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And in a fascinating display of starch and perspiration control, wrinkles never appeared on their shirts over the long hours of coverage, not even in high definition.
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Borrowing technology from NASA (with a dollop of Under Armour), the startup has designed a next-gen line of dress shirts, called "Apollo," that adapt to your body to control perspiration, reduce odor, stay wrinkle free and looking a badass.
Using some of the same technology found in NASA's space suits, the Boston-based startup developed a line of more "technologically-savvy," adaptive dress shirts that help control perspiration, reduce odor and wrinkling but don't make you look like a goon.
So, armed with some of the same technology NASA uses in its space suits, Ministry of Supply has developed a line of dress shirts — called "Apollo" — that adapt to your body to control perspiration, reduce odor, and make you feel like a million bucks.
As temperatures rose, the control subjects' perspiration rates increased proportionately; their core temperatures stayed constant.
Whenever I'm in a suit, it's Murphy's Law that outside it's 90 degrees, I'm dripping perspiration and air traffic control puts me in a holding pattern.
Non-skid gloves are beneficial for wheelchair users, because they keep the hands from slipping when operating the wheels or the hand controls and prevent perspiration.
Featuring a bikini-clad Pinder, the copy doles out innuendos like, "What will she do to make you lose control?", "Play with Lucy" and "Put premature perspiration to the test".
They possess biological temperature sensors that control heat production and switch on heat-loss mechanisms such as perspiration.
Autonomic impairment, or neuropathy, is a nervous system disorder affecting the control of involuntary functions, including, digestion, heart rate, blood pressure, and perspiration.
Blood donation, for example, is accompanied by a long list of usually minor adverse effects including nausea, light-headedness, faintness (Sojka and Sojka 2008), tachycardia, perspiration, fainting (Masser et al. 2008), hyperventilation, restlessness, nausea or vomiting, loss of bowel or bladder control, rigidity or tremors, cyanosis, and convulsions (France et al. 2005).
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com