Denim, in American usage since the late eighteenth century, denotes a rugged
cotton twill textile, in which the weft passes under two (twi- "double") or more
warp fibers, producing the familiar diagonal ribbing identifiable on the reverse
of the fabric, which distinguishes denim from cotton duck. The word comes from
the name of a sturdy fabric called serge, originally made in Nimes, France, by
the Andre family. Originally called serge de Nimes, the name was soon shortened
to denim. Denim was traditionally colored blue with indigo dye to make blue
"jeans," though "jean" then denoted a different, lighter cotton textile; the
contemporary use of jean comes from the French word for Genoa, Italy (Gênes),
from which the first denim trousers were made.
A similarly woven traditional American cotton textile is the diagonal
warp-striped hickory cloth that was once associated with railroadmen's overalls,
in which blue or black contrasting with undyed white threads form the woven
pattern. Hickory cloth was characterized as being as rugged as hickory wood—not
to mention the fact that it was deemed to be worn mainly by "hicks"—although
neither may be the origin of that term [from a nickname for "Richard"]. Records
of a group of New Yorkers headed for the California gold fields in 1849 show
that they took along four "hickory shirts" apiece. Hickory cloth would later
furnish the material for some "fatigue" pantaloons and shirts in the American
Civil War.
The word dungarees, to identify heavy cotton pants such as overalls can be
traced to a thick cotton country-made cloth, Dongari Kapar, which was sold in
the quarter contiguous to the Dongari Killa, the fort of what was then known as
Bombay (Hobson Johnson Dictionary). The word entered English with just this
meaning in 1696 (OED). Dongri Fort was rebuilt in 1769 as Fort George, Bombay,
where the first cotton mill was established in 1854. Dyed in indigo, the
traditional cloth was used by Portuguese sailors and cut wide so that the legs
could be swiftly rolled up when necessary. Thus, dungarees have a separate
history.
Dry denim
Dry denim, as opposed to washed denim, is a denim fabric that is not washed
after being dyed during its production.
Most denim is washed after being crafted into an article of clothing in order to
make it softer and to eliminate any shrinkage which could cause an item to not
fit after the owner washes it. In addition to being washed, non-dry denim is
sometimes artificially "distressed" to achieve a worn-in look.
Much of the appeal of dry denim lies in the fact that with time the fabric will
fade in a manner similar to factory distressed denim. With dry denim, however,
such fading is affected by the body of the person who wears the jeans and the
activities of their daily life. This creates what many enthusiasts feel to be a
more natural, unique look than pre-distressed denim.
To facilitate the natural distressing process, some wearers of dry denim will
often abstain from washing their jeans for more than six months , though it is
not a necessity for fading.
Predominantly found in premium denim lines, dry denim represents a small niche
in the overall market.
Selvage denim
Selvage denim (sometimes called selvedge denim) is a type of denim which forms a
clean natural edge that does not unravel. It is commonly presented in the
unwashed or raw state. Typically, the selvage edges will be located along the
outseam of the pants, making it visible when cuffs are worn. Although selvage
denim is not completely synonymous with unwashed denim, the presence of selvage
typically implies that the denim used is a higher quality.
Designer jeans are high-fashion jeans that are marketed as status symbols. The
Nakash brothers (Joe, Ralph, and Avi) are generally credited with starting the
trend when they launched their Jordache line of jeans in 1978. Designer jeans
are cut for women and men and often worn skin-tight. They typically feature
prominently visible designer names or logos on the back pockets and on the right
front coin-pocket.
Late '70s to early '80s
During the early rise to prominence of designer jeans, in the late 1970s and
throughout the 1980s, it was fairly typical to see fashions for men follow those
for women, just as previously women had been the first to wear flared and
bell-bottomed trousers. For example, Jordache initially marketed their products
to women only, but soon followed with a line for men that was very similar in
overall appearance to the women's. Given the general tendency toward bagginess
in men's pants today, this male-after-female trend is less noticeable;
nevertheless, most jeans companies have offered low-rise cuts for men in recent
years.
