Update: A tutorial with instructions to make your own Skirt Full of Stars is now posted at StarSkirt.PolymathDesignLab.com
In case you haven’t seen my last post about it, this is a hand-sewn tulle wrap skirt with integrated fiber optics and lights that change color in response to the speed and direction of the wearer’s movement.
It uses the Lilypad Arduino platform, developed for integrating electronics into textiles. There’s a purple organza underlayer to the skirt onto which is sewn the Lilypad main circuit board and a power supply, and an accelerometer hangs from a ribbon to allow for freedom of movement. The Lilypad receives the measurements of the accelerometer’s movement, and translates them into color output for the tricolor LEDs around the waistband of the skirt.
I used sparkle fiber optic cable to cut the harsh quality that you can get when using LEDs and distribute the light more evenly throughout the skirt. In previous prototypes I had simply created a line of LEDs swirling around the skirt, and this makes for a far more subtle and wearable effect.
I have to say, getting decent video of this skirt was quite a challenge! Too much light and the fiber optics didn’t show up on camera, too little and nothing showed up at all. Even this isn’t an accurate representation of what it looks like in person – the camera mostly just picks up the points of light from fiber optics pointed directly at it, where in person you can see them all around the skirt. But hopefully it at least gives a decent idea of how the whole thing works…
It looks like I’ll be making another of these soon, so I plan to take more photos of the construction process and post the instructions here as I go.
If you’re not feeling the yearning to jump into making wearable electronics yourself but you still want your own, send me an email at shannon@polymathdesignlab.com. I had a lot of fun creating this and would be thrilled to make some as custom projects.
There was no video-taking in the Henry household this weekend, so my skirt followup will have to wait a bit. In the meantime, here are a couple of things I’ve been keeping around in google reader to share here:
I really like these Emission Spectra scarves from Becky Stern. I’ve actually been kicking around an emission spectrum bracelet idea for about six months now, but the picture I have in my head requires metalworking skills and tools I don’t have. Seeing this makes me want to revisit the idea, though, and try to find another means of interpreting it.
I was also really intrigued by the ideas from Fabian Hemmert’s TEDx talk on ways a mobile device could provide information kinesthetically. I’m not so sure I’d want a “breathing” mobile, but changing the center of mass seems like it could be a really useful way of providing output. (via information aesthetics)
I just discovered Not So Humble Pie, who came up with these fabulous misfortune cookies. She also recently did a couple of awesome science cookie roundups.
N Building, in Tokyo, is a concept building with an interesting augmented reality twist. Instead of putting up signs, the building facade is a QR code; reading it on a mobile device delivers you to a website with a tenant list and other information.The developers also created an iPhone application that allows building occupants to interact with passersby through their phones – showing what’s behind the windows, overlaying speech bubbles, and the like. (via Rhizome)
I can’t imagine anything like this taking off if every building had its own separate app, but I could definitely envision it integrated into a product like Google Maps.
Hooray, Hooray – it’s finally done!
Introducing my ‘Skirt Full of Stars’ – an interactive, illuminated skirt using the Lilypad Arduino – a microcontroller board designed for textile use. The skirt incorporates an accelerometer to measure the wearer’s movement, and the ‘stars’ change color based on that movement.
Last fall, Sean and I received a jar of P.B. Loco Curry Peanut Butter from my mom, who was right on in thinking that it was very much up our alley.
After we’d shared a couple of delicious snacks of curry peanut butter with apple slices, I was struck by a grocery-store inspiration! I saw chocolate chips on the shelf and decided to give some candy making a try. After all, peanut butter and chocolate is an old stand-by, the curry peanut butter was tasty, and I’ve had the good fortune to have tried a couple of really good curry-chocolate combinations, so why not put all three together?