BeigeJournal

2004-01-27 17:25 UTC

/books

Fashion Victim, by Michelle Lee

Fashion Victim : Our Love-Hate Relationship with Dressing, Shopping, and the Cost of Style, by Michelle Lee. Broadway, 2003.

It is kind of odd that I read this in the first place, being one of the less fashion conscious people around, but I found it very interesting.

The unifying theme of the book is that there is an ever quickening cycle of fashions going in and out of style, leading to pressure to manufacture and market garments faster and cheaper, and pressure on consumers to buy ever more clothing that will only be worn a few times. At one time styles took years to change, but now the hot new spring fashions can be completely out of date while it is still, technically, winter. This does not encourage the manufacture of high-quality, expensive clothing in nice, safe factories by well-paid workers. Nor does it leave much room for new ideas as everyone frantically emulates what everyone else is doing (and mocks anyone does anything original).

There is a lot written on fashion models, the relationships between celebrities and designers, fashion “journalism,” sweat shops, animal rights protests, and even dry cleaning.

The book is very readable, and even as someone with no clue to fashion, who buys clothes based on how I think they’d perform while cycling up a hill at 0°C (or 30°C), or while skiing, and who has never in his life had anything dry cleaned, I enjoyed reading it.

2004-01-27 14:48 UTC

/links

Ping-Pong ball avalanche

Boing Boing readers will have seen this link to a Japanese research group studying the physics of avalanches by dropping hundreds of thousands of ping-pong balls down the landing zone of a ski jump. They have a bunch of images on their web site as well as about a gigabyte of video. Most of the video is from camera angles that are more of scientific than aesthetic interest, but a few a just wonderful. In my opinion probably the best video, if you just want to enjoy the spectacle, is this one of 320,000 balls. All the videos have a computer-generated blue line marking the front of the avalanche.

This is a fantastic example of the ability of science to occasionally justify experiments that would be just wonderful to perform purely for fun.

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by Michael Pereckas

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