Smart Textile Services
Designing and Selling 'Soft Product' - 'Valuable Service' systems (Smart Textile Services) was about the development of successful methods, platforms, guiding principles and the business models required to understand the multi-disciplinary opportunities and challenges of creating Smart Textile Product Service Systems.Innovation in the form of the combination of soft materials with high technology has led to the development of so-called Smart Textiles. These are of strategic importance for the European textile industry to sustain their competitive edge and to counter threats from low-labour cost producers.
Smart Textiles can conduct light, heat or currents; i.e. the textile becomes an interactive product and can now become part of larger product service systems (PSS). This opens up a vast field of opportunities for textile developers and product and service designers to combine their disciplines in the application areas of well being and life style.
To develop these complex PSS solutions, manufacturers need to move away from their current fragmented, slow or non-existent knowledge exchange methods and team up with relevant partners. Initial investment in this field has led to the design and development of an inspirational test-bed, called ‘Wearable Senses’ at TU/e.
What questions were answered?
Teams from 3 universities and Industry partners were working together to answer the questions:
How can the application of user-centred design methods discover, exchange and combine the theoretical principles, strong traditions and best practices within the domain of textile, interactive product and service design?
What are the methods and criteria for the different stakeholders to pass the transitions from the Incubation, Nursery and Adoption phases?
How can the creative industry illicit awareness about the opportunities and challenges of Smart Textile PSS through co-creation and the use of inspirational Test-beds?
What have the teams achieved?
A methodology and tools for the creative industries to translate societal issues into opportunities for Smart Textile PSS’s. An ‘inspirational test-bed’ where proposals for these systems are realised and studied in context.
Timeframe and communication:
Smart Textile Services started in 2011 and finished in 2015. Throughout the project, we published articles in journals and conference proceedings in the fields of industrial design, computer-human interaction, empirical aesthetics ad health and care research. Progress was published via this website and explored in workshops.
Who was involved?
Scientific partners: Eindhoven University of Technology, Delft University of Technology, the Design Academy Eindhoven and Saxion University of Applied Sciences;
Industry and Societal partners: Audax Textiel Museum, V2_, Waag Society, Modint, Contact Groep Textiel, Unit040 Ontwerp, Metatronics en De Wever
Project leaders
Prof. dr. ir. Caroline Hummels, Eindhoven University of Technology
Dr. Oscar Tomico, Eindhoven University of Technology
Dr. ir. Stephan Wensveen, Eindhoven University of Technology (until 2011)
Prof. dr. Kees Overbeeke, Eindhoven University of Technology (until 2011)
publications
TexTales
Textales is a project in the intersection of textile tradition and technological innovation. With the Textales the storytelling through traditional textile and augmented reality fairy tale application is explored. Digital properties extend the textile capabilities and allow the long-lasting textile to change in time to remain interesting for the users. The developed stories demonstrate the possibilities of such storytelling. Textales is rooted in the research about craft values and sustainability. The aim for connecting digital dynamic properties with high quality textile is to extend the longevity of textile products through changing the idea of what textiles can do. Textales shows interactive 3D objects appearing on a woven textile. Scanning the cloth with the application will allow the user to see the flowers rooted in the fabric. By moving or manipulating the surface, the appearing objects move along.Other
1. Presentation Bedtime Stories creation process at This happened (Worm, Rotterdam, NL – April 2013)
2. InFashion. Hotel Dom, Utrecht, Netherlands (05/10/2013 - 06/10/2013 )
3. Sustainable and innovative fashion seminar exhibition. Aalto University School of Arts, Design and Architecture, Helsinki, Finland. (23/09/2013 - 03/10/2013 )
4. ArcInTex Exhibition TIO3, Ronse, Belgium (16/10/2013 – 29/11/2013).
5. DESIGN CHANGES Exhibition as part of Design United Eindhoven University of Technology, Eindhoven, Netherlands (19-27.10.2013)
6. Baltan Open Lab: Wearable Senses event (22.10.2013)
7. Surface textile fair, Evoluon, Eindhoven, Netherlands (26-28.10.2013)
8. Smart Fabrics conference, Barcelona, Spain (29-31.10.2013)
9. Art Academy of Latvia at ArcInTex exhibition (06 – 08.01.2014)
10. Vilnius Academy of Art (Lithuania) at ArcInTex exhibition (22 – 31.01.2014)
11. Co-Created Wearables at Open Lab Expo in Baltan Laboratories (28.01 – 25.02.2014)
12. Auckland University of Technology (New Zealand) at ArcInTex exhibition (1 – 10.04.2014)
13. “Tradition meets Future” (Horst, NL) (23.3.2014 – 28.9.2014)
14. Nerds on Stage (Rotterdam, NL) (27.03.2014)
15. Stuk op Tafel (Amsterdam, NL) (04.03.2014)
16. The Night of Art & Science, Museum De Lakenhal, Leiden, Netherlands, 20.09.2014
17. Mind the Step exhibition, Klokgebouw Eindhoven, Dutch Design Week, (October 18 – October 27, 2014).
18. Design Dialogues in Shaping (un)common grounds / ArchInTex, TU/e, Eindhoven, Netherlands (13.10.2014)
19. Shaping (un)common grounds exhibition during ArchInTex Network event (13-17.10.2014)
20. Smart Textiles – Wearable Services, TextielMuseum Tilburg (21.1.2015 - 22.2.2015)