Editorial Note
About Room 3000
Room 3000 studies the space where fashion starts behaving like technology, and technology starts behaving like jewelry.
The site began from a narrow observation: mainstream technology reviews often focus on specs, while fashion coverage often focuses on trends. But many people are searching in the middle. They want to know whether open-ear audio can look like an ear cuff, whether a smart ring can sit beside silver jewelry, how Y3K differs from cyberpunk, and what makes a device feel wearable rather than merely useful.
This guide collects public references from fashion media, design writing, product documentation, third-party reviews, encyclopedic sources, and online subcultures. Those references are then reorganized into definitions, styling notes, object guides, gift contexts, and material studies.
It is not a lab, a trend agency, or a conventional shopping site. Think of it as a field notebook for future-facing personal style: part aesthetic wiki, part styling guide, part index of wearable objects.
Editorial Principles
- Explain the aesthetic before recommending the object.
- Separate official specifications from third-party opinions and user language.
- Write for real constraints: glasses, piercings, comfort, city walking, gifting, and daily wear.
- Prefer tradeoffs over hype.
- Use public sources as evidence, then add original structure and practical interpretation.