Fashion Research Institute Announces
Formation of Black Dress Technology Subsidiary
NYC, NY, April 08, 2008 – Fashion
Research Institute, Inc. (FRI) has launched a subsidiary, Black Dress
Technology (Black Dress), to develop an end-to-end enterprise solution for
virtual-worlds-based product design for the fashion industry in
conjunction with IBM, FRI’s technology partner.
Black Dress will provide a virtual
world experience specifically developed for apparel and accessory
designers. This virtual world, expressly created as a product design
environment, will offer a fundamentally new work flow addressing critical
issues facing the fashion industry, such as ensuring manufacturability of
designs and decreasing substantial sample costs by 2/3. In addition, this
“green” solution reduces the carbon footprint of the fashion industry.
Users of the Black Dress solution will ultimately be able to enter a
virtual world, receive training on the systems, and take a design from
concept to prototype – with every step short of actual manufacturing being
done virtually.
Black Dress will offer an IBM-backed
and -developed enterprise solution providing a simpler and more intuitive
user interface than currently existing products, apparel-industry-oriented
software, and scalability for businesses of all sizes. Users of the
technology could see sample creation costs decreased by 60% or more and
time to market cut by as much as six weeks per collection. Additionally,
management and executive staff can have access to real-time business
statistics so they can make immediate, informed decisions. This technology
solution was showcased in the IBM booth at the National Retail Federation
Show in January 2008.
A mid-sized design house
implementing a Black Dress Technology solution could save millions a year
in sample costs and dozens of weeks of development time, enough to put
into development and production one full collection or two
mini-collections. This, in turn, could allow this company to generate
additional tens of millions a year in gross revenue.
Black Dress’s board currently
includes Jeffrey Safran, president, Antares ITI; Richard M. Fine, Ph.D.,
principle, Biopredict; and Theodore Buyniski, Esq., SVP, Radford. Black
Dress is also being overseen by FRI’s CEO, Shenlei Winkler. Winkler
brings more than 20 years of fashion experience and has designed both
virtual world and real world fashion with annual sales of more than $30
million. The roster of Black Dress Technology officers has not yet been
announced.
“Black Dress will be competing in a
$1.7 trillion global industry, where the rapid turnover of in-house IT
systems clearly tells us there’s a huge need for an improved solution. We
intend to deliver that solution, in a way that serves the unique needs of
both the creative design staff and executive management. In fact, we see
our solution as finally allowing management to monitor and manage the
previously unmanageable design process without disrupting the delicate
creative process,” said Winkler.
Black Dress’s parent company,
Fashion Research Institute, conducts research into technology-based
initiatives and develops emerging technologies to sweepingly overhaul
traditional fashion industry practices and methodologies. FRI’s mission
is to reduce the carbon footprint and change the environmental impact of
the industry in ways that are sustainable, replicable, respectful of the
practitioners, and meaningful for all stakeholders. FRI maintains Shengri-La,
a five-island complex in Second Life, and an OpenSim complex. FRI is an
IBM business partner, and has been working closely with top IBM architects
and researchers over the last year to develop its virtual worlds-based
product design solution.