Within a few years of the Jordache launch, dozens of other brands were on the
market; among them were:
* Sergio Valente
* Sassoon
* Gloria Vanderbilt
* Chic
* Calvin Klein
* Bonjour
* Guess?
* Dittos
* Joujou
Racy, suggestive advertisements promoted many of the brands.
Today
In the late 1980s, designer jeans lost popularity. In the early 2000s, they
started coming back into fashion, with specialty brands such as AG Jeans, Antik
Denim, Buffalo, Citizens of Humanity, Chip and Pepper, Diesel, Dorinha Jeans
Wear, Earnest Sewn, Energie, Evisu, G-Star, Goldsign, Hudson, Habitual, J Brand,
J & Company, James Jeans, Joe's Jeans, Ksubi, Lucky Brand Jeans, Mavi Jeans,
Miss Sixty, Nudie Jeans, Paige Premium Denim, Paper Denim & Cloth, People For
Peace, Replay,Rock and Republic, Seven for All Mankind, TAG, Taverniti So Jeans,
True Religion, and Yanuk, among others.
Designer jeans can be purchased at high-end department stores such as Nordstrom,
Bloomingdale's, Bergdorf Goodman, Saks Fifth Avenue, Barneys New York, and
Neiman Marcus, along with retailers like The Buckle, Urban Outfitters, and
Kitson Boutique. Select Macy's stores carry designer jeans. They typically cost
from around USD 200, mid-range, to more than USD 500 for higher-end denim.
A few of the original designer brands, namely Jordache, Calvin Klein, and
Dittos, are also coming back with the designs that made them popular.
* Calvin Klein reproduced/reissued their old design of the loop stitched pocket
as a throwback to the 1980s style and named them Omega jeans. The differences
are that the copper rivets at the back pocket were taken out, no double stitches
appear at the both side of the jeans, and the back pockets were redesigned with
a bit of slanting to the edge.
* In August 2007, Jordache completed a prominent advertising campaign featuring
supermodel Heidi Klum, photographed in the Chateau Marmont.
* Dittos jeans, in their trademark assortment of bright colors, are now
available at Saks Fifth Avenue.
Jeans are trousers traditionally made from denim, but may also be made from a
variety of fabrics not including corduroy. Originally intended for work, they
became popular among teenagers starting in the 1950s. Historic brands include
Levi's, Jordache, and Wrangler. Today jeans are a very popular form of casual
dress around the world and come many styles and colors, especially red.
History
The earliest known pre-cursor for jeans is the Indian export of a thick cotton
cloth, in the 16th century, known as dungaree. Dyed in indigo, it was sold near
the Dongarii Fort near Bombay. Sailors cut it to suit them.
Jeans fabric was first created in Chieri, a town near Turin (Italy), already in
1400s. It was sold through the harbour of Genoa, that was the capital of an
independent republic, and a naval power. The first were made for the Genoese
Navy because it required all-purpose pants for its sailors that could be worn
wet or dry, and whose legs could easily be rolled up to wear while swabbing the
deck. These jeans would be laundered by dragging them in large mesh nets behind
the ship, and the sea water would bleach them white. According to many people
the jeans name comes from blue de Genes, i.e. blue of Genoa.
Riveted jeans
In the 1850s Levi Strauss, a German dry goods merchant living in San Francisco,
was selling blue jeans under the "Levi's" name to the mining communities of
California. One of Strauss's customers was Jacob Davis, a tailor who frequently
purchased bolts of cloth from the Levi Strauss & Co wholesale house. After one
of Davis's customers kept purchasing cloth to reinforce torn pants, he had an
idea to use copper rivets to reinforce the points of strain, such as on the
pocket corners and at the base of the button fly. Davis did not have the
required money to purchase a patent, so he wrote to Strauss suggesting that they
both go into business together. After Strauss accepted Davis's offer, on May 20,
1873, the two men received patent #139,121, a patent for an "Improvement in
Fastening Pocket-Openings," from the United States Patent and Trademark Office.
