First intelligent, heated clothing burns up Indiegogo
Were you a little chilly last winter? So were Alex Huang and Jason Yakimovich. And they did something about it.
Then students slogging through bitter drifts to fourth-year classes, the two were so unimpressed by the polar vortex that they decided to take matters into their own hands by inventing the world's first intelligent heated base layer.
"That cold winter was the instigator," remembers Yakimovich. "We had the idea, and things got pretty serious pretty quickly."
In just six months the pair founded their company, FuelWear, and created a feather-light, washable and snuggly undershirt they call the Flame Base Layer. The garment can add 10 degrees Celsius to your body temperature in -20 C weather for three continuous hours, and has a smart monitor that turns it off when you're warm enough, and on again when you cool down.
The shirt is made of premium bamboo fabric, chosen for its antimicrobial properties and washability. The heating elements, sewn into patches across the wearer's chest and lower back, are made of carbon fibre and controlled by specially-designed printed circuit boards. Rechargeable lithium-ion batteries last for up to 12 hours of continuous outdoor use, and LEDs indicate battery life. The whole package weighs just a few hundred grams, slightly heavier than a modern smartphone.
"It's really soft – it feels great," says Yakimovich. "We're really happy with the way it's turning out, and we can't wait to start processing orders," adds Huang.
Demand is already high – on August 26 FuelWear launched with a target of $20,000. They reached it on September 2, just five days into their six-week window, and have been gaining ever since.
But their journey hasn't been all warm and fuzzy. From early struggles with designing and testing the PCB, to identifying their target demographics, FuelWear had lots of help and guidance from Engineering Entrepreneurship Hatchery mentors Professor Vaughn Betz and Candice Luck. After being accepted into the Hatchery's intensive summer program, Huang and Yakimovich met with Betz in May 2014 to talk execution and marketing.
"We wanted to start with building the prototype, but he encouraged us to do more market research first and target our model to that niche market," says Huang. "We found that the construction and outdoor-worker market was already very saturated, but we noticed major flaws in existing base layers for outdoor adventurers."
They conducted market research in May, sourcing suppliers in June. "We had to do a lot of testing to find the right materials to make it washable, because there are electrical elements in there," says Yakimovich.
Their first two attempts at a prototype were hand-sewed on a second-hand sewing machine bought for the project – neither claims to be a tailor, and the results were a little misshapen. By their third iteration they had forged a partnership with established garment manufacturer Gruven Athletics, and supplied Gruven with a pattern.
"Every time we made it, we made it simpler," says Huang.
Huang moved to Edmonton from southern China at age 16, and met Yakimovich, who is also from Edmonton, during their first year of the engineering science program before both transferred into electrical and computer engineering. The two are now roommates in a downtown Toronto condo, which makes business meetings simple, too.
Having exceeded their funding goal, things are heating up for FuelWear – they hope to ship the first base layers in time for Christmas. For those Indiegogo investors who got in with FuelWear on the ground floor, it's going to be a toasty winter.
Marit Mitchell is a writer with the Faculty of Applied Science & Engineering at the 91³Ô¹Ï.