by Florence1 August 02, 2023
Shit dude! My girlfriend gave me some cold top last night too! I'm still not sure how I feel about it...
by Omnipresent Sentinel January 20, 2016
Knifes or all other blade related stuff
Not "putting an iron to mouth" if you come for cringe stuff dumbass
Not "putting an iron to mouth" if you come for cringe stuff dumbass
Other guy:Get ready to eat cold steel.
You:NO WAI-
*pain cry*
*sirens*
Cop 1:the guy was stabbed 1 time and fell to his death, the murder weapon seems to be an Excalibur replica made out of steel.
Cop 2:hm, it seems to be a homicidal case
You:NO WAI-
*pain cry*
*sirens*
Cop 1:the guy was stabbed 1 time and fell to his death, the murder weapon seems to be an Excalibur replica made out of steel.
Cop 2:hm, it seems to be a homicidal case
by Player2170(roblox arsenal guy) December 30, 2019
by Happy feet 123 April 24, 2017
The Cold Curse Fabric, or The Cold Curse Material, is a cheap synthetic fabric material known as Acrylic. It's used widely in production of clothing to cut down on the cost, particularly in socks.
Acrylic earned this name due to its qualities of almost nonexistent generation and retention of warmth, poor insulation, as well as being conducive to sweatiness which, ironically enough, is less effectively evaporated the thicker the piece of Acrylic clothing is. These qualities of Acrylic practically ensure that, no matter how thick the Acrylic fabric is, the wearer will remain cold in lower temperatures.
Mixed-material clothing like wool-acrylic blend is sometimes advertised as being warm--warmer even than wool on its own--but that's false advertising. Whether 100%, 93%, or 30% Acrylic, the clothing made with it is completely unsuitable as a base layer for cold weather and prove poor in structural quality, with tears, shedding, and decomposition quick to appear.
Acrylic comes as last on a list of materials that keep the wearer warm after Down, Wool, Fleece, Cashmere, Polyester, Hemp, and Cotton.
Acrylic earned this name due to its qualities of almost nonexistent generation and retention of warmth, poor insulation, as well as being conducive to sweatiness which, ironically enough, is less effectively evaporated the thicker the piece of Acrylic clothing is. These qualities of Acrylic practically ensure that, no matter how thick the Acrylic fabric is, the wearer will remain cold in lower temperatures.
Mixed-material clothing like wool-acrylic blend is sometimes advertised as being warm--warmer even than wool on its own--but that's false advertising. Whether 100%, 93%, or 30% Acrylic, the clothing made with it is completely unsuitable as a base layer for cold weather and prove poor in structural quality, with tears, shedding, and decomposition quick to appear.
Acrylic comes as last on a list of materials that keep the wearer warm after Down, Wool, Fleece, Cashmere, Polyester, Hemp, and Cotton.
by otto88 December 10, 2024
by OneWordedGirl August 25, 2020
by Cold_Ankles (The Man Himself) September 25, 2009