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$199.00 $210.00
Inspired by female astronauts and the Epic Red Planet, this stunning statement dress will be a true showstopper. The print features superior high resolution NASA composite imagery of the surface of Mars and Earth in the far distance.
$189.00
Want to wear the latest Astronomy data #LikeABOSS?
This super-fashionably chic and professional turtleneck style sheath dress goes easily from day-to-(starry!) night, and is designed to look fabulous with your favorite blazer.
This print is of the largest-ever, three-dimensional map of distant galaxies done by the Sloan Digital Sky Survey and its Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (BOSS).
Each dot in the print indicates the position of a galaxy 6 billion years into the past! The image covers about 1/20th of the sky, a slice of the Universe 6 billion light-years wide, 4.5 billion light-years high, and 500 million light-years thick.
“We have spent a decade collecting measurements of 1.2 million galaxies over one quarter of the sky to map out the structure of the Universe over a volume of 650 cubic billion light years. This map has allowed us to make the best measurements yet of the effects of dark energy in the expansion of the Universe." - sdss.org
$199.00
Math + Fashion go quite well together! This mathematically fashionable dress is calculated to be fabulously figure flattering. The next number is found by adding up the two numbers before it. When we make squares with those widths, we get a nice spiral...It is that simple!
$179.00
Wear The Bone Matrix, one of the most stunning microscopy images. Lending itself naturally to a beautiful fabric print, this classic look embodies the feeling of strength. Image is human bone under a Scanning Electron Microscope.
$189.00
A true conversation starter!
The print on this dress is based on the art of the incredible science artist Ferruccio Tartuferi who drew what he saw through the microscope in 1887. In his diagram the horizontal and amacrine cells are clearly represented, as are the rods, cones and bipolar cells. This print is what eye neurons looks like at a cellular level.

$179.00
Want to wear the fabric of space time?
Celebrate the discovery of gravitational waves with this smart casual look. At first glance, you see plaid. Look a bit further and- surprise, you'll recognize the data from the LIGO detectors. It's a classic professional dress with an educational twist.
These plots show the signals of gravitational waves detected by the twin LIGO observatories at Livingston, Louisiana, and Hanford, Washington. The signals came from two merging black holes, each about 30 times the mass of our sun, lying 1.3 billion light-years away.
The top two plots show data received at Livingston and Hanford, along with the predicted shapes for the waveform. These predicted waveforms show what two merging black holes should look like according to the equations of Albert Einstein's general theory of relativity, along with the instrument's ever-present noise. Time is plotted on the X-axis and strain on the Y-axis. Strain represents the fractional amount by which distances are distorted.
As the plots reveal, the LIGO data very closely match Einstein's predictions.
Digitally Printed Material:
$299.00
The Best Selling Fibonacci Sequence Dress now comes in a Gala Maxi Gown.
A wonderful combination of femininity and STEM come together in this stunning showstopper!
Math + Fashion go quite well together! This mathematically fashionable dress is calculated to be fabulously figure flattering. The next number is found by adding up the two numbers before it. When we make squares with those widths, we get a nice spiral...It is that simple!