2010년 11월 12일 금요일

Amazing textile : innovetive wood carpet by Elisa Strozyk


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German design student Elisa Stroyzk has created a rug made of wood-veneer offcuts.
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The geometric pieces are laser-cut or cut by hand then bonded to a textile backing.
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Stroyzk is currently studying at Central Saint Martins college of art and design in London.
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Photos are by Sebastian Neeb.
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Here’s some more information from Elisa Stroyzk:

I am currently graduating from Central St. Martins College in London and for my MA project I developed a “wooden textile”, an innovative material for interiors.
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Elisa Strozyk who graguated MA Central Saint Martin created billient textile, wood textile. her idea about choosed opposit meterial which is wood is that the relationship between 'hard and soft', 'parquet and carpet' and  ' furniture and textiles'.


The project “wooden textiles” intends to look at the material wood in a new way. Geometric wooden pieces compose a flexible surface which can perform in different three-dimensional shapes. The material ranges between hard and soft, parquet and carpet, blurring relationships between furniture and textiles.
How can wood transform into a textile?
1. What materials and techniques have you used?
I was working with veneer wood leftovers from a wood workshop which is closing down. The wood is cut by hand or lasercut into pieces of different geometric shapes. All pieces are stuck by hand on a textile base and compose a flexible surface.
2. What inspires you?
Material itself and our presumptions about it. I like to switch properties and meanings and pose questions like: Can a hard material be liquid or soft? I look at everyday objects around us and try to rethink their function or imagine hybrids between them.
3. What does Textile Futures means to you?
In the future we will have to deal with more waste and less resources. Therefore it is fundamental to be aware about lifecycles of objects. For me that means to use material that is able to grow old beautifully. Another way to save resources is working with reused or recycled objects and material waste. Also it is crucial to aim for a closer relationship between subject and object. This can be achieved through more flexibility and changeability, the possibility of growth or surprising elements

I think that this material , wood would rangs to organic textile. and would involve another meaning which is environmenst friendiy. and her idea which is using wood as textile could lead to break  the spereotype that 'wood is hard, and is rough.'

2010년 11월 11일 목요일

What is Fabrican? adj nano fabrics

What is Fabrican?
Fabrican is the creator of Spray-on Fabric

In 2000 Fabrican patented an instant, sprayable, non-woven fabric.

Developed through a collaboration between Imperial College London and the Royal College of Art, Fabrican technology has captured the imagination of designers, industry and the public around the world. The technology has been developed for use in household, industrial, personal and healthcare, decorative and fashion applications using aerosol cans or spray-guns, and will soon be found in products available everywhere.

 
this textile is very billient ideas. if we have this spray, we can make shape of  cloths which is fond of. and i think that we can save money and reduse waste of goods.
we can save money and

The fabric is formed by the cross-linking of fibres, which adhere to one another, to create an instant non-woven fabric that can be easily sprayed on to any surface.  Its properties can be tailored to meet the needs of each user. 

Technology

Fabrican Ltd Technology


Fabrican is offering a new approach to the application of fabrics throughout our everyday lives. Spray-on Fabric is a patented technology developed by Fabrican which involves the creation of a liquid suspension which is then sprayed by use of either a spray gun or an aerosol can. The fabric is formed by the cross-linking of fibres which adhere to create an instant non-woven fabric that can be easily sprayed on to any surface. Its properties can be tailored to meet the needs of the consumer. Intricate patterns can be created, in a number of colours leading to an aesthetically pleasing fabric. With our prototypes we have been able to use different types of fibres from natural to synthetic, incorporating scents and colours (from primary to fluorescent) that provide great flexibility for modern consumer and industrial needs.

The product was developed through interdisciplinary research, linking the subjects of engineering, material science and design. The commercial exploitation of robust prototypes is underway, potentially licensing the technology to industry within a number of identified commercial sectors.

Innovations in material science, such as smart fabrics incorporating nano-technology, Spray-on skin used by the medical and cosmetic industry, and the variety of substances able to be dispensed through today's aerosol technology, have informed and surrounded the development of Spray-on Fabric. As a non-woven material, Spray-on Fabric offers possibilities for binding, lining, repairing, layering, covering and moulding in ways previously not imaginable
Nano-Fabric Reveals Unique Propertiesby Kate Melville Researchers from the UK and Russia have unveiled - in the journal Science - the world's first single-atom-thick fabric. The research team, led by Andre Geim at The University of Manchester, has succeeded in extracting individual planes of carbon atoms from graphite crystals, which has resulted in the production of the thinnest possible fabric - graphene. The resulting atomic sheet is stable, highly flexible and strong and remarkably conductive. The nanofabric belongs to the family of fullerene molecules and is the first two-dimensional fullerene.

