Durex Fundawear

If t-shirts can be digitised, then why can’t underwear. Durex Australia has unveiled “Fundawear”, billed as a first-of-its-kind wearable electronic underwear concept that allows touch to be transferred over the internet while maintaining comfort, sexiness and flexibility. The idea is simple. People in long-distance relationships can tease, tickle and tantalise even when apart.

To replicate the nuances of touch, each garment houses touch technology that connects with a real-time server to communicate between touchscreen devices and the garments. Interaction happens through a smartphone interface, translating inputs into sensation on the connected wearable.

A prototype that behaves like a campaign

What makes this work stand out is the choice to launch as an experiment, not a finished product. Fundawear is framed as a prototype, which gives the brand permission to be bold, invite participation, and trigger debate, without pretending the tech is already mainstream.

Extractable takeaway: When a product concept is unfamiliar, framing it as a prototype lowers disbelief and lets curiosity do the distribution work.

The real question is whether people can understand the use case quickly enough to talk about it.

It also shifts the job of the communications. Instead of persuading people that “remote touch” is a good idea, it makes people imagine use cases. That imagination is the marketing engine.

How the technology story earns attention

The campaign leans on a clear mechanism. Touch input on a phone maps to specific zones, then the garment responds, creating a feedback loop, meaning the phone input and garment response feel connected in the same moment rather than as a delayed message.

When wearable technology is explained this clearly, it stops sounding like science fiction and starts sounding like an interface decision. That is when people share it.

In consumer innovation marketing, the leap from novelty to adoption happens when a physical interface makes a digital promise feel immediate, controllable, and consent-led.

Distribution strategy: invite the internet to co-author the idea

Fundawear is described as still in the experimental stage, with no confirmed release date at the time. But Durex uses that uncertainty as a hook. If you provide a creative reply to “How would you use Fundawear with your partner?” at the Durex Facebook page, you might win a free prototype.

That is a smart move. It turns the public into contributors, and it generates word of mouth that carries the concept further than a conventional product launch could.

What to steal if you are launching an unfamiliar product concept

  • Prototype publicly. Experiments can travel faster than “finished” products because people argue, imagine, and remix.
  • Explain the mechanism in one breath. If the audience cannot repeat how it works, they will not share it.
  • Design for participation. A prompt like “how would you use it?” converts curiosity into content.
  • Keep the tone playful, not clinical. For intimate categories, playfulness lowers the barrier to talk about it.

A few fast answers before you act

What is Fundawear, in plain terms?

Fundawear is an experimental wearable concept from Durex Australia. It pairs smart underwear with a smartphone interface so a partner can send touch inputs over the internet in real time.

What kind of technology does it rely on?

It relies on wearable haptics, meaning small actuators in the garment respond to signals from an app. A server connection synchronises inputs between two partners’ devices and garments.

Why launch a prototype instead of waiting for a finished product?

Because a prototype creates permission to experiment, earn press, and test cultural appetite. It also turns uncertainty into participation, which can generate more talk than a polished launch.

What is the biggest brand risk with intimate wearable tech?

Trust. The concept has to feel safe and consent-led, and the communication has to avoid any hint of surveillance or misuse. If trust breaks, the idea becomes a cautionary tale.

What is the core marketing lesson from Fundawear?

When the product is unfamiliar, the first job is not persuasion. It is making the mechanism and the imagined benefit instantly understandable, so people do the distribution for you.

CuteCircuit x Ballantine’s: tshirtOS

A grey T-shirt looks ordinary until it lights up and starts broadcasting whatever you choose. Text. Images. A status. A moving graphic. Your chest becomes a screen.

London fashion house CuteCircuit, in collaboration with whisky brand Ballantine’s, introduces tshirtOS, described as a wearable, shareable, programmable T-shirt built for digital creativity.

Here is a short making-of film, described as having received over 500,000 views.

What tshirtOS actually is

At the center is a 32 by 32 grid of 1,024 LEDs on the front of the shirt, controlled via an app on your phone. The concept is expanded with built-in components including a micro-camera, a microphone, an accelerometer, and speakers. The result is a garment that can display and capture content, then push it outward as a wearable broadcast. Here, that means the shirt itself becomes the display surface and the phone becomes the control layer.

In global consumer culture, where mobile is the primary tool for self-expression, programmable wearables turn identity signals into a personal channel that travels with the wearer.

Why it lands

Most “future of fashion” ideas die because they look like tech demos instead of culture. tshirtOS works as a story because it keeps a familiar object, the plain tee, then adds one new superpower that everyone understands immediately. You can show something. Right now. In public. Because the output appears on a familiar object people already understand, the technology reads as communication before it reads as hardware. That instant legibility makes the idea feel less like a gadget and more like a new medium.

Extractable takeaway: If you are launching a new interface, anchor it in a familiar form factor, then make the first benefit obvious in one glance so the audience explains it for you.

What the brands are really betting on

The ambition is bigger than a one-off prototype. It is a new creative canvas that sits between fashion, social content, and live communication. Ballantine’s gets cultural adjacency to creativity and experimentation, while CuteCircuit extends its interactive fashion narrative into something that looks commercially repeatable.

The real question is whether a programmable garment can move from prototype theater into a repeatable medium people instantly understand and want to use.

The second film, “T-shirt of the future,” puts tshirtOS into a night-out storyline. It is described as having already generated over 1.3 million views.

What to steal from tshirtOS

  • Prototype the medium, not the message. When the platform is new, the product itself is the headline.
  • Design for instant comprehension. If it cannot be understood in a second, it will not spread.
  • Show it in culture, not a lab. A night out beats a spec sheet for explaining why it matters.
  • Make it programmable. Viewer control creates infinite variations without infinite production.

A few fast answers before you act

What is tshirtOS in one line?

A programmable T-shirt concept that uses a 32 by 32 LED grid and a mobile app to display and share digital content in real time.

What hardware is described as being inside the shirt?

A 1,024 LED grid plus components including a micro-camera, microphone, accelerometer, and speakers.

Why does a programmable shirt matter for brands?

It turns the wearer into a moving, controllable surface for expression, which can connect live moments to digital content without relying on external screens.

What is the main adoption barrier?

Practicality and cost. Washability, comfort, battery life, and price all determine whether it becomes a product or stays a prototype.

What is the strongest creative use case?

Live, personal expression in social settings, where instant visual output is part of the experience and the wearer wants to change what is displayed on the fly.