Print Email Facebook Twitter Interwoven: Growing a Durable yet Delicate Composite Textile Title Interwoven: Growing a Durable yet Delicate Composite Textile Author Ford, Damienmarc (TU Delft Industrial Design Engineering) Contributor Karana, Elvin (graduation committee) Sonneveld, Marieke (mentor) Degree granting institution Delft University of Technology Programme Design for Interaction Date 2019-12-17 Abstract Growing design is an emerging new design approach at the confluence of materials science, biology, arts and design. It challenges current industrial consumption and production because it offers the opportunity to co-create with nature and shift the paradigm of production towards more sustainable solutions. Diana Scherer is an artist exploring the creation of a novel material by utilising the natural processes of the growth of a living organism. She has created a material called Interwoven, which is made of plant roots. far, plant roots have not yet been used for the production of a material. In contrast to comparable textiles made from natural fibres, the material itself weaves. Producing itself through the search of the plant for nutrients and water. This project explored different methods to improving the strength of Interwoven as a bio-composite, while assessing its technical and experiential properties. In its current state Interwoven is limited in its functional use because of the technical characteristics of the roots being weak. Therefore it was required the strength be improved as an aspect of durability. Apart from the technical challenges presented, there are also challenges with peoples perception of new emerging grown materials as they trigger uncertainty in peoples perceptions. Experiential characterisation and technical characterisation was conducted on the material interwoven so that both may be utilised towards finding a meaningful application as a textile Subject Material ExperienceGrowing DesignBio-CompositeMaterial Driven Design To reference this document use: http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:f8efc51a-db33-4db9-a74b-10a5d9135b37 Part of collection Student theses Document type master thesis Rights © 2019 Damienmarc Ford Files PDF D.Ford.Graduation.2019Dec_edd.pdf 13.42 MB PDF D.Ford.Graduation_Poster.pdf 1.08 MB Close viewer /islandora/object/uuid:f8efc51a-db33-4db9-a74b-10a5d9135b37/datastream/OBJ1/view