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Fashion in the 90s united around a new standard, minimalism, and styles of stark simplicity became the vogue. Despite the best efforts of a few designers to keep the flag for pretty dresses flying, by the end of the decade the notion of ostentatious finery had virtually disappeared. As well as the styling of the product, its promotion in the media became crucial to its success and image. The financial pressures of the decade had a devastating effect on the development of new talent and lessened the autonomy enjoyed by more established designers. Fashion at the end of the 20th century tackled themes that fashion had not previously embraced. There was a dramatic move away from the sexy styles aimed at the glamorous femme fatale of the Eighties and many designers, taken with a vision of romantic poverty, adopted the style of the poverty-stricken waif, dressed in a stark, perversely sober palette, with a face devoid of make-up.


Clothes by ready-to-wear retailers such as The Gap, Banana Republic, and Eddie Bauer came to the forefront of fashion, managing to tap into the needs of women who simply wanted comfortable, wearable clothes. In America, three of the most influential fashion designers of the time were Michael Kors, Marc Jacobs, and Calvin Klein. Michael Kors set up his own business in 1980. However, it was not until the Nineties that the designer reached the peak of his popularity. His knowledge and consciousness of trends enabled him to produce simple well-cut garments, whose sophistication and elegance appealed to a whole new breed of wealthy American customers. One of the first fashion designers to anticipate the globalization of world markets, the already well-known designer Calvin Klein started to market his fashions, perfumes, and accessories not only right across the US, but also in Europe and Asia, achieving an unequaled success. Music was a prominent influence on popular and street fashion during the early- and mid-Nineties. Followers of hip hop adopted huge baggy jeans, similar to those worn in American prisons, with big patterned shirts and sneakers heavy black shoes. The sports label Nike had great popularity and materials such as Lycra and Spandex were increasingly used for sportswear. Increasing eco-awareness and animal rights made even top couture houses such as Chanel introduce fake fur and natural fibers into their collections. Th is ᠎data w as w​ri tten wi​th GSA᠎ C on tent​ Gen erator  D emov ersion.


The very extensive Hugo Academic. A list of books from every nation in the world. A mesmerizing collection of AI-generated plants. An incredibly well-designed website about house plants. A translated, annotated and remixed edition of Guy Debord’s The Society of the Spectacle. Talkyard - a community discussion platform to share links and resources, and comment on them. Linkding - an intuitive and beautiful bookmark service, with a nifty Firefox extension. Should help with keeping this page up to date too. Tania - a farm management journal for when we finally have our own farm/large garden. I, Librarian - a feature-packed service to organize research papers - multiple import options (DOI, PubMed ID, arXiv etc.), exportable annotations with colors and everything, tagging and organization into (also collaborative) projects, full text search, and export to citation managers (!). Wrote a Python library to generate composable, customizable 2D matplotlib visualizations of 3D protein structures, portein: Portraits of Proteins.


It uses some linear algebra from various StackOverflow answers to find the optimal 2D projection, so I don’t have to fiddle around trying to find the protein’s most flattering angle. Ported the popular recipe ingredients parser, ingreedy, to Rust at ingreedy-rs. AlphaFold and EMBL released the AlphaFold Protein Structure Database with over 350,000 predicted structures and Deals over a million coming up! "Sioyek is a PDF viewer designed for reading research papers and technical books." - this could be very useful. Oku is a really pretty GoodReads alternative. Multiverse - a microblogging platform with a unique expressive style. A newsletter on graph machine learning. It looks pretty polished - there are themes, different kinds of layouts, and a lot of ways to customize the output. Mini-Conf lets you set up your own full-fledged virtual academic conference! A set of color-blind friendly palettes, useful for plotting. Tiny tools for sparking creativity. Neuron and its spiritual successor Emanote look like brilliant systems for designing micro-blogs and project sites.


An engrossing article about cleaning up handwritten notes. The blog has other nice gems too. A new book and seminar about Geometric Deep Learning. Collaborative coding in JetBrains IDEs! A crazy project on 3D printing food dye into jello! Pangolin A Linux AMD laptop? PDF to get comments from collaborators etc. Has some great citation tools and beautydrops.shop neat interactive web versions of manuscripts. A Prolog inspired interactive fiction language called Dialog. Found GoatCounter a FOSS web analytics platform with zero cookies (no GDPR notice needed!). We’ve replaced Fathom analytics with this now. This post walks through variations of the Game of Life in Haskell. Adorable and information-packed comic series on Quantum computing. We just mentioned signed distance functions (SDFs) last month and this month came across sdf, a Python library for generating 3D meshes using SDFs. Pattern matching accepted for Python, woot! A textbook on Algorithms for Decision Making. Obsidian a customizable, extensible personal knowledge base system built on local Markdown files (also has a great Discord community).

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