Bare is a non-toxic body paint that allows you to become a human electrical conductor (sans electrocution) by applying it directly to the skin.

This innovative material allows users to interact with electronics through gesture, movement, and touch. Bare can be applied with a brush, stamp or spray and is non-toxic and temporary. Application areas include dance, music, computer interfaces, communication and medical devices. Bare is an intuitive and non-invasive technology which will allow users to bridge the gap between electronics and the body.
Wow. This is serious geek hotness.
It’s rare that I’m in front of a camera, but I would love to get my hands on this paint and collaborate with some tech savvy friends on a photo project! Who’s with me?
Thanks to Artie for sending this link.

2 responses to “Bare: Skin Conductive Ink”
The site doesn’t seem to want to sell it to anyone yet – there’s nothing there that I can see would suggest you can get it yet. However, they seem to have done very extensive research on various materials – potentially giving people access to the data to make their own?
Secondly, seems that a lot of people on the Gizmodo site forget that skin has a conductivity of its own, depending on moisture. I was interested to see they had an image of an LED being lit, but couldn’t work out how they’d done the circuit. Still, if they can get some pretty sharply defined edges on the paint, it’d be lovely to have little stick-on gem style surface mounted LEDs ๐
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