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  • Modern fashion trends can be... weird.

  • I mean, skinny jeans can get a little uncomfortable, yes.

  • And maybe you have a friend who spends more time waxing his mustache and trimming his

  • beard than he does actually bathing himself.

  • But your fashion choices probably won’t kill, burn, or poison you.

  • However, people haven't always been so lucky.

  • Historically, some pretty dangerous clothing, cosmetics, and accessories have come in vogue,

  • endangering their wearers and makers alike.

  • It turns out there are just some things that you really don’t want to put on or in your

  • bodyeven if everyone else is doing it.

  • [INTRO]

  • Let’s start in the 1700s, when skirts were huge, cool guys wore wigs, and the hottest

  • color in Europe was green.

  • Specifically, two special pigments known as Scheele’s Green and Emerald Green.

  • In 1775, Swedish chemist Carl Wilhelm Scheele developed copper arsenate, an intense, yellow-green

  • pigment that was more brilliant and longer-lasting than any other green dye.

  • It was also a lot more toxic because it was made with arsenic.

  • German scientists soon improved on Scheele’s recipe by inventing an even more vivid green

  • dye -- copper acetoarsenite, commonly known as Emerald Green or Paris Green.

  • And society loved it. They used it to decorate everything from fake plants to ball gowns.

  • For fashionistas, the danger emerged when they’d sweat through their green gloves,

  • stockings, or socks, and transfer the toxins to their skin.

  • This caused chemical burns and open sores that absorbed even more of the poison.

  • A poisonous dust would also flake off of dyed objects, especially wallpapers or twirling

  • dresses as people danced at balls.

  • If you breathed in enough arsenic, the poisoning could cause vomiting, ulcers, nerve damage,

  • and eventually even death.

  • But arsenic pigments weren’t the only harmful ones. Some of the first synthetic dyes for

  • clothes and shoes could cause some pretty nasty health problems all on their own.

  • Aniline is a toxic organic compound that was first isolated from the indigo plant in the

  • 1820s.

  • When ingested, it interferes with blood cellsability to carry oxygen.

  • But in 1856, a chemistry student named William Henry Perkin was trying to use aniline to

  • create an antimalarial drug, when he accidentally created mauveine, a bright purple dye.

  • And soon, aniline dyes were all the rage. Their vibrant reds and deep blacks made natural

  • dyes look muted by comparison.

  • But I bet you can guess what happened next.

  • People who wore socks, gloves, and shirts colored with aniline, or shoes that had been

  • shined with an aniline-based polish, often suffered inflammatory skin reactions or headaches

  • and dizzinessbecause the dye was poisoning their blood.

  • Our next dangerous trend is more like a single horrible incident.

  • The culprit in this case was zinc chloride, which wasn’t used to dye fabrics, but it

  • was used in a coating that goes on wool to protect the fabric.

  • The compound had, and still has, lots of applications, because it’s both highly corrosive and highly

  • soluble in water.

  • But, one day, in December 1898, over 60 men were hired to clean the streets of Birmingham,

  • England after a snowstorm.

  • And they were all given new wool overcoats to keep them warm. Nice, right?

  • Well, most of the men ended up in the hospital, with large patches of destroyed skin around

  • their knees and wrists.

  • It turns out, their coats had been treated with an excess of zinc chloride, and when

  • they got wet from the snow, the toxin dripped onto their skin and caused serious chemical

  • burns.

  • Now, weve talked before about how asbestos has been misused over the ages.

  • But before anyone knew that asbestos equals dying, it was often worn for protection.

  • It can form lightweight fibers that can be woven into fabric, and it's famously flame

  • retardant.

  • So, from ancient Rome until at least the early 1980s, lots of dangerous, fire-related jobs

  • involved wearing uniforms with some amount of asbestos in them.

  • This was especially true for firefighters.

  • But, asbestos fibers are incredibly dangerous for human health.

  • Even when theyre woven into clothing, asbestos fibers can break off into tiny pieces that

  • can enter the lungs.

  • When too many fibers build up in your lungs, they cause irritation, inflammation, and scarring,

  • hindering the ability to absorb oxygen and making it hard to breathe.

  • Asbestos is also a carcinogen. People who are exposed to large amounts of it tend to

  • develop an otherwise-rare lung cancer called mesothelioma.

  • So even though we were using it as protection, asbestos was doing tremendous damage to our

  • bodies all along.

  • Another fabric that proved to be more harmful than we expected is viscose rayon.

  • In the late 1800s, chemists were looking for an artificial substitute for natural silk,

  • which, as sexy as it is, is incredibly time-consuming and expensive to produce.

  • In 1905, a British company began making a new material: They started with a sticky solution

  • of dissolved wood pulp, which contains lots of the natural plant polymer cellulose.

  • They aged it, dumped in some chemicals, and eventually extracted fibers that looked and

  • felt a lot like silk.

  • We know those fibers today as rayon.

  • One of the key steps in making viscose rayon involved a compound called carbon disulfide,

  • which is -- as you might guess-- highly toxic!

  • The fabric was safe to wear, but factory workers suffered.

  • Prolonged exposure to carbon disulfide can damage the cardiovascular and nervous systems.

  • This was linked to behavioral and health problems among workers ranging from bouts of mania

  • to strokes.

  • But even with these hazards, the popularity of artificial silk kept booming, well into

  • the 1900s.

  • So you might know the Mad Hatter from Lewis Carroll’s Alice in Wonderland -- kind of

  • crazy, drinks a lot of tea? Turns out, he might have some basis in reality.

  • The phrasemad as a hatterwas actually used to describe industrial hat-makers in

  • the mid-1800s, who were poisoned by mercury just by doing their jobs.

