleness, this could revolutionize 3D printing.”

MakerBot Flexible Filament is so malleable and form fitting that the Verlan Dress, created in Francis Bitonti’s New Skins workshop, uses mostly MakerBot Flexible Filament, with some traditional MakerBot PLA Filament on the chest and shoulder portions of the dress. The body of the dress is made entirely out of MakerBot Flexible Filament.

“For the New Skins workshops, the students were inspired by the lines of muscles in the human body and how muscle groupings are distributed,” noted Francis Bitonti, who led the workshop. “Through modeling, the students came up with new forms for the dress.

For the material, we needed something that would be able to conform to the body. If it were rigid, the flow and feel of the body’s muscles wouldn’t be possible – it would be like armor. We needed this material to flex and move with movement, like muscles do, and MakerBot’s Flexible Filament worked beautifully for the design.”

Bitonti’s New Skins workshop was the first application outside of the company’s R&D facility to use MakerBot Flexible Filament. The New Skins workshop printed the whole Verlan Dress using two MakerBot Replicator 2 Desktop 3D Printers.

The MakerBot Replicator 2s printed continually for close to 24 hours a day for two weeks – a total of 400 hours of printing – to create the dress. Francis Bitonti is an experienced 3D printed fashion designer, but this was the first time he had an actual 3D printer in his studio.

“I was pleasantly surprised with how easy the MakerBots were to use,” said Bitonti. “The quality was on par with any industrial 3D printed pieces we have commissioned previously. It was great to have the MakerBot Desktop 3D Printers in the studio and provided the students the ability to have immediate feedback on their designs by printing them during the design process.”

Source: http://www.fibre2fashion.com/news/apparel-news/newsdetails.aspx?news_id=151769
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MakerBot to Unveil 3D Printed Fashion Garment at NYFW