Home > News > Monique Lhuillier: Cyber Cabaret
February 5th, 2008
Monique Lhuillier: Cyber Cabaret
Abstract:
Silver metallics, including a jacquard embossed with a deco pattern, looked like computer chips, leaving the impression that these were the kind of clothes that might populate a futuristic cyberpunk cabaret when everyone has finally dispensed with such gauche necessities as Blackberries or iPhones. Instead, they've simply become incorporated into their clothing, or perhaps their skin, giving new meaning to the word "implants," when nanotechnology is the new black.
Source:
fashionwiredaily.com
Bookmark:
News and information
Nano-needles for cells May 25th, 2013
How do cold ions slide May 24th, 2013
Gold nanocrystal vibration captured on billion-frames-per-second film May 23rd, 2013
Glowing Plant Releases Maker Kit, Enabling Anyone to Make a Glowing Plant at Home: Glowing Plant seeks funds via crowdfunding and raises almost $400,000 May 23rd, 2013
Interviews/Book Reviews/Essays/Reports/Podcasts/Journals
Heinrich Rohrer dies at 79; a father of nanotechnology: With IBM colleague Gerd Binnig, Rohrer invented the scanning tunneling microscope, which can show individual atoms on a surface and move them around May 23rd, 2013
IDTechEx launches online Market Intelligence Portal May 23rd, 2013
Whirlpools on the Nanoscale Could Multiply Magnetic Memory: At the Advanced Light Source, Berkeley Lab scientists join an international team to control spin orientation in magnetic nanodisks May 22nd, 2013
UofL scientists uncover how grapefruits provide a secret weapon in medical drug delivery May 22nd, 2013
Textiles/Clothing
Nanoadsorbent Synthesized to Remove Toxic Dyes from Textile Industry Wastewater May 16th, 2013
Miller Sports Aspen Brings European Fashion to Aspen With Designer Ski Wear with Goldwin and Toni Sailer May 3rd, 2013
Revolutionary new device joins world of smart electronics: Unique properties of graphene and graph Exeter combine to create a new flexible, transparent, photosensitive device April 19th, 2013
Peratech working on "Nose in clothes" and touch technology for wearable electronics: QTC sensors in clothes can monitor vital signs for illness and warn of exposure to dangerous chemicals March 18th, 2013