Company:Diffus Design

From HandWiki
Diffus Design
TypePrivate
Founded2004
FounderMichel Guglielmi
Hanne-Louise Johannesen
Headquarters,
Websitewww.diffus.dk

Diffus Design is a design company and consultancy based in Copenhagen, Denmark . It was founded in 2004 by Michel Guglielmi and Hanne-Louise Johannesen as a creative partnership. The Diffus Design team works with theoretical and practical approaches toward art, design, architecture, and new media.

New products are created by the company through sensor technology merged with traditional materials and craft, with a design focus, based primarily upon intelligent textiles, wearable technology, tangible interfaces, composite materials, and interactive installations. Diffus Design is in a close working relationship with other organizations such as Forster Rohner, Inntex, and Alexandra Instituttet[1] as well as Delft University of Technology).[2][3]

Diffus Design also undertakes consultancy and research in the fields of interactive design, intelligent textiles, and architecture, as well as product design for global clients within a wide array of industries ranging from industrial production to fashion and infrastructure planning.[4] The company works in partnership with two European Union research projects funded by the Seventh Framework Programme, CREATIF and Light.Touch.Matters.

The Creatif project is based on the use of smart fabrics. The aim of the project is to design and develop software and a smart fabric printer that can print electronic materials containing inks with interactive capabilities. The consortium consists of three creative partners (Diffus Design, Base Structures, and Zaha Hadid Architects[5]) and four technical and research-based partners (University of Southampton, Institut für Textiltechnik Aachen, Grafixoft, and Ardeje).

Light.Touch.Matters is a cooperation between product designers, material scientists, and industry. Light.Touch.Matters plans to create smart materials that can sense touch and movement, and respond with light. The base technologies for the Light.Touch.Matters. project are piezo plastics and flexible OLEDs.[6] The consortium consists of 17 partners from 9 EU countries.

Selected projects

The Climate Dress

The Climate Dress was designed in 2009 in collaboration with the Swiss embroidery company Forster-Rohner, the Alexandra Institute , and the Danish School of Design.[7][8] It is laced with hundreds of LEDs that respond to the level of carbon dioxide in the nearby surroundings and are powered through the conductive embroidery by an Arduino Lily pad microprocessor and a carbon dioxide detector, resulting in patterns that range from slow pulses to rapid flashes depending on the concentration of CO2.[9][10] The Climate Dress does not rely on wiring, soldering, or crimping, which is often the case with smart textile products. All functional elements are blended into the embroidery and exposed to the viewer.[11]

Solar Handbag

The Solar Handbag was designed in 2011 in collaboration with the Alexandra Institute and Center for Software Innovation.[12][13] It has 100 silicon solar cells that collect daytime sunlight and thus generate two watts of usable energy enough to charge a mobile device.[12][14][15] The handbag also features a set of interior optical fibers that glow to assist the user in their search for objects in the handbag.[16] The solar cells have been woven into conductive embroidery on the exterior surface of the handbag, which transmits the harvested energy into a rechargeable lithium-ion battery.[17] These components were developed through a joint research effort between Forster Rohner AG and the University of Applied Science Rapperswil and the NTB Interstate University of Applied Sciences of Technology, Buchs, Switzerland.[citation needed]

Wall (E)Motion

Awards

Exhibitions

External links

References

  1. Malik Chua, Jasmin (27 July 2011). "Solar powered wearables guaranteed to give you a charge". Ecouterre. http://www.techfieber.de/green/2011/10/12/diffus-design-power-aus-der-schultertasche/. 
  2. Schoeser, Mary, Textiles: The Art of mankind, Publisher: Thames and Hudson, 2012
  3. Buechley, Leah, Textile Messages: Dispatches From the World of E-Textiles and Education, Publisher: Peter Lang Publishing, 2013
  4. Goldsmith, Sara Vitamin Green, Phaidon Press, 2012
  5. Banks,Tom "Zaha Hadid joins EU-backed ‘smart fabrics’ research team", Designweek, 12 November 2013
  6. European Plastics News Staff "EU funding for piezo-electric project" , PRW, 7 June 2013
  7. Schoeser, Mary, Textiles: The Art of mankind, Publisher: Thames and Hudson, 2012
  8. Pakhchyan, Syuzi "CO2 Dress — A Beautiful Pollution Sensing Dress", Fashioning Tech, December 16, 2009
  9. Koch, Wendy LED "climate" dress monitors greenhouse gases, usatoday.com, December 30, 2009
  10. Kim,Sara "Ready-To-Wear Milestones At The Fashion Institute of Technology", The Creators project, April 16, 2013
  11. Buechley, Leah, Textile Messages: Dispatches From the World of E-Textiles and Education, Publisher: Peter Lang Publishing, 2013
  12. 12.0 12.1 Jirmann Von Dieter “Diffus Design: Solar power aus der Handtasche”, Techfieber, October 12, 2011
  13. Goldsmith, Sara Vitamin Green, Phaidon Press, 2012
  14. “La lumière est dans le sac”, Intramuros Design Magazine. Issue: #156, October 2011.
  15. “Diffus Chic Solar-Power Bag Flaunts Its Photovoltaic Panels”, Inhabitat. Issue: #Issue: May 22, 2011.
  16. Schoeser, Mary, Textiles: The Art of mankind, Publisher: Thames and Hudson, 2012
  17. "Diffus Solar Handbag Uses Solar Panels For Design" (in en-US). 2011-05-26. https://www.coolthings.com/diffus-solar-handbag-uses-solar-panels-for-design/.