Japanese style camouflage dress
A fashion designer in Japan has created a unique camouflage for women who want to get rid of the bad guys. It is a dress with a vending machine.
A fashion designer in Japan has created a unique camouflage for women who want to get rid of the bad guys. It is a dress with a vending machine.
Aya Tsukioka, 29, said her design has dual functionality, as well as a modest dress that can be changed to look like an automatic Coca Cola machine. She announced her product in Tokyo in the hopes of helping women reduce their concerns about criminals.
Tsukioka flipped a cloth over her dress revealing a large cloth with Coca-Cola's flaming red logo. By opening the fabric, the wearer will snuggle in an automatic box. Thanks to that, a "single-handedly" woman can hide the attackers.
She said her idea came from the Japanese ninja assassin, often wearing black robes to hide in the night. With children, she designed a backpack that could be turned into a tap on the street.
While Western women often prefer to participate in self-defense classes, Tsukioka says, "It's easier for a Japanese woman to get away from hiding.
MT
- Explain the color of the dress
- The US military tested the 'invisible' camouflage suit for snipers
- Production of ink-inspired camouflage material
- The ability of extreme animal camouflage
- Latest revealing about the dress that separates the net in the past 2 years
- Admire the extreme camouflage art of animals
- Stealthy assassins in nature
- Decode the disguise of fish
- Dinosaurs camouflage with skin color to deceive the enemy
- Why is the wedding dress often white and the transformation of a little-known wedding dress?
Công ty Mỹ phát triển tàu tốc độ 250km/h bay sát mặt nước New battery works even when folded or cut in half Building a battery that can generate electricity from the atmosphere on Mars Electrode technology helps produce hydrogen fuel from seawater Phone case with solar power generation function China develops super powerful acoustic laser technology Rotary engines help aircraft reach supersonic speeds Designing AI aircraft without pilots