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Zac Posen teams with GE Additive and Protolabs to 3D print Met Gala gowns

3D printing turns heads at fashion's biggest night out as designer, Zac Posen collaborates with GE Additive and Protolabs.

Zac Posen x GE Additive x Protolabs rose gown featuring 21 unique 3D printed petals. - General Electric / Twitter
Zac Posen x GE Additive x Protolabs rose gown featuring 21 unique 3D printed petals. - General Electric / Twitter
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It’s not uncommon to find elements of 3D printing woven into the fashion world from the famous Dita Gown that started it all to Chanel’s 3D printed suits. At the annual Met Gala, where the dress code and exclusive guest list invites the most extravagant outfits to the steps of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, the technology enabled some of the most striking looks at this year's event.

The theme was 'Camp: Notes On Fashion' and U.S. designer, Zac Posen created a number of 3D printed garments and accessories inspired by the concept of freezing natural objects in motion. The pieces were developed over a six-month period in collaboration with experts from GE Additive and Protolabs, expanding on Posen’s vision of incorporating cutting-edge technology and innovation with sophisticated style.

“The Met Gala is special for designers because it’s the biggest fashion event in the world. This year it is particularly special because we’re working with GE Additive and Protolabs to 3D print ideas that are unachievable using fabric,” Posen commented. “For me, science, engineering and art all work together. That’s why standing at the forefront of 3D printing is so important.”

GE Additive - Zac Posen.jpg
The rose gown took over 1,100 hours to complete.

The pieces - four gowns, a headdress and a number of structural elements - were worn by guests Jourdan Dunn, Nina Dobrev, Katie Holmes, Julia Garner and Deepika Padukone, and took over 1,500 hours to manufacture.

British model Dunn wore a custom Zac Posen x GE Additive x Protolabs rose gown featuring 21 unique 20-inch plastic petals printed with stereolithography (SLA) and finished with primer and bold colour shifting red automotive paint. The petals, each weighing 1 lb., were attached to a titanium cage printed on a GE Additive Arcam EBM machine. The gown took over 1,100 hours to complete.

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1147432950 Clear bustier was 3D printed in four pieces. - Dimitrios Kambouris Getty Images for The Met Museum/Vogue

A clear 3D printed bustier worn by actress Dobrey was printed in four pieces and finished by wet sanding and sprayed to give an almost water-like glass appearance. Meanwhile, actresses Holmes and Garner each sported exaggerated accessories including a palm leaf collar attached to a custom gown produced with SLA and finished in pearlescent purple paint, and a vine headpiece with berry embellishments, printed in a single piece with HP’s Multi Jet Fusion and finished with brass plating.

The technology was also utilised to produce 408 intricate embroidery pieces for a metallic pink gown worn by Bollywood star, Padukone. The embroidery was printed in plastic, vacuum metalised, and painted. Posen also created a number of printed accessories including brooches and cufflinks.

The majority of the garments were manufactured at Protolabs’ additive manufacturing facilities in the U.S. and Germany, while the titanium cage for the rose gown was printed at the GE Additive Technology Center in Cincinnati.

Daniel Cohn, General Manager of Protolabs, added: “Designers are no longer limited by traditional manufacturing processes, where a project would be curtailed by questions like ‘can a part be cut to this shape’ or ‘can it suspend itself under its own weight’. What we have here is a very pure design process, from concept to physical part."

Laura Griffiths

Laura Griffiths

Head of Content at TCT Magazine, joined the publication in 2015 and is now recognised as one of additive manufacturing’s leading voices. Her deep application knowledge and C-suite connections make her industry insight second to none.

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