
AWH
19 Jan 2026
A Swedish factory prints solar panels on fabric—you can literally iron them onto your shirt.
A factory in Sweden now prints solar panels directly onto fabric rolls — thin enough to iron onto shirts.
Developed by Epishine, a Swedish startup, these ultra-light organic solar films are flexible, printable, and just microns thick. Instead of rigid panels, the factory uses roll-to-roll printing techniques — similar to newspaper printing — to embed photovoltaic layers onto soft, pliable materials. The result: solar fabric that bends, stretches, and even folds without losing power.
This innovation means wearable energy is no longer futuristic. These panels can power small devices like fitness trackers, sensors, or emergency lights — all from sunlight or indoor ambient light. In some prototypes, shirts and backpacks have already been embedded with panels that charge a phone passively during the day.
Unlike traditional silicon-based solar cells, these printed panels are made with organic materials and avoid toxic metals. They're lightweight, recyclable, and work well even in low light or cloudy conditions — perfect for Nordic countries.
While not meant (yet) for powering entire homes, the potential impact is big — imagine tents, awnings, or clothing becoming tiny personal power stations. Factories can now produce these in long fabric rolls, which are then cut and added to consumer products just like any other textile.
For sustainability advocates, this is a step toward energy everywhere — invisible, portable, and printed straight onto your daily life.
This article is from: Fact Fuel
