Fabric Interfaces Tutorial: E-Textiles, Conductive Thread and Trill Craft

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  • čas přidán 23. 09. 2020
  • In this video Becky Stewart guides us through creating a fabric breakout with Trill Craft, conductive thread and e-textiles. Becky walks us through the best choice of materials, the stitching techniques which work best with when dealing with conductive thread and fabrics, and the electronic principles that will help create the most reliable interfaces.
    Conductive thread links:
    kitronik.co.uk/collections/e-...
    www.adafruit.com/product/640
    www.sparkfun.com/products/13814
    Conductive fabric links:
    kitronik.co.uk/collections/e-...
    www.adafruit.com/product/1168
    Link to template:
    github.com/theleadingzero/tri...
    Trill Craft is a 30-channel breakout board that lets you make your own touch interfaces out of anything conductive. Trill Craft is perfect for crafting complex interfaces from conductive fabric, copper tape, metal, wire, fruit, water, and any other conductive material. Each of Trill Craft's 30 channels of capacitive sensing offer variable readings, and multiple boards can be chained together to create interfaces with hundreds of channels of capacitive touch. Trill Craft comes with an unsoldered right angle pin header for the I2C pins so you can connect the board to Bela or your system of choice.
    shop.bela.io/trill
    Becky Stewart is a Lecturer in the Dyson School of Design Engineering at Imperial College London. She works with e-textiles and signal processing to build interactive, body-centric wearable computing systems. These systems often incorporate performance, fashion, music and/or design.
    theleadingzero.com/

Komentáře • 16

  • @afroditistereo
    @afroditistereo Před 3 lety +1

    Amazing tutorial Becky 🙌

  • @corinnesoderberg1378

    This is so cool!! Thank you alot❤❤

  • @Manaoin
    @Manaoin Před 3 lety +1

    Thank you so much!!!

  • @thomashaberle4715
    @thomashaberle4715 Před 2 lety +2

    Is it possible for you to make it portable?

  • @ximenaalarcon5082
    @ximenaalarcon5082 Před rokem

    Hi Becky, many thanks for the great tutorial. I am at the point of bonding the conductive fabric. I am confused about what to do with the long threads from behind the fabric. did you cut them? On my test, I placed the conductive fabric on the threads that are loose at the end. Thanks for your help!

  • @rifosi
    @rifosi Před 2 lety

    Great! Thanks.

  • @tanzeelatassawarbutt4829

    hey bella i need our help.I want to do my thesis project throughthis technique can you please guide me more about this which thread you use ,fabric and how we made the electric chip? or we can buy from somewhere?

  • @MclarenF1rocket

    Where did you get the press fit snap and applicator tool from ?

  • @dundass3130
    @dundass3130 Před rokem

    Hi, thanks for the great tutorial! I'm still slightly confused about the part from

  • @MiguelRodriguez-wn8mc

    hello very didactic, your video, I ask you some questions

  • @arisoda
    @arisoda Před rokem

    Couldn't you take out the microcontroller and place it directly on your fabric? Yes the connectors are small but then you'll not have such a big clunky metal think attached. With the microcontroller only, it's like nothing is there!