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Couture Corsets Completed with 3D Printed Fashion Accessories

By Michael Molitch-Hou

Move over, Justin LeBlanc[1]! There’s a new 3D printing fashion designer reigning the runway. At this year’s Fashion Art Toronto (FAT), Toronto-based Starkers Corsetry unveiled its latest line of corset couture with a bit of 3D printed flair.

The founder of Starkers Corsetry, Dianna DiNoble, first became interested in corsetry while studying art history in high school. She’d come across this strange piece of clothing that didn’t just fit a body, but caused a body to fit it. Corsets today are often seen as an oppressive component of ancient fashion, but DiNoble began researching whether or not the women who wore them in the past viewed them in the same way.  Eventually, when she wanted one herself, there was no one to turn to, so she attended art school, where she learned how to make them herself.…

The original post Couture Corsets Completed with 3D Printed Fashion Accessories appeared first on 3D Printing Industry.


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