Jeans in popular culture
Blue jeans
Enlarge picture
Copper rivets for reinforcing pockets are a characteristic feature of blue
jeans.
Initially, blue jeans were simply sturdy trousers worn by workers, especially in
the factories during World War II. During this period, men's jeans had the
zipper down the front, whereas women's jeans had the zipper down the right side.
By the 1960s, both men's and women's jeans had the zipper down the front. In the
United States during the 1950s, wearing of blue jeans by teenagers and young
adults became symbolic of mild protest against conformity. This was considered
by some older adults as disruptive; for example, some movie theaters and
restaurants refused to admit patrons who wore blue jeans. During the 1960s the
wearing of blue jeans became more acceptable and by the 1970s had become a
general fashion in the United States, at least for informal wear. Notably, in
the mid-1950s the denim and textiles industry was revolutionized by the
introduction of the stone-washing technique by GWG (Great Western Garment).
Entrepreneur, importer and noted eccentric, Donald Freeland of Edmonton,
Alberta, pioneered the method which helped to bring denim to a larger and more
versatile market. Denim suddenly became an attractive product for all age groups
and Freeland became one of the most important innovators in the history of denim
and denim products. It should be noted, also, that Freeland contributed to a
variety of other denim textile developments throughout his career with Great
Western Garments (GWG) Acceptance of jeans continued through the 1980s and 1990s
to the point where jeans are now a wardrobe staple, with the average North
American owning seven pairs .
Being imported American products, especially in the case of the Soviet Union
which restricted hard currency imports, jeans were somewhat expensive. In Spain
they are known as vaqueros or "cowboys" and in Chinese, jeans are known as
niuzaiku (SC: 牛仔裤), literally, "cowboy pants" (trousers), indicating their
association with the American West, cowboy culture, and outdoors work.
Jeans can be worn very loose in a manner that completely conceals the shape of
the wearer's lower body, or they can be snugly fitting and accentuate the body.
Historic photographs indicate that in the decades before they became a staple of
fashion, jeans generally fit quite loosely, much like a pair of bib overalls
without the bib. Indeed, until 1960, Levi Strauss denominated its flagship
product "waist overalls" rather than "jeans".
Blue jean insulation
Recycled blue jean is becoming a popular insulation material in the construction
of houses. Due to its low relative synthetic chemical composition and because it
is made of recycled materials, it is gaining prominence in green building
circles. Like conventional insulation, it moderates temperature and reduces
sound transfer between floors or rooms.
Fits
Fits of jeans are determined by current styles, sex, and by the manufacturer.
Here are some of the fits produced for jeans:
* Ankle jeans
* Baggy jeans
* Bell bottom/Flares
* Bootcut
* Boy cut or Boyfriend (for women)
* Carpenter jeans
* Classic
* Hip-huggers
* Loose jeans
* "Mom" jeans
* Original jeans
* Overall
* Phat pants
* Relaxed Fit
* Saggy
* Skinny jeans
* Slinkies
* Straight jeans
* Wide leg
* Jorts (Jean shorts)
Rises in jeans (the distance from the crotch to the waistband) range from
high-waisted to superlow-rise. Jeans for men usually have a longer rise and
zipper, whereas women have a shorter rise and zipper, although exceptions do
exist.
The word "selvage" comes from the phrase "self-edge" and denotes denim made on
old-style shuttle looms. These looms weave fabric with one continuous cross
thread (the weft) that is passed back and forth all the way down the length of
the bolt. As the weft loops back into the edge of the denim it creates this
“self-edge” or Selvage. Selvage is desirable because it can’t fray like lower
grade denims that have separate wefts which leave an open edge that must be
stitched. Shuttle looming is a more time-consuming weaving process that produces
denim of a tighter weave resulting in a heavier weight fabric that lasts.
Shuttle looms weave a more narrow piece of fabric, and thus a longer piece of
fabric is required to make a pair of jeans (approximately 3 yards). To maximize
yield, traditional jean makers use the fabric all the way to the selvage edge.
