Takeaways from 2023 SMART Fabrics Summit


The annual Smart Fabrics Summit was held again this year at the Wilson College of Textiles of North Carolina State University, sponsored by the Advanced Textiles Association (ATA, formerly the Industrial Fabrics Association International). John Lanza and Arian Jabbary, representing Foley’s Smart Manufacturing Industry Sector and its Fashion, Apparel & Beauty (fab) Industry Team, engaged with the nation’s preeminent stakeholders in the e-textiles industry, including the likes of electrical and textile engineers, research labs, manufacturers, consumer brands, and federal defense agencies to discuss the development of smart fabric technology and its implementation into everyday use applications. 

The two-day event featured the format of “share and discuss,” where various members of the industry presented their latest findings in e-textile research and development, and then a Q&A discussion followed allowing for all members to confer and discuss their insights and solutions. This year’s Summit posed two questions to the attendees: How can market segments collaborate to accelerate the development of the industry by U.S. manufacturers?  And, what policies will apply to, or should be developed for, smart fabric products? 

Our answer: like any industry, a conformity of standards, messaging, and legal infrastructure is paramount. The segmented nature of the research and development activity in the smart fabrics industry, as well as the relative gaps between their current applications (e.g., defense, home furnishings, fashion, athletic wear, medical, etc.), means that stakeholders from all shades of the spectrum are currently operating in different, albeit related, siloes.  These siloes are each subject to different rules and standards, while some are subject to none at all. Moreover, each silo messages the technology differently because of the difference in industry end users. A common framework and language for smart fabrics will help the smart fabrics industry achieve its full potential. 

Smart Fabrics

While the emphasis in the smart fabrics industry is still on technology development and implementation, regulatory oversight is clearly on the horizon. We provide a few examples that will likely impact the smart fabric industry in the coming years:

Our takeaway from the 2023 Smart Fabrics Summit is that the future for smart fabrics is bright, but there’s definitely work to be done. It’s worth doing, though.  IDTechEx predicts that the smart fabrics market will exceed US$780 million by 2033. Let’s roll up our sleeves and get to the task at hand.


© 2025 Foley & Lardner LLP
National Law Review, Volume XIII, Number 186