Drynamic Bag Creation

Cal Brackin
4 min readDec 5, 2020

Building the First Prototype

I’ve described this project in previous posts, but these illustrations give an overview of the concept

Early this year, I interviewed an industrial designer, Ryan Lee, to discuss his soft-product design expertise and career making backpacks for top outdoor gear companies. During his talk, he mentioned that some designers use chicken-wire to construct the shape of their bags in early-stage prototyping. I thought that was an excellent idea for the odd shape I was trying to construct.

Cutting the chicken wire and creating the shape

I purchased cheap cotton then cut, pinned, and marked it on the chicken wire shape to start understanding how fabric can be manipulated into this shape. I cut the fabric in ways that I thought would be easiest to understand and reconstruct. I drew out the dimensions and then traced the shapes onto my actual bag material.

The fabric I was using to construct the bag was Heat Sealable 200 Denier TPU in Marine Safety Orange. It is water-proof, resilient, and can be heat-welded together to create a super-strong bond. On one side, there is a synthetic woven fabric feel and on the other side is a soft-plastic that melts. Putting the soft plastic sides together and then using a heat-welding iron melts them together. My method was to line up the edges and weld strips underneath to seal them together.

Heat welding the fabric

I created one prototype and was satisfied with the shape and what I learned with the methods of heat welding. There were tiny holes at the corners and along some seams and I thought that I could fix those with another prototype. Additionally, with this shape, I could create a better pattern by strategically cutting it apart. I cut this bag, traced the updated pattern, and started making another prototype.

The first blank bag

In my next attempt, I used wider and longer continuous strips to heat weld the seams together. This helped me to limit holes between the seams and to better predict where holes might occur. I attached a D-ring to the front, a roll-top buckle system to the back, and the inflation tube to the top. I used an epoxy seam-sealer to stop up tiny holes and ensure it was totally airtight.

I abandoned the backpack straps and plastic window for the light because they aren’t necessary to test in this first prototype. When I see that the bag floats appropriately with weight then I will start testing those additional features.

Drynamic Bag

This project was humbling and challenging. The materials and tools took patience to understand and practice with. The shape was tricky to achieve and I still believe that mastering a CAD program to create this shape and “unroll it” into a pattern is the way to go.

For my next steps, I need to get this bag in the water with some gear and give it a test. Unfortunately, the lakes are frozen over and the CU pool has been shut down, so I’ll need to wait a bit. I can continue working on the website and thinking about other applications this bag could be used for as a product. I am thinking about using this bag for one purpose, but thinking about other uses could open up new markets.

For example, when backpacking I often run into rivers or lakes that I need to go around or find a bridge crossing because I can’t cross with a backpack. With this product, I could put my gear into it and swim across a lake or river. An alternative for river crossings is I could put the gear inside this bag, tie a rock to parachute line, heave the rock across, swim to the other side, then pull the gear across using the line.

--

--