When the cuff is turned up the two selvage edges, where the denim is sewn
together, can be seen. The selvage edge is usually stiched with colored thread:
green, white, brown, yellow, and red (red is the most common). Fabric mills used
these colors to differentiate between fabrics.
Most selvage jeans today are dyed with synthetic indigo, but natural indigo dye
is available in smaller niche denim labels. Loop dying machines feed a rope of
cotton yarn through vats of indigo dye and then back out. The dye is allowed to
oxidize before the next dip. Multiple dips create a deep dark indigo blue.
In response to increased demand for jeans in the 1950's, American denim
manufacturers replaced the old shuttle style looms with modern projectile looms.
The new looms produced fabric faster and wider (60-inches or wider), yet lighter
and less durable. Synthetic dyeing techniques along with post-dye treatments
were introduced to control shrink and twist.
Raw selvage is material that has not been washed once undergoing the dying
process. It especially desirable because the material will fade in the creases
and folds of the jeans. This process is known as whiskering
Stone washing is a textiles manufacturing process typically utilized by the
fashion industry, in order to give a newly-assembled cloth garments a worn-out
appearance. Stone-washing also helps to increase the softness and flexibility of
otherwise stiff and rigid fabrics such as canvas and denim.
The process does literally use large stones to roughen up the fabric being
processed. The garmets are placed in a large horizontal industrial clothes
washer that is also filled with large rocks. As the wash cylinder rotates, the
cloth fibers are repeatedly pounded and beaten as the tumbling stones ride up
the paddles inside the drum and fall back down onto the fabric.
Stone washing is similar in operation to a ball mill, except that this is a wet
process.
Stonewashed jeans
Stonewashed jeans are jeans that have been treated to produce a faded, worn
appearance. This is usually accomplished either by washing the jeans with pumice
in a rotating drum, or by using chemicals to create the appearance without the
use of a rotating drum. Stonewashed jeans were a popular fashion trend in the
1990s
Mavi Jeans is a famous brand of denim jeans founded in 1991,headquartered in
Istanbul,Turkey.
Founded in Istanbul in 1991, Mavi Jeans designs a full collection of jeanswear,
for young women and men. Mavi sells 7.000.000 pairs of jeans a year and is now
sold at over 4,600 specialty stores, better department stores and specialty
chains stores in 50 countries including;
* North America
* Canada
* United States
* Europe
* Austria
* Germany
* England
* Denmark
* Italy
* France
* Netherlands
* Asia Pacific
* Australia
Mavi has flagship stores in New York, Vancouver, Istanbul, Berlin and Frankfurt.
There are 15 mavi showrooms worldwide located in Istanbul, New York, Vancouver,
Montreal, London, Frankfurt, Munich, Copenhagen, Brussels, Sydney, Zurich,
Paris, Toronto, Milano and Amsterdam.
Since being introduced in the US in 1996, Mavi has become one of the favorite
fitting denim brands among young women and men. Celebrity fans include Kate
Winslet, Juliette Lewis, Julia Stiles,Geri Halliwell, Annie Lennox, Sugababes,
Billy Zane, Hillary Duff, and Jason Biggs.
A fun fact is that the word "mavi" means "blue" in Turkish (the language of the
mother country of this denim company). Although, in Turkish, blue jeans are
called "blucin" (pronounced just like blue jean). So, basically, the company is
called "Blue Jeans" (Mavi Jeans).
Trousers (or pants in Canada, South Africa and the United States, and sometimes
called slacks or breeches — often pronounced /b??t??z/ — in more old-fashioned
usage) are an item of clothing worn on the lower part of the body, covering both
legs separately (rather than with cloth stretching across both as in skirts and
dresses). Historically, as for the West, trousers have been the standard
lower-body clothing item for males since the 16th century; by the late 20th
century, they had become extremely prevalent for females as well. Trousers are
worn at the hips or waist, and may be held up by their own fastenings, a belt,
or suspenders (braces). Leggings are form-fitting trousers of a clingy material,
often knitted cotton and lycra.
