Last year, we made a chair at Bath Hack. Not a smart chair. Just… a chair. It got more attention than we expected.
Naturally, the next step was obvious: we needed to make a blazer.
Enter The Blazer™—a fully custom, hand-sewn garment, brought to life using a combination of projector-based pattern projection, software-assisted scaling, and questionable sewing skills.
We wrote custom software to take digital blazer patterns, scale them to human-sized dimensions, and project them directly onto fabric for tracing and cutting. Then we stitched it all together by hand. The result is a one-of-a-kind wearable piece that blends technology, design, and just enough chaos to qualify as a hackathon project.
While this may not revolutionise the world of fashion just yet, it's a fun proof of concept: using accessible tech and code to bridge the gap between digital design and physical creation. It turns out, making clothes is really hard—and also really cool.
If you're intrigued, amused, or mildly impressed, vote us for Hacker’s Choice. Your support could help bring next year’s mystery project to life— which we intend to level up even more. Possibly something we haven’t even invented a word for yet.
Vote Blazer™. Because why shouldn’t you make clothes at a hackathon?
Built With
- blood
- dedication
- fabric
- pmo
- skill
- sweat
- tears
- ts

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