Experimental Device for Performance – Wearables Project.02

THESIS,Wearables — andrew on February 2, 2007 at 4:28 pm

crashtestProject:
create an item of clothing using wool, cotton, leather, and electronic component, conductive fabric or thread.

Process:
I’ve decided to start bringing in thesis idea influences early on in this class.
Experimental Devices for performance is this weeks working title. You can read more about my thesis proposal and research here or here as a pdf (34k)

For this project specifically I am interested in exploring soft video. As an initial exploration into this topic I decided to see whether or not it is possible to send composite video signal over conductive thread.


click to play

Looks like it’s all systems go for now.

I’ve decided to start with some sketches that I’ve made during our first week of class. Then it’s on to construction.

The Hat

I am using a hat-on-hat combo that I usually wear as a daily fashion choice. The under-hat is a New York Yankees hat with a rigid brim. This will be used to attach the cameras. The over-hat is a crocheted black cap that Kristin made for me. This will be used as a place to put the conductive fabric video lead patches as well as housing for batteries and wires.

The cameras are my standard low-cost security camera of choice from super circuits. I’ve used coat hangers from the dry-cleaners to attach the cameras to the hat.

The camera’s composite output terminates in a standard female RCA connection (there is no sound). I’ve made my own male RCA connector that terminates on the opposite end in a snap connection. The signal and ground of the video cable are soldered to two seperate female snaps. This is done to be able to make a solid connection between the wires and the conductive fabric of the patches. (Soldering to conductive fabric or thread is not very feasible.) The male side of the snaps are sewn to the crocheted hat with conductive thread, which is also used to sew the pathes of conductive fabric to the hat.

Now the camera’s RCA output leads are connected solidly to the individual patches of the hat. One for signal and one for ground. In this way I will be able to reverse engineer this process on the television side of things.

The Television

Two patches of the same conductive fabric are attached to the television and positioned so they line up with the patches on the hat. Signal to signal and ground to ground. The same fabric sewn to snap and snap soldered to wire technique that was used on the hat is implemented here.

After I attach some 9V batteries and hide them in the fold of the skull cap, the first prototype of Experimental Devices for Performance # 1 is ready to be demo-ed.

Result:


click to play

5 page contextual research

THESIS — andrew on February 1, 2007 at 7:07 pm

Andrew Schneider
THESIS SEMINAR
Spring 2007
Wednesday 3:30 – 6:00
Caren Rabbino, Instructor

The purpose of this paper is to provide a contextual background to the development of Avant-Garde-Ables, my thesis project for the Interactive Telecommunications Program at NYU. Avant-Garde-Ables (working title) are a series of wearable, performer-oriented devices for the direct real-time manipulation of live and prerecorded media in the live performance space. For the purposes of this paper I will use the term media to refer to video, audio, lighting, and mechanisms. These devices will be used to develop and refine the action of a specific performance in parallel development called PLEASURE (working title). PLEASURE is a one-man show exploring the human condition in a technologically saturated and hyper-everythinged world.
(more…)

week.01

THESIS — andrew on January 24, 2007 at 2:37 am

start.

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