Kevin Martin (MechEngr'16)
Header image: unspun jeans
Technology first prototyped in the Department of Mechanical Engineering鈥檚 Senior Design course has been named one of the .
Alumnus Kevin Martin鈥檚 (MechEngr鈥16) robotics and apparel company has built a machine that 3D-weaves yarn into a seamless pair of jeans tailored to fit individual buyers. The machine uses topographical weaving to produce the pants in just ten minutes.
Martin hopes the technology will help reduce global carbon emissions by making the design, manufacturing and consumption of apparel intentional.
鈥淭he big north star that we kept coming back to is our climate,鈥 Martin said. 鈥淐limate change is probably going to be the most pressing issue of our lifetime. Apparel is one of the dirtiest industries in the world because clothing that is never sold ends up in landfills or gets burned. We felt like there was a big opportunity to drive change.鈥
His company鈥檚 mission is to implement sustainable practices to ensure each piece of fabric that goes into making a pair of jeans is not wasted 鈥 which means each pair is made-to-order.
Ordering a pair of jeans from unspun starts with a 3D body scan. Customers can use their iPhone to scan themselves. The scan captures 30,000 data points for the robotic weaving machine to create the perfect fit.
The 3-D weaving machine is the technology that was originally developed in Senior Design. Martin, who graduated from the Department of Mechanical Engineering in 2016, and his unspun co-founders sponsored a 2017 capstone project to build their first prototype.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 know that unspun would have actually existed without the Senior Design team,鈥 Martin said. 鈥淲e needed a prototype and they crushed it for us.鈥
After that capstone project, Martin advanced the prototype with help from a National Science Foundation grant and venture capital investment. Unspun is now on version three of the machine, which is what earned the TIME Best Invention 2021 accolade.
unspun's app that body scans customers for the perfect fit.
鈥淭he greatest feeling this year was to unveil the machine for the first time after not being able to talk about the hardware for four or five years,鈥 Martin said. 鈥淭o say to the world that we have developed this new method of apparel manufacturing called 3D weaving and it works.鈥
This is the second time unspun has made TIME鈥檚 Best Inventions list. The company was also given the honor in 2019 for the software that designs their custom denim jeans.
Martin, who grew up in Colorado Springs, said his interest in robotics started in high school. He built remote control airplanes and created his own version of a drone by attaching cameras to them. He then started a company building upon that drone technology.
At CU 麻豆影院, Martin pivoted the startup company to cable cameras, allowing the system to move around on wires and be safer for indoor filming.
鈥淲e came up with this whole plan to sneak into the Idea Forge to test it on the rafters in the evening so hopefully nobody would see us,鈥 Martin said. 鈥淚 remember sitting on the rafters when Professor Daria Kotys-Schwartz walked by and all I could think about was how much trouble I was going to be in. Instead, she said our robot looked really cool and asked how she could help. She was so supportive.鈥
Martin鈥檚 advice to current mechanical engineering students is to take advantage of that encouraging atmosphere. There are many resources for aspiring entrepreneurs and engineers to plug into.
鈥淕o find those instructors and professors at the university that are doing incredible things,鈥 Martin said. 鈥淪hare your excitement with them and get their perspective. You do not need to have all ten next steps of your life figured out, but they can help you figure out the next one or two.鈥
Customers can order a pair of jeans on the or using the . You will need the iPhone app for the body scan. Unspun jeans cost around $200, but Martin said CU affiliates can get 20% off with the code SKOBUFFS.
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