Terminology
In North America, pants is the general category term, and trousers refers, often
more formally, specifically to tailored garments with a waistband and
(typically) belt-loops and a fly-front. For instance, informal elastic-waist
knitted garments would never be called trousers in the U.S. Undergarments are
called underwear, underpants, or panties (the last are women's garments
specifically) to distinguish them from other pants that are worn on the outside.
The term drawers normally refers to undergarments, but in some dialects, may be
found as a synonym for "breeches", that is, trousers. In these dialects, the
term underdrawers is used for undergarments.
In Australia, the terms pants and trousers are synonymous.
In most parts of the United Kingdom and Ireland, trousers is the general
category term, and pants refers to underwear. In some parts of Scotland,
trousers are known as trews; taken from the early Middle English trouse, its
plural developed into trousers.
Characteristics
* Length: Trousers can cover the body from the waist all the way down to the top
of the foot, or stop almost anywhere from the upper thigh to the ankle. Short
trousers, or shorts, stop anywhere from the upper thigh to the knee. Capris are
trousers that end mid-calf or just below the calf, while plus-fours (British) or
knickers (US) end just below the knee.
* Children who have grown such that the trouser legs are not long enough, are
derisively said to be wearing "floods" or "highwaters" (a reference to hiked
trousers to keep them dry in flood times); in the UK they are said to be
'wearing their trousers at half-mast' (just as you might fly a flag at
half-staff), or simply wearing "half-masts" or "hoisties".
* Some trousers have detachable legs, usually with zippers, allowing them to be
worn as shorts.
* Pockets: There may be front pockets (usually inset) and back pockets (usually
patch). Men's trousers almost always have back pockets. Some trousers,
especially jeans, have a smaller fifth pocket inside the right front pocket.
This is variously called a "fob" (for a pocket watch) or "coin pocket" but it
may be used to stash other small items, such as a ring.
Men's pleated slacks (left) and "English drape" trousers (right), 1937, both
with fly-front and cuffs
* Turn-ups or cuffs (the bottom of the trouser leg folded up) may or may not be
present
* Pleats: vertical folds in the front for a looser fit
* Waist band: may be elasticized
* Fly: This allows easier dressing and, for men, urination without undressing.
The fly may further be distinguished by the closure mechanism: zipper or
buttons. There may not be a fly. Trousers wide enough to put on and taking off
without having a fly or opening at the side, have either an elastic or
drawstring waist or are kept in place with a belt or suspenders.
* Leg shape: The trouser legs may be straight, tapered to be snug around the
ankles, or widen at the ankles (Boot cut). The bottom may be flared, in which
case the trousers can be called "bell-bottoms" (or "flares" in the UK). Breeches
(commonly worn for horse riding) are either loose-fitting and then gathered
together just below the knees, or jodhpurs, formed and then gathered just below
the knees (similar to pantaloons), below which they are snug and form fitting
down to the ankles.
* Beltloops: These may or may not be present to support a belt which may be used
to adjust the tightness in the waist, and for decoration. Men can use
suspenders/braces to support trousers that are loose in the waist (though these
are largely out of favor).
Enlarge picture
Blue Jeans
History
Nomadic Eurasian horsemen/women such as the Iranian Scythians, along with
Achaemenid Persians were among the first to wear trousers, later introduced to
modern Europe via either the Hungarians or Ottoman Turks.
In ancient China, trousers were only worn by cavalry. According to tradition,
they were first introduced by King Wu of Zhao in 375 BC, who copied the custom
from non-Chinese horsemen on his northern border.
Trousers were introduced into Western European culture at several points in
history, but gained their current predominance only in the 16th century.
The word itself is of Gaelic origin, from the Middle Irish word "triubhas"
(close-fitting shorts).
Men's trousers
Trousers also trace their ancestry to the individual hose worn by men in the
15th century (which is why trousers are plural and not singular). The hose were
easy to make and fastened to a doublet at the top with ties called "points", but
as time went by, the two hose were joined, first in the back then across the
front, but still leaving a large opening for sanitary functions. Originally,
doublets came almost to the knees, effectively covering the private parts, but
as fashions changed and doublets became shorter, it became necessary for men to
cover their genitals with a codpiece.
