Digital Engineering 24/7

Helping design and engineering professionals discover, evaluate and specify technologies and processes that shorten the design cycle and enable success.

3D Printed Fashion Line

3D Printed Fashion Line
|

Latest Additive Manufacturing News

Latest Additive Manufacturing Resources

  • Digital Engineering April 2026

    In the latest issue of Digital Engineering, we take a look at the latest innovations in design for additive manufacturing, including the use of natural language inputs, social media cosplayers, and AI integration. The issue also includes a feature…

  • January Special Focus Issue: Design for Additive

    In this Special Focus Issue of Digital Engineering, learn about the latest advancements in design for additive manufacturing, including new software tools, additive in automotive, custom medical devices, and more.

  • More Resources

By Brian Albright  

August 25, 2015

An Israeli grad student has created what she claims is the very first fashion line fabricated on consumer-grade 3D printers. And while I'm certainly not ready for lattice-structured sheer pants, this could point the way to the future of homemade clothing.3dlede

Danit Peleg created her the fashion line as her graduate project entirely on 3D printers in her home. She printed the clothes using FilaFlex filament and Witbox home printers over the course of 2,000 hours. The clothes were created as her final project at the Shenkar College of Engineering and Design in Israel.

Black-dress.-Photo-credit-Daria-RatinerAccording to an interview on ChannelWeb:

"I really enjoyed the fact that I could create without intermediaries; I could design my own textiles and manufacture my own clothes, all from my own home," Peleg said. "I didn't have to go buy cloth that someone else chose to sell – I could make my own … I think this is just the beginning. As technologies evolve, we will soon all be printing our own clothes at home."

She spent months researching materials before settling on FilaFlex. She also got help from the TechFactory Plus 3D printing laboratory in Tel Aviv. She created patterns using Optitex software, and then created digital models in Blender to produce 3D print files.

Using Andreas Bastian's Mesostructured Cellular Materials as inspiration, she designed the patterns to create her own flexible textiles. Each of the five pieces took nearly 17 days to complete.

You can learn more about the process in the video below.


Source: Mashable 

 

Latest in Danit Peleg

About Brian Albright

Brian Albright

Brian Albright is the editorial director of Digital Engineering.
Contact him at [email protected].

Follow DE
on Facebook
on Linkedin

Related Topics

Additive Manufacturing   3D Printing   Materials   Resources   Rapid Ready Tech   Danit Peleg   Engineering   FilaFlex   All topics
 

Subscribe

Subscribe to our FREE magazine, FREE email newsletters or both!

Join over 90,000 engineering professionals who get fresh engineering news as soon as it is published.

Subscribe today

 
 

From our Sponsors

Meltio Takes Metal Additive to the Next Level
Meltio's DED technology enables industries to tailor and customize their solutions to create & repair metal parts.
Easing the Transition from ETO to CTO with Configuration Lifecycle Management
Manufacturers are discovering that the Configure-to-Order (CTO) model provides significant benefits when it comes to customization.
Siemens + Altair = The Next Chapter in Design and Simulation
With its acquisition of Altair, Siemens creates a unified simulation portfolio combining generative design with high-performance computing and AI workflows.