(Controversial) thoughts on this 3D printed bikini?

Image via Continuum Fashion

Summer vacations may be over (for most of us), but I am still monitoring some of the interesting activities people might perform during this period…The latest one we wrote about was this 3D printed radio-controlled (RC) boat that could bring you some drinks and snacks; and on top of that plays your favourite song during your pool time. Let’s keep the “swimming pool” mode on, and imagine now that you wear a completely 3D printed swimwear during this relaxing time.

Continuum fashion actually created one: the N12 bikini. The bikinir esults from a collaboration between Continuum Fashion and 3D printing company Shapeways.

3D printed using SLS 3D printing and Nylon 12, a “white, strong, and flexible”, the product should have passed  ISO skin sensitization testing and can be fully customizable thanks to the freedom of design AM enables. According to Shapeways, the material’s strength enables the bikini to bend without breaking when printed very thin.

Image: Continuum Fashion

With a minimum wall thickness of .7 mm, it is possible to make working springs and almost thread-like connections. For a bikini, the nylon is beautifully functional because it is waterproof and remarkably comfortable when wet. The bikini’s design fundamentally reflects the beautiful intricacy possible with 3D printing, as well as the technical challenges of creating a flexible surface out of the solid nylon. Thousands of circular plates are connected by thin strings, creating a wholly new material that holds its form as well as being flexible. The layout of the circle pattern was achieved through custom written code that lays out the circles according to the curvature of the surface. In this way, the aesthetic design is completely derived from the structural design”, the team at Continuum fashion explains on its website.

Although I always stand behind most 3D printed creations, this one left me a little bit dubious. Bear with me, from a manufacturing standpoint, it’s a very interesting approach to use SLS 3D printing and Nylon 12 for clothes manufacturing, not to mention the design of freedom that would enable customization. However, from a user perspective, is it really comfortable to wear a bikini made up of laser-sintered nylon?  

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