What could possibly be more attractive than your clothes changing color every time you worked up a sweat? That was the hot look — literally — for millions of kids and teenagers in 1991, when ...
It was 1991: “Roseanne was on TV, Terminator 2 was on the big screen, Color Me Badd was on the radio and Hypercolor t-shirts were on the backs of millions of middle- and high school-age kids across ...
Readers of a certain age might remember Hypercolor or Hypergrafix clothing, the color-changing T-shirts produced by Generra that were all the rage in the early '90s. Now that the '90s are back, it's a ...
There's something counterintuitive about a clothing line for young adults that could exhibit outward signs of embarrassment. A shirt, for example, that changes color as a person sweats would seem like ...
The ’80s have been mined so thoroughly, so deeply, that it’s come to this: Hypercolor is back. Generra Sportswear created the craze in 1991, with heat-sensitive T-shirts that changed colors like magic ...
The debate over whether "the dress" is blue and black or white and gold now has a third answer: it can be both. At least it is when using a new color-changing fabric developed by a team from the ...
Hypercolor could be the next Nehru jacket or maybe just maybe the next denim. Like those innovations, the color-changing Hypercolor clothing has become the hot apparel item. The question is, what ...
THE ‘80s have been mined so thoroughly, so deeply, it’s come to this: Hypercolor is back. Generra Sportswear created the craze in ‘91, with heat-sensitive T-shirts that changed colors like magic.
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