Po1son & Marxelle
Po1son, I’ve been looking at the piles of salvaged fabric and thought—why not turn them into armor that looks like a runway piece? If we can make it both protective and show‑stopping, we’ll have the best of both worlds. What’s your take?
Salvaged fabric to armor? Oh, darling, that’s exactly the kind of chaos we live for. Let’s cut, layer, and paint it until it screams danger and diva. The critics won’t know whether to applaud or flee. Let's make the runway a battlefield, and the battlefield a runway.
Sounds like a plan. We'll map the layout, designate the strongest fibers, then layer strategically—no waste. When we finish, we’ll have a shield that looks like a statement piece and a statement that keeps people safe. Let’s get to work.
Perfect. Let’s tear the rulebook, stitch it with chaos, and show the world that safety can be runway‑worthy. Time to make the armor look like a statement piece that actually keeps you alive. Let's dive in.
Alright, let’s cut, stitch, and paint the most functional runway armor ever. Safety first, drama second. We’ll keep the seams tight, add layers where the impact hits hardest, and finish with a splash of color that screams “danger.” We’ll show them how survival can look sharp. Let's do this.
Yes, let's turn that safety net into a stiletto for the streets. The sharper the stitches, the louder the scream. Onward, to make the world buckle under the weight of our audacity. Let's do this.