Adobe's latest wearable tech promises dynamic clothing that can change at the push of...

Jimmy2x

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Recap: Italian fashion designer Miuccia Prada once said that what you wear is how you present yourself to the world. Adobe research scientist Christine Dierk presented herself as boldly as possible at this year's Adobe Max conference while giving the art and fashion worlds a small but memorable taste of what's possible with today's technology.

The Adobe Max conference in Los Angeles is an annual gathering of engineers, developers, and creative professionals intended to showcase the latest in the company's suite of applications and emerging technologies.

Adobe research scientist Dr. Christine Dierk stunned the crowd during the presentation with Project Primrose. Primrose is a breakthrough in fashion technology that leverages a flexible, low-power, non-emissive series of modular displays that can create static or dynamic patterns on any application, including clothing.

The project combines several technologies and applications used to develop the stunning result. Adobe says Project Primrose uses wearable, flexible, non-emissive textiles that allow an entire surface to display content created with Adobe Stock, After Effects, Firefly, and Illustrator. Although the company used an interactive dress to showcase the innovation, end users can leverage the tech for various other applications, such as furniture, handbags, or other articles of clothing.

In addition to allowing designers and artists to create new, interactive patterns, the concept could also present consumers with a new way to interact with fashion and the world around them. Rather than having to go out and buy another dress, shirt, or pair of shoes, individuals could download and wear cutting-edge patterns from their favorite designers or even create their own.

The project is a marriage of Dierk's passion for technology and fashion, and she's no stranger to either. Dr. Dierk holds a Ph.D. in Computer Science from U.C. Berkeley and has extensive experience developing and working with wearable technologies. She's also an accomplished and talented seamstress who enjoys working with various materials and patterns to create her fashion designs.

Project Primrose is a proof of concept, so there's no word on whether or when it will be available for consumers and designers. However, based on the project's initial reception, it's a safe bet we haven't seen the last of Dr. Dierk's tech-driven fashions.

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LOL, now people will have to make sure their clothing is "charged up" before going outside. LOL
 
I've heard of a concept as formidable as this in the Hunger Games books and franchise, and at the head of it is Adobe, who (as a corporation) loves to buyout brilliant artistic software like Substance Painter, and then paywall it and use your data (by default) for their AI art through an enrollment program which comes automatically enabled. All of this comes as a bitter sweet reward of technological progression, your choice on whether its more sweet or more bitter.
 
I like it. Thought it looked cool, like fish scales.
Didn't think it was 'fugly' either - very figure hugging and shapely which I thought look good, but just my opinion.
I'm sure this is the tip of an iceberg with this. I can imagine hi-res multicoloured 'cloth' will be a thing at some point. Long-sleeved shirts with built-in watches etc.
 
I've heard of a concept as formidable as this in the Hunger Games books and franchise, and at the head of it is Adobe, who (as a corporation) loves to buyout brilliant artistic software like Substance Painter, and then paywall it and use your data (by default) for their AI art through an enrollment program which comes automatically enabled. All of this comes as a bitter sweet reward of technological progression, your choice on whether its more sweet or more bitter.
Maybe that is why it was called Project Primrose, from Primrose Everdeen.
 
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