#Eclypse absorbent dressings
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Superabsorbent Dressing Market Industry Chain Structure, Key Players Profiles and Sales Data, 2023
The worldwide superabsorbent dressing market is projected to exhibit a healthy CAGR during the forecast period. Superabsorbent dressings are used in wound care and are made up of superabsorbent polymer. The superabsorbent supports clinician to cure extremely exuding wounds owing to their absorbing capacity compare to the traditional dressings.
Rising aged population with the chronic wounds such as pressure ulcer and leg ulcers, increasing research and development funding and high physiological and clinical effect of the superabsorbent dressing on wounds are anticipated to spur market growth in the forthcoming period. In addition, prevalence of trauma and accident cases, incidence of chronic diseases are also expected to propel the superabsorbent dressing market growth. However, stringent government regulation for the efficacy and safety of the superabsorbent dressings and a high price of wound management and the superabsorbent dressings will restrain the market growth in the years to come.
Key Players:
• Baxter International Inc • Johnson & Johnson • Medline Industries, Inc. • Smith & Nephew plc • BSN medical Inc.
Request free sample to get the complete list of companies @ https://www.millioninsights.com/industry-reports/superabsorbent-dressing-market/request-sample
Advancis Medical USA LLC launched one more novel superabsorbent dressing in their Eclypse range in June 2016. Eclypse Contour dressing is exclusively designed and guarantees negligible contact of wound and exudate management. ABIGO Medical broadcasted the addition of one more novel superabsorbent dressing in their Sorbact product range in February 2016. The Sorbact dressing avoids wound infection and lowers the bio problem. Mergers, acquisitions, expansions, and new product growth are some of the most extensively accepted policies by industry players, both small and large scale in the market.
Market Segment:
Key Regions • North America • Europe • Asia Pacific • Middle East & Africa • South America
Browse Related Category Reports @ https://industriesstudyreport.wordpress.com/
Key Questions Answered in this Report • What will the market size in the forecast period? • What are the key factors driving the global market? • What are the challenges to market growth? • Who are the key players in the industry? • What are the market opportunities and threats faced by the key players?
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The All-Weather Shoe You’ll Regret Underestimating
A month or two ago, I acquired two pairs of hulking, ‘90s-inspired Buffalo London x Opening Ceremony platform sneaker clogs. (No longer available, but similar styles here.) When I opened the box, I knew immediately that these shoes—one pair black, one white—were not at all what I wanted. What I’d been after, perhaps, was a celestial portal to an earlier time. It’s quite a lot to ask of footwear. In the flesh, these clodhoppers required both strength and shelf space. And yet, the trick about snagging $165 shoes for $50 is that they arrive on your doorstep final sale; no returns accepted.
Imagine my surprise when I reluctantly tied the multi-pound monstrosities on and realized that, not only are they a game-changing look, they’re positively practical. In Los Angeles, it’d been raining for weeks, shooting streams down the sidewalk; all of a sudden, instead of soaking my running shoes, I was walking on water. Well, not on water—through it. But the effect was the same; the platform sneaker’s rubber lug sole, like the indented gripper you might find on a hiking boot, doesn’t absorb water and the height puts the thick leather upper above the elements. Sure, platform sneakers would be ill-advised for the Iditarod, but they should carry you seamlessly through your commute.
Photography via IMAXTREE
The Spice Girls made platform sneakers an iconic pre-Y2K staple; models like Slick Woods and Gigi Hadid have made them new again. While the return of the platform sneaker has been widely noted, the shoe’s largely been covered as one more 90s accessory making a return visit. But unlike the silk slip dress or the crop top, platform sneakers help the wearer navigate winter and spring: mud, dampness, snow, and salted roads.
As it turns out, this was one of the platform’s founding features. For hundreds of years before pop stars dangled their platforms over couch arms on Instagram, women across the world have relied on the style to protect them from the elements. In Japan, geta—open-toed sandals with wooden platforms—help safeguard both the wearer and their outfit from dragging; better yet, a 2007 study by physical therapy researchers at the Prefectural University of Hiroshima found that geta could prevent foot disorders and falls.
