Rapanui’s Invisible T-Shirt Breakthrough

Update: This article published before midday on 1st April was an April Fool.


An eco-fashion brand has taken an innovative approach to the issue of transparency and traceability within the fashion industry by developing a new fabric that can make t-shirts appear invisible.

Diagram: In partnership with the University of The Isle of Wight, eco-fashion brand Rapanui has taken the light transmitting properties of optic fibres and woven a jersey fabric to create an invisible t-shirt. The technology captures light on one side of a garment and relays it on to the opposite side.

Optic fibres conduct the light
Martin Drake-Knight, Designer at Rapanui explains, “The research has been around for a long time but the principle is actually quite simple – to take light from the front of the garment and relay it to the back – and vice versa.

“Optic fibres are simply light conductive threads. They capture the light in the space immediately surrounding the garment and relay them through the threads. If you can direct this light directly out of the shirt, as we have done, the result is a vivid perception of invisibility.”

Make landfill sites invisible
The University of The Isle of Wight assisted with the project and hope to develop variants of the fabric for a wide range of applications.

However Textiles specialist Professor Barry Green said it would be “quite some time” before the technology could come to market, adding that an early idea would be to make landfill sites invisible, “Sustainability is an out-of-sight, out-of-mind problem. We can throw invisible t-shirts in open-air landfill sites – or even just on the street – and nobody will know they are there.”

Clip from video:“Game changing,” says Hemingway
In a recent interview fashion designer Wayne Hemingway spoke of the Award-Winning eco fashion brand, “What Rapanui is doing is game changing; they are at the forefront of fashion technology. People will see what they are doing and will want to copy it.”

Rapanui Co-founder Rob Drake-Knight comments, “We are delighted to announce this innovation; we hope it helps to raise awareness of transparency and traceability within fashion.”

For more information visit the Isle of Wight University Website.

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Christian
1, April 2012 6:52 am

Nice little Wight lie.
You must think we’re on a ship of fools!

PAUL MULLERY
Reply to  Christian
1, April 2012 8:12 am

The best ever was The Guardian in collaboration with Guinness a few years ago. Anyone remember adverts for holidays to Sans Serif? The island was illustrated as a semi colon. Guinness were advertising money off pints if purchased in Sans serif. Package holiday companies were in on the act also. It fooled thousands.

daveq
Reply to  PAUL MULLERY
1, April 2012 9:03 am

The best one I remember was on BBC TV- sphagetti trees!!!(A long time ago now!)

Simon Perry
Admin
Reply to  daveq
1, April 2012 5:58 pm

Spaghetti trees footage …

Lyn Blackledge
1, April 2012 5:46 pm

I remember the spaghetti trees too – Had a lot of people fooled!

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