Sabine Seymour

Sabine Seymour is a designer, author, entrepreneur, and researcher, known for her work in fashionable technology and design. She is the director of the Fashionable Technology Lab and Assistant Professor of Fashionable Technology at Parsons The New School for Design. Seymour is the founder of Moondial Inc., a consulting company specializing in the integration of technology and fabrics.[1]

Sabine Seymour
Alma materVienna University of Economics and Business
OccupationDirector of the Fashionable Technology Lab at Parsons The New School for Design, CEO of Moondial Inc.

Education

Seymour received a PhD and MSc in Social and Economic Sciences from the Vienna University of Economics and Columbia University in New York, and a MPS in Interactive Telecommunications from New York University. [2]

Research

Seymour is the Director of the Fashionable Technology Lab at Parsons The New School for Design and Assistant Professor in Fashionable Technology. She is an editorial review board member of the International Journal of Mobile Human Computer Interaction and chairs the Rockefeller Foundation Grant–funded project Computational Fashion at Eyebeam Art+Technology Center, New York. Seymour has received numerous grants and awards, including the Michael Kalil Endowment for Smart Design Fellowship.[3]

Seymour has published Fashionable Technology: The Intersection of Design, Fashion, Science, and Technology (Springer, 2008) and Functional Aesthetics: Visions in Fashionable Technology (Springer, 2010).

Seymour was previously a design co-chair for ISWC and a jury member for the Prix Ars Electronica,[4] a visiting researcher for Computational Cellulose at Aalto University, Helsinki, a curator of the MAK Fashion Lab at the Museum of Applied Arts, Vienna, a co-director of the research project BODYMetaphor at the New School, New York, and a steering committee member for Zero Power Smart Fashion, New York.[3]

Entrepreneurship

Seymour is the founder of Moondial Inc., a consulting firm that focuses on intelligent clothing, concepts and creative direction for online or networked environments, strategies for the integration of wireless technologies in clothing and equipment, go-to-market strategies for wearable products, and trend scouting. Moondial works for clients such as Motorola, Johnson Controls, Intel, and North Face.[5][6]

In 2015, Seymour introduced a prototype for a new technology called "Soft Spot" that would integrate sensor technology into fabrics.[7] This technology has since been incorporated into company named "Supa Spot."[8]

gollark: CSS can send GET requests, at least, but that's not very useful without other stuff.
gollark: The most I could do is probably include the blueness thing in a popular template and hope nobody notices.
gollark: All I've done for now is just make my user page mildly blue.
gollark: Some weirdness with background image URLs and esoteric selectors.
gollark: As I said, CSS can even do keylogging VERY VERY hackily.

References

  1. "Sabine Seymour - Secret Life of Scientists and Engineers — Secret Life of Scientists and Engineers | PBS". www.pbs.org. Retrieved 2018-03-12.
  2. "Faculty | Parsons School of Design". www.newschool.edu. Retrieved 2018-03-12.
  3. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2017-03-13. Retrieved 2017-03-12.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  4. "Faculty | Parsons School of Design". www.newschool.edu. Retrieved 2018-03-12.
  5. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2014-02-03. Retrieved 2014-02-01.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  6. "Moondial". Moondial.
  7. Times, Tech (2015-10-02). "Sabine Seymour Has Designs On Your Dumb Clothes". Tech Times. Retrieved 2017-03-12.
  8. "SUPA". SUPA. Retrieved 2017-03-12.
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