ABSTRACT

The Digital Bespoke? is about mass customization, 3D printing, human bodies, and the step towards digitally built objects made to individual specifications. The author argues that the modes of customization offered by digital fabrication and mass production have more in common with their industrial predecessors than with craft-based customization.

Using case studies of historical and current practices from Europe, Africa, and North America to ground her theory, she investigates where digital fabrication technologies have developed from and how their uses differ from existing modes of production. Digital fabrication and mass customization are concepts encompassing broad ecosystems of technologies and practices. Both are increasingly implemented and hyped. As such, it is imperative to address not just their potential, but their challenges.

Written for a scholarly audience and for design practitioners concerned with the social and political impacts of digital fabrication and mass customization, this book will be a useful reference point for students and researchers in digital and analogue design, technology, and material culture.

chapter 1|10 pages

The map, the territory, and the jeans

chapter 2|16 pages

Definitions

chapter 3|23 pages

A known customer

chapter 4|17 pages

The tailor online

chapter 5|23 pages

Interfaces between bodies and standards

chapter 6|21 pages

Mission control and other considerations

chapter 7|14 pages

The role of the user in custom goods

chapter 8|17 pages

Labour, bodies, infrastructure

chapter 9|7 pages

Conclusion/future