It's also weird and creepy enough to have people stare more

Sep 28, 2015 14:38 GMT  ·  By

Usually, women bosoms are the subject of attention of many a male stare, and not rarely women tend to become nervous when confronted with the more or less intended male wandering eye.

To solve this issue once and for all, architect and designer Behnaz Farahi fashioned a top out of 3D printed plastic covered in monochromatic spikes, which has a camera and some facial tracking algorithms behind the spikes and it picks up every face that turns towards it.

However, the fun part is that it not only picks up faces but also has the spiky cover undulate and move, the spikes pointing their tips towards the faces the camera picks up. This way any male face that stares a bit too much at a woman's ample chest will be met with a sea of angry moving spikes, ready to sting the unwelcome breasts gazer.

Well, although the idea might seem honorable, the end result is weird and creepy at best. When faces go around the spiky top, the spikes move, rise and fall, continuously giving the apparel a very organic aspect, as if creatures are moving underneath the woman's top.

If this sort of motion was meant to keep male stares away, unfortunately, it didn't do much help, since the weird continuous spikey motion makes people look at it even more. Which kind of defeats its purpose.