Anti-dirt cloth for children
A woman in New York used nanotechnology to make 'non-smudged baby clothes'.
A woman in New York uses nanotechnology to make 'dirty baby clothes', and she is raising money for her invention on the Kickstarter website, according to UPI.
Experiment with chocolate - (Photo: PRNewswire)
Ms. Penina First, an Israeli-American background in chemistry, biology and biotechnology, said the No More Bibs clothing - which she wanted to create if she raised the necessary funds - It is made of cotton and uses nanotechnology to turn the surface of the fabric into a liquid surface.
According to information posted on the Kickstarter website, the fabric can withstand 99% of the liquid that a child may be exposed to, including chocolate, cream, mud, blood, saliva, paint, oil.
The campaign raised more than $ 4,000 on Oct. 21, but still runs for another 22 days to reach the $ 40,000 target Ms. First is aiming for.
- Oil spill troubleshooting using SOS-1 oil filter cloth
- 1,300-year-old mummy in a cocoon of cloth in Siberia
- Oil filter cloth from water helps protect the environment
- There have been more than 500,000 people booking tickets
- Where does the stain of color written under the nail come from?
- The experience of eating cloth is not poisoned, not hot
- The more dirty the husband is, the more easily the wife becomes depressed after birth
- Hanoi seeks to reduce air pollution
- Video: See how this machine cleans the clean white tunnel like it did
- The secret in mummy cloths of ancient Egyptians
Scientists plan to turn dead birds into drones LG launches world's first stretchable screen that can 'transform' from 12 inches to 18 inches 200-passenger hybrid aircraft Canada agrees to let billionaire Elon Musk's company test chip implant in human brain Commercial aircraft reach supersonic speed Ship equipped with foldable solar panel sails NASA tests X-59 supersonic aircraft engine for the first time Strange flying car design with speed of 150km/h