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  2. Disco pants - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disco_pants

    Pop celebrities such as Jessie J have started wearing them again, progressing from the 1970s there might be coming out with the jacket that go with the pants. [2] In 2008, American clothing manufacturer American Apparel reintroduced disco pants to the buying public, albeit in a version slightly different from the original from 30 years earlier ...

  3. Textile performance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Textile_performance

    Burberry advertisement for waterproof gabardine suit, 1908. The performance of textiles extends to functionality through comfort and protection. The term "comfort" (or "being comfortable") refers to a state of physical or psychological well-being—our perceptions, physiological, social, and psychological requirements are all part of it.

  4. Plastic clothing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plastic_clothing

    Plastic clothing has also become the subject of fetishistic interest, in a similar way to rubber clothing; see PVC clothing and PVC and rubber fetishism. There have also been fashion trends involving the wearing of plastic shopping and rubbish bags as clothing, [5] clothing made from plastic bags is also an element of trashion.

  5. PVC clothing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PVC_clothing

    PVC plastic is often called "vinyl" and this type of clothing is commonly known as vinyl clothing. [2] PVC is sometimes confused with the similarly shiny patent leather . The terms "PVC", "vinyl" and "PU" tend to be used interchangeably by retailers for clothing made from shiny plastic-coated fabrics.

  6. Clothing material - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clothing_material

    It can be assumed that the animal skins were used for clothing throughout the human history, although in the ways that are primitive when compared to the modern processing, the earliest known samples come from Ötzi the Iceman (late 4th millennium BC) with his goatskin clothes made from leather strips put together using sinews, bearskin hat, and shoes using the deerskin for the uppers and ...

  7. Polyester - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polyester

    A polyester shirt Close-up of a polyester shirt SEM picture of a bend in a high-surface area polyester fiber with a seven-lobed cross section A drop of water on a water resistant polyester Polyesters can contain one ester linkage per repeat unit of the polymer, as in polyhydroxyalkanoates like polylactic acid , or they may have two ester ...

  8. Clothing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clothing

    Clothing has significant social factors as well. Wearing clothes is a variable social norm. It may connote modesty. Being deprived of clothing in front of others may be embarrassing. In many parts of the world, not wearing clothes in public so that genitals, breast, or buttocks are visible could be considered indecent exposure.

  9. Clothing physiology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clothing_physiology

    A woman wearing sports bra and boyshorts, conventionally women's sportswear, but now worn as casuals or athleisure by women in the West. Clothing physiology is a branch of science that studies the interaction between clothing and the human body, with a particular focus on how clothing affects the physiological and psychological responses of individuals to different environmental conditions.