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Dive into the research topics where Hannah Perner-Wilson is active.

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Featured researches published by Hannah Perner-Wilson.


ACM Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction | 2012

Crafting technology: Reimagining the processes, materials, and cultures of electronics

Leah Buechley; Hannah Perner-Wilson

This article examines the practice of electronics building in the context of other crafts. We compare the experience of making electronics with the experiences of carving, sewing, and painting. Our investigation is grounded in a survey of 40 practicing craftspeople who are working in each of these disciplines. We then use this survey as a foundation for a discussion of hybrid craft—integrations of electronics with carving, sewing, and painting. We present examples of hybrid craft and discuss the ways in which blended practices can enrich and diversify technology.


tangible and embedded interaction | 2011

Handcrafting textile interfaces from a kit-of-no-parts

Hannah Perner-Wilson; Leah Buechley; Mika Satomi

This paper explores the idea of handcrafted electronics. We introduce a kit-of-no-parts approach to building electronics from a diverse palette of craft materials, which we argue is more personal, understandable and accessible than the construction of technology from a kit of pre-determined components. We illustrate our approach by describing the design, construction, and dissemination of a collection of textile sensors, and detailing a website and a series of workshops through which we share our approach.


tangible and embedded interaction | 2010

Making textile sensors from scratch

Hannah Perner-Wilson; Leah Buechley

This workshop will explore the use of low-cost materials and tools to build textile-based interfaces. We will introduce a range of methods for handcrafting textile sensors and circuitry. Participants will learn techniques developed by the workshop leaders and will also be encouraged to use our material library to design their own custom sensors. The goal of the workshop is to familiarize participants with available electronic textile materials and introduce them to a variety of sensor and circuitry construction techniques.


acm multimedia | 2010

Living wall: programmable wallpaper for interactive spaces

Leah Buechley; David A. Mellis; Hannah Perner-Wilson; Emily Lovell; Bonifaz Kaufmann

The Living Wall project explores the construction and application of interactive wallpaper. Using conductive, resistive, and magnetic paints we produced wallpaper that enables us to create dynamic, reconfigurable, programmable spaces. The wallpaper consists of circuitry that is painted onto a sheet of paper and a set of electronic modules that are attached to it with magnets. The wallpaper can be used for a multitude of functional and fanciful applications involving lighting, environmental sensing, appliance control, and ambient information display.


tangible and embedded interaction | 2011

Fine bookbinding meets electronics

Daniela K. Rosner; Hannah Perner-Wilson; Jie Qi; Leah Buechley

As technologies, finely bound books are compact, durable forms that get passed from one generation to the next. As handcrafted objects, they exemplify manual control and dexterity, patience and care, and continuity with the past. Paper-based electronic books, by contrast, are relatively new objects that enable novel interactions with material. Here we explore connections between centuries-old and contemporary building techniques by adding electronics to traditional binding. What kinds of details would be interesting to learn about the past? How could we use conductive fibers to talk to the future? What could gilded edges tell us about our interactions with books? In this studio, participants will build basic bookbinding and e-textiles skills to enable new material explorations.


international symposium on wearable computers | 2014

2013 e-textile swatchbook exchange: the importance of sharing physical work

Anja Hertenberger; Barbro Scholz; Beam Contrechoc; Becky Stewart; Ebru Kurbak; Hannah Perner-Wilson; Irene Posch; Isabel Cabral; Jie Qi; Katharina Childs; Kristi Kuusk; Lynsey Calder; Mj Marina Toeters; Marta Kisand; Martijn ten Bhömer; Maurin Donneaud; Meg Grant; Mk Melissa Coleman; Mika Satomi; Mili Tharakan; Pauline Vierne; Sara Robertson; Sarah Taylor; Troy Robert Nachtigall

The E-Textile Swatch Exchange is a platform for sharing physical work samples in the field of electronic textiles. The exchange wishes to emphasize the importance of physicality and quality workmanship in an increasingly digital world. Individuals and collaborative efforts participate in the exchange by submitting a unique swatch design of their own, and in turn receive a compiled collection of everybody elses swatches. This means that everybody participating needs to make as many multiples of their swatch as the total number of participants. There are no guidelines defining what the swatches could or should be, only that they relate to the field of E-Textiles.


designing interactive systems | 2010

Handcrafting textile mice

Hannah Perner-Wilson; Leah Buechley

This workshop will explore the use of low-cost materials and tools to build textile-based interfaces that replace the current hard-shell computer mice or laptop touchpads that you use to navigate your screen. We will introduce a range of methods for handcrafting textile input devices. Participants will learn techniques developed by the workshop leaders and will also be encouraged to use our materials library to design their own custom mice. The goal of the workshop is to familiarize participants with available electronic textile materials, to introduce them to a variety of sensor and circuitry construction techniques and get people thinking about different interfaces that allow you interact differently with everyday technology.


tangible and embedded interaction | 2013

Microcontrollers as material: crafting circuits with paper, conductive ink, electronic components, and an "untoolkit"

David A. Mellis; Sam Jacoby; Leah Buechley; Hannah Perner-Wilson; Jie Qi


international symposium on wearable computers | 2015

Wearable studio practice: design considerations for digital crafting in harsh environments

Andrew Quitmeyer; Hannah Perner-Wilson


ISEA 2011, 17th International symposium on electronic art, 14-21 September 2011, Istanbul, Turkey | 2011

Future master craftsmanship : where we want electronic textile crafts to go

Mika Satomi; Hannah Perner-Wilson

Collaboration


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Leah Buechley

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Jie Qi

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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David A. Mellis

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Andrew Quitmeyer

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Emily Lovell

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Sam Jacoby

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Bonifaz Kaufmann

Alpen-Adria-Universität Klagenfurt

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