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A pair of biotechnologists at Newcastle University, working with a colleague from Northumbria University, all in the U.K., have developed a way to use mycelium to create a self-healing wearable material. In their paper published in the journal Advanced Functional Materials, Elise Elsacker, Martyn Dade-Robertson and Meng Zhang, describe their process and how well it worked when tested.
The Future of Fashion: Self-Repairing Clothes Made of Fungus
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Living complex materials and objects made by 3D printing of
The Future of Fashion: Self-Repairing Clothes Made of Fungus
UK Researchers Develop Self-Healing Leather Using a Medicinal Mushroom from Asia - vegconomist - the vegan business magazine
Mushroom Leather' Made From Fungi Could Be Self-Repairing
Self-healing mycelium leather shown to be possible - Materials Today
Self-healing clothes may become a reality thanks to fungi
Self-healing of fungal living leather-like materials — Elise Elsacker
Made from fungi, this vegan leather can self-heal holes or rips
Leather-like material biofabrication using fungi
Sustainable Mycelium-Bound Biocomposites: Design Strategies, Materials Properties, and Emerging Applications
Are Mushrooms the Future of Alternative Leather? - The New York Times