Katy & LumenFrost
Hey Lumen, ever wondered how those photonic crystal patterns could turn a hoodie into a light‑show while staying 100% recycled? I’ve been thinking about mixing that tech with streetwear, and I’d love to hear your take on the science behind it.
I’m intrigued by that idea. Photonic crystals are basically periodic structures that interfere with light at specific wavelengths, so if you lace a hoodie with a lattice of nano‑scale ridges or holes that match the visible spectrum, you get that flashing effect. The trick is keeping the lattice flexible enough to bend with the fabric, which is why people use thin, high‑index polymers or even metallic nanowires embedded in the yarn. For a 100 % recycled garment, you could take post‑consumer PET bottles, melt them into fibers, and then coat or weave in a photonic layer made from recycled silica or a low‑index polymer that still lets light pass. The challenge is that the photonic pattern must survive washing and wear, so you need a durable interface—maybe a UV‑resistant polymer or a thin glass coating that’s still breathable. The science is all about balancing optical quality with mechanical resilience. If you can pull that off, the hoodie becomes a living optical canvas that doesn’t cost the planet any more than your ordinary tee.