Alongside miniskirts, hot pants and tights, accessories, including Quant Afoot shoes, and make-up, iconic photographs will celebrate the marketing campaigns that helped promote Mary Quant’s photogenic looks and youthful brand.ĭame Mary Quant received the Companion of Honour Award in HM King Charles III’s first New Years Honours List. From Quant’s early years when the self-taught designer created garments overnight, to her designs being sold internationally, the exhibition reveals the real stories behind the myths and shows how Quant democratised fashion and empowered women through her determination, ingenuity and unique personal style, which she exported around the world.ĭisplays explore the evolution of the miniskirt, her novel use of modern materials such as PVC, and how her Ginger Group wholesale label was sold internationally from Glasgow’s House of Fraser to department stores in San Francisco and Sydney. This is the final chance to see the exhibition, which features over 100 garments, accessories, cosmetics and photographs drawn from the V&A’s extensive collections, Dame Mary Quant’s archive and, following a public appeal, many private collections.įocusing on the years from 1955, when Quant opened her experimental boutique Bazaaron the King’s Road, Chelsea, through the ‘Swinging Sixties’ when Mary Quant was awarded her OBE, to 1975, it showcases the period when Quant revolutionised the high street with her subversive and playful designs for a younger generation. The V&A’s major retrospective of Dame Mary Quant, one of Britain’s most iconic and celebrated fashion designers, is now on at Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum until 22 October 2023, after returning from international tour. Tickets: Adults £8.50, Concession £6.50, Under 12s FREE Quant revolutionised the high street with her subversive and playful designs for a younger generation © Ronald Dumont/Daily Express/Hulton Archive/Getty Images Now on until 22 October 2023 There's the Discord as well, where you can have chat with dev team in realtime.Mary Quant and Vidal Sassoon, 1964. You can always create a GitHub account, there you will be able to submit bugs, suggestions, and even change the code via pull request. The project is open for criticism, and we love it, currently there's really few feedbacks and zero reviews in English, so i incentive everyone to check and test this project. The 5V regulator has a current max of 1A MAX on the USB output (Vbus), won't necessarily will drain that, but if need, it's there's for usage.Īgain, USB2DB15 aims jamma and Neogeo, the DB15 port won't give any power output, there's only INPUT, i know that the out serial DB 15 on computers has diferente pinouts, so i recommend you don't try it. The datasheet says that the AVR can be used between 2.7V till 5.5V and 16MHz "safe" operational is around 3.7V, that's why you won't get any issue with 3.3V, why we engineers work on a limit calculation, for USB2DB15 we are safe. The AVR is well used for more than a decade at 3.3V and 16MHz, 8MHz was tested and turn the code to run much slower with some functions. I'm not criticizing you, I though the people who did the design had already though about the possible problems and could answer some questions or explain the design choices, that's all.Ĭlick to expand.This project is made aimed on jamma PCBs and Neogeo, anything you use out of that is your own risk. I don't have a GitHub account so can't do what you suggested. It's possible that the devices will work, because nobody knows the real specs of the Atmel 328 clones that are sold on Ali/Ebay.īut is it reliable? Wouldn't be better to use 8Mhz? On the Atmega 328/P Datasheet Summary on page 2 it says: That amount by itself (Plus there's the USB controller) is unsafe for some (old) computers joystick ports, so for chaining adapters an external power source will be needed.Īlso running a 328P/16Mhz device at 3.3V is out of spec. I did a quick check with the datasheets of the parts: The USB Host + Arduino Max power consumption is ~ 65mA. Yeah, thats the reason I'm asking questions here, basically I did a Google search and found conflicting info.īased on your reply I guess that connecting the other I/O lines won't cause problems.
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