By the end of the 16th century, the codpiece had been incorporated into the
hose, now usually called breeches, which were roughly knee-length and featured a
fly or fall front opening.
During the French Revolution, the male citizens of France adopted a
working-class costume including ankle-length trousers or pantaloons in place of
the aristocratic knee-breeches. This style was introduced to England in the
early 19th century, possibly by Beau Brummell, and supplanted breeches as
fashionable street wear by mid-century. Breeches survived into the 1940s as the
plus-fours or knickers worn for active sports and by young school-boys. Types of
breeches are still worn today by baseball and football players.
Sailors may have played a role in the dissemination of trousers as a fashion
around the world. In the 17th and 18th centuries, sailors wore baggy trousers
known as galligaskins. Sailors were also the first to wear jeans -- trousers
made of denim. These became more popular in the late 19th century in the
American West, because of their ruggedness and durability.
Women's trousers
Enlarge picture
Wigan pit brow girl.
Although trousers for women did not become fashion items until the later 20th
century, women began wearing men's trousers (suitably altered) for outdoor work
a hundred years earlier.
The Wigan pit brow girls scandalized Victorian society by wearing trousers for
their dangerous work in the coal mines. They wore skirts over their trousers and
rolled them up to their waist to keep them out of the way.
Women working the ranches of the 19th century American West also wore trousers
for riding, and in the early 20th century aviatrices and other working women
often wore trousers. Actresses Marlene Dietrich and Katharine Hepburn were often
photographed in trousers from the 1930s and helped make trousers acceptable for
women. During World War II, women working in factories and doing other forms of
"men's work" on war service wore trousers when the work demanded it, and in the
post-war era trousers became acceptable casual wear for gardening, the beach,
and other leisure pursuits.
In Britain during the Second World War, because of the rationing of clothing,
many women took to wearing their husbands' civilian clothes, including their
trousers, to work while their husbands were away in the armed forces. This was
partly because they were seen as practical garments of workwear, and partly to
allow women to keep their clothing allowance for other uses. As this practice of
wearing trousers became more widespread and as the men's clothes wore out,
replacements were needed, so that by the summer of 1944 it was reported that
sales of women's trousers were five times more than in the previous year.
In the 1960s, André Courrèges introduced long trousers for women as a fashion
item, leading to the era of the pantsuit and designer jeans and the gradual
eroding of the prohibitions against girls and women wearing trousers in schools,
the workplace, and fine restaurants.
Society
It is customary in the Western world for men to wear trousers and not skirts or
dresses. However, there are exceptions, such as the Scottish kilt and the Greek
foustanella, worn on ceremonial occasions, as well as robes or robe-like
clothing such as the cassocks, etc. of clergy and academic robes (both rarely
worn in daily use today).
Based on Deuteronomy 22:5 in the Bible, some groups believe that women should
not wear trousers, but only skirts and dresses.
Among certain groups, low-rise, baggy trousers exposing underwear are in
fashion, e.g. among skaters and in 1990s hip hop fashion.
Cut-offs are homemade shorts made by cutting the legs off trousers, usually
after holes have been worn in fabric around the knees. This extends the useful
life of the trousers. The remaining leg fabric may be hemmed or left to fray
after being cut.
Removing one's trousers in public is, in the main, considered taboo.
Law
In May 2004 in Louisiana, state legislator Derrick Shepherd proposed a bill that
would make it a crime to appear in public wearing trousers below the waist and
thereby exposing one's skin or "intimate clothing". The Louisiana bill was
retracted after negative public reaction.
In February 2005, Virginia legislators tried to pass a similar law that would
have made punishable by a $50 fine: "any person who, while in a public place,
intentionally wears and displays his below-waist undergarments, intended to
cover a person's intimate parts, in a lewd or indecent manner".
It is not clear whether, with the same coverage by the trousers, exposing
underwear was considered worse than exposing bare skin, or that the latter was
already covered by another law.