The researchers have been exploring the electronic properties of the nanofabric and have demonstrated an ambipolar field-effect transistor, which works under ambient conditions. They found that the nanofabric exhibits a remarkable quality whereby electrons can travel without any scattering over submicron distances, an important property for making very-fast-switching transistors.
http://www.scienceagogo.com/news/20040924233513data_trunc_sys.shtml

eco-textile(Recycle method)

Gorgeous Textiles and Rugs Made From Recycled Materials by Brazilian Designer Claudia Araujo

by Paula Alvarado, Buenos Aires  on 09. 9.08
Green Fabrics from Textile Scraps and Recycled PET by Claudia Araujo Photo
Brazilian designers and sisters Claudia and Monica Araujo use traditional weaving techniques and natural and recycled materials to build these versatile fabrics that serve as rugs or as textiles.
Among their creations there's the Cabeludo and Broinha rugs, produced with scraps from the textile industry; and the TaPET line of fabrics, produced with 100% recycled PET and also in variations with a mixture of cotton or even recovered PVC. All of their creations are produced in team with a group of weavers in the state of Minas Gerais under fair trade conditions.
More gorgeous pictures in the extended!
Cabeludo and Broinha, Rugs from Recovered Textile Scraps
The Cabeludo is a rug produced with recovered scraps from the textile industry, mainly by fibers with polyamide and elastane (that of swimsuits), which give it comfort, smoothness and durability. The fibers are hand-woven one by one.
According to the designers, it's easy to keep as it does not stain and can be washed with neutral soap by hand.
Fabric from Recovered Textile Scraps by Claudia Araujo Photo
The Cabeludo rug.
Broinha is the name of another rug with recovered textile scraps: it's produced with selvedges from polyamide and elastane. Also hand made one by one and resistant, the designers say it has shown good performance in bathrooms and kitchens.
The name was given to the rug by the weavers, who thought the small forms that make the fabric looked like a cookie named like that in Brazil.
Green Fabric from Recovered Textile scraps by Claudia Araujo Photo
Broinha rug.
taPET: Fabrics with Recycled PET
The taPET weaving is produced with 100% recycled PET bottles in hand loom, and the fabric is then base for other variations that incorporate cotton and even recycled PVC.
Apt for wet environments, washable and high resistant, the designers say it's ideal for bathrooms, kitchens and terraces. According to the website Planeta Sustentavel, the price of taPET goes from 400 Brazilian reais (230 USD) the square meter.
Green Fabric from Recycled PET by Claudia Araujo Photo
Original taPET rug, from 100% recycled PET.
Green Fabric from Recycled PET by Claudia Araujo Photo
taPET variations: Puzzle (with cotton) and combined with recovered PVC.
Claudia and Monica Araujo's rugs and fabrics are sold at their showroom in Sao Paulo, (R. Pelotas, 367) or through contact via their website.

In today,
a number of textile desigers are trying to creatin geco- textile which involve eco-friendly element.

http://www.treehugger.com/files/2008/09/fabrics-rugs-recycled-materials-claudia-araujo-brazil.php

2010년 11월 4일 목요일

kinds of fabrics



Non -Woven
Nonwoven Fabric is a fabric-like material made from long fibers, bonded together by chemical, mechanical, heat or solvent treatment. The term is used in the textile manufacturing industry to denote fabrics, such as felt, which are neither woven nor knitted. Nonwoven materials typically lack strength unless densified or reinforced by a backing. In recent years, nonwovens have become an alternative to polyurethane foam.
 ;in wikipedia


Contents

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Feit
paper
colore balloon
Inflatable alligator isn swimming pool
carpet padding
Applications
  Nonwoven fabrics are broadly defined as sheet or web structures bonded together by entangling fiber or filaments (and by perforating films) mechanically, thermally or chemically. They are flat, porous sheets that are made directly from separate fibers or from molten plastic or plastic film. They are not made by weaving or knitting and do not require converting the fibers to yarn. Typically, a certain percentage of recycled fabrics and oil-based materials are used in nonwoven fabrics. The percentage of recycled fabrics vary based upon the strength of material needed for the specific use.

  Nonwoven fabrics are engineered fabrics that may be a limited life, single-use fabric or a very durable fabric. Nonwoven fabrics provide specific functions such as absorbency, liquid repellency, resilience, stretch, softness, strength, flame retardancy, washability, cushioning, filtering, bacterial barrier and sterility. These properties are often combined to create fabrics suited for specific jobs, while achieving a good balance between product use-life and cost. They can mimic the appearance, texture and strength of a woven fabric and can be as bulky as the thickest paddings. In combination with other materials they provide a spectrum of products with diverse properties, and are used alone or as components of apparel, home furnishings, health care, engineering, industrial and consumer goods.

Non-woven materials are used in numerous applications, including:

kind of fabrics

*Woven.


A woven is a cloth formed by weaving. It only stretches in the bias directions (between the warp and weft directions), unless the threads are elastic. Woven cloth usually frays at the edges, unless measures are taken to counter this, such as the use of pinking shears or hemming. Most cloth in use is woven.



*Knit