It makes you appreciate the amount of effort that goes into getting everything just right in film.
redfloatplane 1 days ago [-]
I love it when this kind of thing surfaces on HN. It’s always so enjoyable to have the fractal nature of detail in the world shown to you. Really nice to read as well.
CyberDildonics 1 days ago [-]
I'm not sure it's a fractal nature of detail, it might just be a vague reference to an old movie.
redfloatplane 1 days ago [-]
Did you read the article? It's entirely about a concrete artefact from that old movie, down to the kind of tweed, now made by only six people in Scotland. I'm not sure how you come to this response.
CyberDildonics 1 days ago [-]
Is rare tweed fractal detail or is it just an oddball fact?
redfloatplane 1 days ago [-]
Maybe I meant that the amount of detail is sustained no matter how close you look? Maybe I was careless with my words? This is unnecessarily pedantic. I enjoyed the article. See you another time, CyberDildonics
saberience 22 hours ago [-]
Don't worry, I completely agree with your original comment and think CyberDildonics is being a bit of a dildo in this case...
CyberDildonics 15 hours ago [-]
I ask reasonable questions and because of that you insult me?
sdwr 1 days ago [-]
Yeah, fractal means you see the same structure, or an equally complex structure, at the smaller scale. This is just details, there's no sustained complexity
alienbaby 21 hours ago [-]
Fractal means that something has a fractional spatial dimension. Ie, a fractal plane filling curve would have a dimension somewhere between 1 and 2
sudb 1 days ago [-]
A tangential but interesting takeaway for me from this is that Harris Tweed was at some point in danger of dying out and that it was saved (?!) by now King Charles.
nntwozz 22 hours ago [-]
English royalty does this from time to time, through different means.
The Duke of Windsor (formerly Edward, Prince of Wales) is credited with popularizing and essentially "saving" or bringing the Fair Isle sweater to global fashion prominence in the 1920s.
vintagedave 24 hours ago [-]
Yes! I hadn't known about Prince Charles' involvement, but its popularity declined drastically in the 70s. Big revival now though.
The article veers into a loose advertisement for the designer selling replicas.
ink_13 22 hours ago [-]
Not so much replicas as the original maker selling additional editions
TBH if you're the kind of person who wants one might as well go to the source
alienbaby 20 hours ago [-]
I looked for this coat, or one like it not so long ago. I found Andrea Galer is making them tailored to order for £2-£3k . Something I can't afford unfortunately. If anyone knows if anything passably similar let me know!
balamatom 1 days ago [-]
Ah, la culture. It's the enemy's pareksalons this time!
toed 1 days ago [-]
Par excellence ?
balamatom 1 days ago [-]
No; like pantaloons but smart.
Rendered at 12:45:54 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time) with Vercel.
https://bid.candtauctions.co.uk/lot-details/index/catalog/11...
https://www.greatwarforum.org/topic/91425-scots-guards-unifo...
that "Scottish romanticism" all but evaporated by the turn of the century, so the "typo"?
Actual 1800s SG uniform
https://www.pinterest.com/pin/uniformi-militari--84443180375...
For comparison, the "timeless" Grenadier Guards frock
https://thelanesarmoury.co.uk/shop.php?code=21282
Bonus: Caspar David Friedrich (another appropriation :)
https://www.poetryfoundation.org/collections/152982/an-intro...
It makes you appreciate the amount of effort that goes into getting everything just right in film.
The Duke of Windsor (formerly Edward, Prince of Wales) is credited with popularizing and essentially "saving" or bringing the Fair Isle sweater to global fashion prominence in the 1920s.
Fascinating 'hobby drama' story about tweed here: https://www.reddit.com/r/HobbyDrama/comments/10nps05/fashion...
The article veers into a loose advertisement for the designer selling replicas.
TBH if you're the kind of person who wants one might as well go to the source