CAPtured: The Wearable Reclaiming Digital Consent

Digital consent meets high design—CAPtured transforms privacy from paranoia into statement piece. Droga5 Dublin and Ancuta Sarca's AI-reactive headpiece deploys a veil when smartphones approach, making invisibility the ultimate flex.

Refusing the Frame

CAPtured uses computer vision to detect incoming cameras, triggering an instant veil across the wearer's face. It's not hiding—it's curating. In our perpetually documented reality, the piece reclaims agency over personal visibility, turning surveillance evasion into a deliberate aesthetic choice.

Athletic Futurism Coded

Rooted in Sarca's signature sportswear vocabulary, the headpiece balances technical precision with conceptual weight. It joins the lineage of protest garments where fabric becomes philosophy—a second skin that codes resistance directly into its architecture. Privacy isn't anti-social here; it's intentional.

Wearable Refusal

Beyond novelty tech, CAPtured positions consent as cultural currency. The device doesn't erase the wearer but amplifies their right to disengage, reframing visibility as dialogue rather than default. It's fashion that fights back—quietly radical, sharply executed.

The future of privacy isn't invisible—it's designed.

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