It’s difficult to trace the first platform; for instance, even the ancient geta are said to have been inspired by clogs from China’s Hainan Province. Evidence of practical platforms has also been found in pre-modern Turkey, Greece, India, Spain, and elsewhere.
In Venice, the chopine or zoccoli—an oft-more-heavily-uppered shoe with a high platform—was all the rage from the 15th to 17thcenturies. This makes intuitive sense; Venice floods! And yet, the chopine could hardly be considered a weather shoe; many of the styles were so sumptuous and unwieldy that the wearer depended upon servants to navigate the streets in them.
Photography via IMAXTREE
Platforms have been around for ages, but the sneaker wasn’t invented until the late 19thcentury. While platforms and sneakers may seem an odd combination, at a certain level—let’s say three inches or less—it can be a generative match: function meets function.
Do platform sneakers have form? The mind, which abhors dissonance, can be driven to assign the object in question to one column: attractive, neutral, repellant. We might, if purely for the exercise, resist such categorization. The French have the term “jolie lade,” which translates directly to “pretty ugly,” but means more. If the platform sneaker lands somewhere, it may be close to there.
For a contemporary all-weather option, do not as I did: the platform sneaker clog in winter requires a thick sock and risks a twisted ankle. Best to find one with a full back. In the middle range, you might consider the Superga 2790, Topshop’s CHOMP Chunky Trainers, Jeffrey Campbell’s Top Peak 2 or one of Dolls Kill’s spirited offerings. (I’m partial to the Matrixx, which is Certainly A Look.) If you’re committed to the style and have money to spend, consider Stella McCartney’s all-in Eclypse or Versace’s Chain Reaction, which clocks in at a tame 1.8 inches. I couldn’t bear to wear either in the rain, but I’d smile if I saw it. Fun is part of this program.
1/10
Platform Sneakers
Eclypse Platform Sneakers
($765, Stella McCartney)
Buy Now
2/10
Platform Sneakers
Top Peak Sneaker
($130, Jeffrey Campbell)
Buy Now
3/10
Platform Sneakers
Chain Reaction Platform Sneaker
($1375, Versace)
Buy Now
4/10
Platform Sneakers
Track Neon Green
($329, Naked Wolfe)
Buy Now
5/10
Platform Sneakers
Strike 205 Sneaker
($960, Calvin Klein)
Buy Now
6/10
Platform Sneakers
White Patent Angel Sneakers
($470, Eytys)
Buy Now
7/10
Platform Sneakers
Silver Classic Leather Platform Sneakers
($429, Buffalo)
Buy Now
8/10
Platform Sneakers
Manhattan sneaker
($619, Acne Studios)
Buy Now
9/10
Platform Sneakers
Matrixx White Atlantis
($198, YRU)
Buy Now
10/10
Platform Sneakers
Fancy Lace-Up Sneaker
($1230, Fendi)
Buy Now
0 notes
Text
The All-Weather Shoe You’ll Regret Underestimating
A month or two ago, I acquired two pairs of hulking, ‘90s-inspired Buffalo London x Opening Ceremony platform sneaker clogs. (No longer available, but similar styles here.) When I opened the box, I knew immediately that these shoes—one pair black, one white—were not at all what I wanted. What I’d been after, perhaps, was a celestial portal to an earlier time. It’s quite a lot to ask of footwear. In the flesh, these clodhoppers required both strength and shelf space. And yet, the trick about snagging $165 shoes for $50 is that they arrive on your doorstep final sale; no returns accepted.
Imagine my surprise when I reluctantly tied the multi-pound monstrosities on and realized that, not only are they a game-changing look, they’re positively practical. In Los Angeles, it’d been raining for weeks, shooting streams down the sidewalk; all of a sudden, instead of soaking my running shoes, I was walking on water. Well, not on water—through it. But the effect was the same; the platform sneaker’s rubber lug sole, like the indented gripper you might find on a hiking boot, doesn’t absorb water and the height puts the thick leather upper above the elements. Sure, platform sneakers would be ill-advised for the Iditarod, but they should carry you seamlessly through your commute.