It passed in the Virginia House of Delegates. However, various criticisms to it
arose. For example, newspaper columnists and radio talk show hosts consistently
said that since most people that would be penalized under the law would be young
African-American men, the law would thus be a form of discrimination against
them. Virginia's state senators voted against passing the law.
A US mayor plans to pass a law banning the wearing of saggy trousers in his
Louisiana town. Carol Broussard, mayor of Delcambre, said that he will sign the
proposal unanimously passed by town councillors earlier this week. Wearing
trousers that reveal your underwear will lead to a $500 penalty and the risk of
six months in jail. "If you expose your private parts, you'll get a fine," said
Mr Broussard. He told the Associated Press that people wearing low-slung
trousers are "better off taking the pants off and wearing a dress." Ted Ayo,
town attorney, said that the new legislation would expand on existing indecent
exposure laws in Louisiana: "This is a new ordinance that deals specifically
with sagging pants. It's about showing off your underwear in public".
Mr Broussard has received local criticism for the ordinance, with some Delcambre
residents claiming that the proposal is racially motivated, due to the
popularity of "sagging pants" among black hip-hop fans.
However, he responded: "White people wear sagging pants, too."

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characters' skills.
Trik.com continues IJFG.com's
success, but Trik.com has more to offer. Trik Topsite can be found at
Trik Topsite; the TopSite is a great addition if you want to find the best
MMO RPG site(s) or raise your site in the rankings. Trik.com also has a
viciously competitive Arcade. If you want to be the #1 Arcade on Trik, then come
prove yourself at Trik.com arcade:
Trik arcade. Trik.com ?Trik.com/topsite ?Trik.com/forum/arcade.php
With the rising popularity of
commercial MMORPG games came the desire from ardent players of these games to
run their own servers beside the ones run by the game's creator. Since the
original server software is not usually available, the behavior of the server
has to be re-engineered. This can be done by analyzing the data stream with the
original server, or by disassembling and analyzing the client which is
available.
Ultima Online was one of the first
large MMORPGs. Due to its openness in implementation, server emulators arose
very quickly, even during the beta stage of development. The destination to
which the client connects was changeable by simply editing a text file. In beta
stage the client-server data stream was not encrypted yet. The term server
emulator became known through Ultima Online server reimplementation such as UOX,
which was the pioneer. Many forks and reimplementations followed UOX, because
its source code was released under the GNU General Public License relatively
early. RunUO is today the most widely used UO-server emulator. After RuneScape
implemented anti-cheating measures, many gamers left and started their own
private servers. The best place to discuss the private server is at
Trik- The Master of Private Server.
Another useful site is
Rune
Web ruwb.com . This site is about more serious RuneScape gold trading,
account exchange, gold for real life cash and many services. It includes tips on
how to avoid getting lured/scammed while using the marketplace. For programming,
visual basics, java, C/C++, scar and all other languages such as PHP, HTML, ASP,
Delphi. There are also sections for graphics talents, plus many cool videos and
fun stuff.
A defining moment in internet
gaming history was when a group of gamers called (hygo 7) decided to start an
ultimate game forum, which they named
hygo.com. It has the best financial backing, the friendliest game community,
and the highest quality of information. Currently Hygo.com has entered a new
phase...Hygo.com is offering the best private server game. With thousands of
members, Hygo.com is your next place to visit, as they have an amazing game with
a community and economy.
Hygo.com - The Online Adventure Game. is definitely one of the top sites you
want to join right now!
Ezud.com is now the powerhouse of
Runescape bugs and glitches. All and any rs2 bugs that anyone could ever
want are now found at the
Ezud forum. From a range of infinite running in runescape, to rs item
duping, ezud truly is an amazing glitching site.
Ezud has an excellent administration, and a great
moderating team. When everyone strives to make ezud.com a better place….it
becomes just that: a better place. Everyone contributes, and helps
Ezud strive.
So come on down to the new type of runescape 2 cheating:
runescape bugging. This is Ezud…this is
RuneScape 2 Bug Abuse.
Contact Information
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