Bringing Personal Fabrication to Jacquard-Woven Textiles

(Paywall-free popularization like this is what I do for a living. To support me, see the end of this post)

(from the DiDIY Project).

Bringing Personal Fabrication to Jacquard-Woven Textiles /img/wovns-homepage.jpg

Digital DIY can transform, and make it accessible to the masses, virtually any productive activity. Especially when it is not, strictly speaking, 100% DIY but, being digital, it makes somebody else’s machines easily usable, on-demand, through the Internet (“cloud manufacturing”?). And even in sectors considered, until now, as “low tech” ones. The rest of this guest post (*), by the founders and managers of Wovns, is a good example of these possibilities.

WOVNS, founded by twin sisters Dena and Chelsea Molnar, was created to enable artists, designers, businesses, and hobbyists to produce small runs of custom woven fabric at a reasonable price. The web based platform takes an industrial manufacturing process, Jacquard weaving, and makes it accessible to everyone.

Bringing Personal Fabrication to Jacquard-Woven Textiles /img/wovns_website_qualities.jpg

Similar to platforms like Shapeways or OSH Park, WOVNS allows individuals to upload digital design files and get them translated into custom products, in this case woven textiles.

WOVNS offers fabric qualities suitable for applications like upholstery, pillows, bags, scarves, throws, dresses, and other home decor and soft goods products. Jacquard-woven fabric is great for both custom DIY projects and for those looking to make unique textile products.

Historically, access to Jacquard weaving has required large manufacturing minimums and insider connections, but by intelligently aggregating orders from many people, WOVNS makes it possible to efficiently weave as little as one yard of a given design. In short, WOVNS takes the idea of “power in numbers” and applies it to textile production.

Bringing Personal Fabrication to Jacquard-Woven Textiles /img/jacquard_loom1.jpg

To learn more, please visit their website, where you’ll find information about the process of designing your own textiles, and fabric qualities available as well as a range of tutorials.

(*) IMPORTANT: this post was originally published,exactly three years ago, as part of the DiDIY Project.

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I am Marco Fioretti, tech writer and aspiring polymath doing human-digital research and popularization.
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