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two days ago
For future room travelers, a fashion designer has produced clothes.
Chandola Anurita, an Indian native, just worked as a developer on the Martian House Project in Bristol.
After noticing how her gown blew in the weather and wondering how weight may change clothes in space, Ms. Chandola was inspired to meet the project.
The only thing I knew was style, and since place had always been one of my emotions, she made the decision to combine the two.
At the TedX Bristol celebration on November 18 at the SS Great Britain, she spoke about her desire to create clothing for upcoming place travelers.
Ms. Chandola entered the fashion industry ten years ago, but she started to reconsider her career path after realizing the extent of harm that hard style is causing to the environment.
She said,” I had a great life, worked abroad, and worked with great brands, but then I realized how much damage a industry could do to the environment, so I decided I could no longer be enamored with it.”
She returned to the Royal College of Art in London to continue her studies there, where she started her studies and created a line of clothing intended for people to use on Mars.
Ms. Chandola was employed by Bristol’s M Shed Square in 2022 on a room job.
A design of a true Martian house was developed by the project team, and it was the first test of its kind outside of the US.
It comes as NASA unveiled a strategy to bring people to Mars by the 2030s.
Six experts lived in a roof with conditions eerily comparable to those on Mars for the duration of an experiment carried out by the space agency in 2015. That, they stayed for 80 time.
The researchers grew plants in the roof, but when they got a bunch of t-shirts to celebrate their accomplishments, they all died.
According to Ms. Chandola, the chemicals used in the colour of the clothes caused the plants to die.
Situations like that, she continued,” can teach us how to live on earth.”
She continued,” We should stop taking things for granted and use our resources wisely.”
Related Subjects
- Nasa
- Bristol
- Space
- Bristol