  • Most hats were felted, or made from the fur of small animals.

  • And to make felt, hatters used a process calledcarroting,” where they washed the pelts

  • in an orange solution containing mercury nitrate to separate the fur from the skin and shrink

  • it into a thin mat.

  • But the price they paid for dapper hats was mercury poisoning, which drastically harmed

  • hatterscentral nervous systems.

  • Mercurial disease, or Mad Hatter Disease, causes extreme emotional states plus physical

  • effects, like tremors and difficulty walking, speaking, and writing.

  • Since these hats didn’t poison the general public, the occupational hazards of being

  • a hatter persisted.

  • It took half a century or longer for countries to start banning the use of mercury in the

  • felt hat industry.

  • But what about cosmetics? One fashion trend that emerged in the 1500s was an obsession

  • with blindingly white skin.

  • In 16th and 17th-century England, women painted their faces with a whitening paste called

  • Venetian ceruse.

  • The pigment was made by mixing metallic lead with acetic acid -- also known as vinegar

  • -- in the presence of carbon dioxide to make lead carbonate, a powdery white lead.

  • This gave the illusion of a snow-white face, but over time, it would eat away at people’s

  • skin and caused scarring, headaches, nausea, muscle damage, baldness, and eventually early

  • death.

  • In 1898, Marie and Pierre Curie famously discovered radium, in the form of radium chloride, by

  • extracting it from the radioactive mineral called uraninite, or pitchblende.

  • After a couple decades of work, in 1910, they were able to isolate radium as a pure metal.

  • And this discovery not only thrilled scientific researchers, but it also caused a wave of

  • science-basedconsumer goods to sweep the world.

  • We are talking... radium makeup!

  • For example, the London-based Radior in 1917 used radium in products like face creams,

  • soaps, powders, and blush.

  • In the 1930s, ladies in Paris could wear Tho-Radia brand cosmetics, made from both thorium chloride

  • and radium bromide -- apparently, the more radioactive elements, the better.

  • Thankfully, most of these products contained such low amounts of radium that they were

  • pretty much harmless -- although it’s possible that customers suffered health effects later

  • in life.

  • Instead, the most serious poisoning cases were in the factories where radium products

  • were made.

  • Especially in theRadium Girls,” a group of about 4,000 factory workers in the United

  • States who painted watch faces with glowing paint and were pretty much bathed in radioactive

  • dust every day.

  • By the 1920s, they began to suffer from anemia, “radium jawand bone cancers.

  • Within about 20 years, largely because of their plight, radium-branded products had

  • all but disappeared from the market.

  • And people weren’t just putting toxins on their face for the sake of beauty. They also

  • put poison in their eyes to look more attractive.

  • The poison in question here is atropine, a compound derived from a poisonous plant called

  • Deadly Nightshade, or Atropa belladonna.

  • Belladonnameansbeautiful ladyin Italian, and it stems from a dangerous

  • beauty practice.

  • In some ancient cultures, women were said to put drops of juice from Deadly Nightshade

  • berries in their eyes to dilate, or enlarge, their pupils for that striking doe-eyed look.

  • Atropine is a smooth muscle relaxant, and your irises are full of smooth muscles that

  • expand and contract to let in different amounts of light.

  • By adding atropine to your eye, youre stopping your iris from being able to respond to light.

  • Putting lots of atropine in your eyes is a pretty horrible idea, because constantly dilated

  • eyes can expose your retinas to too much light, damaging the sensory tissues and affecting

  • your vision.

  • Plus, forcing your eye muscles into unnatural positions has been found to affect your internal

  • eye pressure and damage your optic nerve, which could lead to blindness.

  • Today, doctors still use atropine for its muscle relaxing and anesthetic effects, mainly

  • to dilate your pupils before eye exams.

  • They just use it in very small, controlled doses.

  • Finally, let’s go out with a bang with combustible fashion accessories!

  • Celluloid was the most successful early, synthetic plastic.

  • It was cheap, light, strong, easily molded to whatever shape you wanted.

  • So in the late 1800s and early 1900s, celluloid accessories were everywhere -- buttons, jewelry,

  • eyeglass frames, toys, and little hair combs that ladies would wear.

  • But, what people didn’t realize was that celluloid was manufactured using a compound

  • called cellulose nitrate.

  • Now, cellulose is that naturally-occurring plant polymer I mentioned earlier.

  • And when you expose cellulose, like in wood pulp or cotton, to nitric acid, it forms cellulose

  • nitrate -- which is highly flammable.

  • So flammable that it’s also called guncotton because of its tendency toexplode.

  • So with the rise in popularity of celluloid accessories came a wave of newspaper articles

  • about combs combusting in people’s hair, setting their whole body on fire, just from

  • the heat from a curling iron or a nearby electric lamp.

  • There were even reports of entire stores burning down because they stored their celluloid stuff

  • too close to windows and mirrors on hot summer days.

  • So, in comparison, those skinny jeans and mustache waxes don’t seem so bad now, do

  • they?

  • All told, it’s much safer to commit a fashion faux-pas than have your skin burned or your

  • hair catch on fire, all because of a trend.

  • Thanks for watching this SciShow List Show, and thanks especially to all of our patrons

  • on Patreon who make this show possible. If you want to help us make videos like this,

  • just go to patreon.com/scishow­. And don’t forget to go to youtube.com/scishow and subscribe!

  • When you look at a plant, your first thought probably is not "That thing's gonna kill me!"

  • But in some cases, that thing is gonna kill you. Sure, plants can be pretty or delicious,

  • but they also evolved with all kinds of compounds inside...

Modern fashion trends can be... weird.

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