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Researchers at ETH Zurich have developed a soft skin for robotic hands that mimics the human sense of touch. Unlike current humanoid hand platforms, their soft skin provides ideal contact with objects and enhances grasp strength without limiting range of motion or speed. They also mounted pressure sensors under the skin, which can be used to classify objects through grasps. The researchers used a fast prototyping pipeline that involved multi-material 3D printing to optimize the design of the soft skin. In this video, we present our work on a soft skin for dexterous robotic hands performed in the Soft Robotics Lab of ETH Zurich. Human hands having flesh and highly innervated skin around the rigid bone structures help us in manipulating objects in daily life. Our soft skin provides ideal contact with a wide range of objects. Our sense of touch also enables us to manipulate without visual cues. Even though it has been shown that tactile sensing can enable similar capabilities for robotic hands, current humanoid hand platforms only mimic our kinematics but rarely provide soft skins and tactile sensing. In our work, we developed a soft, sensitized skin for the five robotic hands. Our main contributions are the following. We developed a method for fast prototyping and optimizing of a soft skin for our dexterous robotic hand, the five hand. We evaluate the skin through both quasi-static pulling tests and dynamic tests and show that it enhances grasp strength without limiting range of motion or speed. We then mount custom-made pressure sensors under the skin and show that we can utilize them in classifying objects through grasps. Our fast prototyping pipeline used multi-material 3D printing to optimize the parameters of our complex origami structure made of DragonSkin10. After 11 iterations, we arrived to a design that does not buckle or limit joint motion. The final versions of our finger designs were cast together with a palm in 3D-printed molds. After one hour of casting and four hours of cure time, we spent one hour demolding the glove using isopropanol.