MIT & Adobe Unveil ‘Refashion’ for Modular Clothing Design

Note* - All images used are for editorial and illustrative purposes only and may not originate from the original news provider or associated company.

Subscribe

- Never miss a story with notifications

- Browse free from up to 5 devices at once

- Gain full access to our premium content

Media Packs

Expand Your Reach With Our Customized Solutions Empowering Your Campaigns To Maximize Your Reach & Drive Real Results!
– Access The Media Pack Now!
– Book a Conference Call
Leave Message for us to Get Back

Related stories

Why Modern Textile Mills Run on Custom-Machined Metal Parts

The textile industry talks a lot about fibre, dye...

Cambodia’s $16bn Garment Industry Plans Supply Chain Shift

Cambodia’s garment, footwear and travel goods industry—an export engine...

US Cotton Export Sales Slip as Upland and Pima Shipments Fall

US cotton booking activity cooled in the week ended...
AI Summary

New US software designs resizable, repairable, restylable garments

US researchers have developed a software called ‘Refashion’ that breaks down fashion design into modules by allowing users to draw, plan and visualise each element of a clothing item.

The tool, developed by a team at Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL) and Adobe, turns fashion ideas into a blueprint that outlines how to assemble each component into reconfigurable clothing.

Users draw shapes and place them together to develop an outline for adaptable fashion pieces. It’s a visual diagram that shows how to cut garments, providing a straightforward way to design things like a shirt with an attachable hood for rainy days, an MIT release said.

One can, for example, create a skirt that can then be reconfigured into a dress for a formal dinner, or maternity wear that fits during different stages of pregnancy, it said.

Refashion helps design garments that can be easily resized, repaired or restyled into different outfits.

Its interface first presents a simple grid in its ‘Pattern Editor’ mode, where users can connect dots to outline the boundaries of a clothing item.

Users can customise the shape of each component, create a straight design for garments or perhaps tinker with one of Refashion’s templates. A user can edit pre-designed blueprints for garments like a T-shirt, blouse or trousers.

As a user designs a clothing piece, the system automatically creates a simplified diagram of how it can be assembled. The pattern is divided into numbered blocks, which is dragged onto different parts of a 2D mannequin to specify the position of each component. The user can then simulate how their sustainable clothing will look on 3D models of a range of body types.

Finally, a digital blueprint for sustainable clothing can extend, shorten, or combine with other pieces. Instead of buying new clothes every time, consumers can simply reconfigure existing ones.

Never miss a textile headline

The textile industry moves fast – stay on top of it with our must-read briefings.

  • The top textile stories, straight to your inbox
  • The biggest news, features, interviews, and analysis
  • Dedicated coverage of the key developments driving global textile trade

Latest stories

Related stories

Why Modern Textile Mills Run on Custom-Machined Metal Parts

The textile industry talks a lot about fibre, dye...

Cambodia’s $16bn Garment Industry Plans Supply Chain Shift

Cambodia’s garment, footwear and travel goods industry—an export engine...

US Cotton Export Sales Slip as Upland and Pima Shipments Fall

US cotton booking activity cooled in the week ended...

Subscribe

- Never miss a story with notifications

- Gain full access to our premium content

- Browse free from up to 5 devices at once

Media Packs

Expand Your Reach With Our Customized Solutions Empowering Your Campaigns To Maximize Your Reach & Drive Real Results!

– Access The Media Pack Now!
– Book a Conference Call
Leave Message for us to Get Back