Photography via IMAXTREE
The Spice Girls made platform sneakers an iconic pre-Y2K staple; models like Slick Woods and Gigi Hadid have made them new again. While the return of the platform sneaker has been widely noted, the shoe’s largely been covered as one more 90s accessory making a return visit. But unlike the silk slip dress or the crop top, platform sneakers help the wearer navigate winter and spring: mud, dampness, snow, and salted roads.
As it turns out, this was one of the platform’s founding features. For hundreds of years before pop stars dangled their platforms over couch arms on Instagram, women across the world have relied on the style to protect them from the elements. In Japan, geta—open-toed sandals with wooden platforms—help safeguard both the wearer and their outfit from dragging; better yet, a 2007 study by physical therapy researchers at the Prefectural University of Hiroshima found that geta could prevent foot disorders and falls.
It’s difficult to trace the first platform; for instance, even the ancient geta are said to have been inspired by clogs from China’s Hainan Province. Evidence of practical platforms has also been found in pre-modern Turkey, Greece, India, Spain, and elsewhere.
In Venice, the chopine or zoccoli—an oft-more-heavily-uppered shoe with a high platform—was all the rage from the 15th to 17thcenturies. This makes intuitive sense; Venice floods! And yet, the chopine could hardly be considered a weather shoe; many of the styles were so sumptuous and unwieldy that the wearer depended upon servants to navigate the streets in them.
Photography via IMAXTREE
Platforms have been around for ages, but the sneaker wasn’t invented until the late 19thcentury. While platforms and sneakers may seem an odd combination, at a certain level—let’s say three inches or less—it can be a generative match: function meets function.
Do platform sneakers have form? The mind, which abhors dissonance, can be driven to assign the object in question to one column: attractive, neutral, repellant. We might, if purely for the exercise, resist such categorization. The French have the term “jolie lade,” which translates directly to “pretty ugly,” but means more. If the platform sneaker lands somewhere, it may be close to there.
For a contemporary all-weather option, do not as I did: the platform sneaker clog in winter requires a thick sock and risks a twisted ankle. Best to find one with a full back. In the middle range, you might consider the Superga 2790, Topshop’s CHOMP Chunky Trainers, Jeffrey Campbell’s Top Peak 2 or one of Dolls Kill’s spirited offerings. (I’m partial to the Matrixx, which is Certainly A Look.) If you’re committed to the style and have money to spend, consider Stella McCartney’s all-in Eclypse or Versace’s Chain Reaction, which clocks in at a tame 1.8 inches. I couldn’t bear to wear either in the rain, but I’d smile if I saw it. Fun is part of this program.
1/10
Platform Sneakers
Eclypse Platform Sneakers
($765, Stella McCartney)
Buy Now
2/10
Platform Sneakers
Top Peak Sneaker
($130, Jeffrey Campbell)
Buy Now
3/10
Platform Sneakers
Chain Reaction Platform Sneaker
($1375, Versace)
Buy Now
4/10
Platform Sneakers
Track Neon Green
($329, Naked Wolfe)
Buy Now
5/10
Platform Sneakers
Strike 205 Sneaker
($960, Calvin Klein)
Buy Now
6/10
Platform Sneakers
White Patent Angel Sneakers
($470, Eytys)
Buy Now
7/10
Platform Sneakers
Silver Classic Leather Platform Sneakers
($429, Buffalo)
Buy Now
8/10
Platform Sneakers
Manhattan sneaker
($619, Acne Studios)
Buy Now
9/10
Platform Sneakers
Matrixx White Atlantis
($198, YRU)
Buy Now
10/10
Platform Sneakers
Fancy Lace-Up Sneaker
($1230, Fendi)
Buy Now
The post The All-Weather Shoe You’ll Regret Underestimating appeared first on FASHION Magazine.
The All-Weather Shoe You’ll Regret Underestimating published first on https://borboletabags.tumblr.com/
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Elevate your wound care with Eclypse Adherent Dressings! 🩹 Featuring super absorbent properties and a gentle silicone contact layer, they offer advanced healing and reduced discomfort during dressing changes.
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