Jeangenet123

SCP-3984

Object Class: Safe Euclid

Special Containment Procedures: No personnel lower than Clearance Level 2 is allowed contact with SCP-3984. Personnel are required to wear gloves and hazardous materials suits when handling SCP-3984 and are not to remove either items until testing is complete. When not in testing, SCP-3984 is to be kept in a darkened, climate-controlled room of 7.5 degrees Celsius. If any changes to these conditions are noticed, they are to be corrected immediately.
If SCP-3984 does make contact with human skin it its active state, the subject is to be restrained and the affected extremity is to be either amputated or have SCP-3984 cut from it with either a scalpel or a pair of surgical scissors, but this is generally not advised, as this will not only cut through SCP-3984, but also the affected skin. If a subject views SCP-3984 in its active state, the subject is to be immediately treated with Class-A amnestics and be closely monitored for 2-4 weeks for any other signs of exposure.
Currently, there is only one known instance of SCP-3984 in containment, with any and all possible instances being investigated by the Foundation.

Description: SCP-3984 refers to any instance of a fabric known as “DeLouge” in an unaltered state. Currently, SCP-3984 has 2, clearly-defined active states: Primary and Secondary. In a darkened setting, SCP-3984 will be inactive and will manifest as a blue-green fabric, but other colors have been observed as well. In a brightened setting, SCP-3984 will enter into the Primary state and take on a color outside of human perception and description. If a subject were to view SCP-3984 in its Primary state, the subject will be rendered unconscious in a time span of 45 minutes, catatonic in 60 minutes, and brain-dead in 120 minutes. If the subject is treated before the 45 minute mark, this color’s secondary effects will set in and last for 2-4 weeks after exposure. During this length of time, the subject will experience hallucinations, visions of [REDACTED], and ultimately, insanity. If the temperature around SCP-3984 rises above 7.5 degrees Celsius, it will enter the Secondary active state. If human contact is made with SCP-3984 in this state, it will adhere to the subject’s skin and begin constricting the subject. This process ends with the subject being fully covered and life functions ceasing due to either asphyxiation or circulation being restricted.
SCP-3984 came to the Foundation’s attention after a roll of it was discovered to have been marked for a Marshall, Carter and Dark, Ltd. auction. When it was displayed at the auction, it had entered into the Primary and Secondary active states and exposed the entire audience to its effects. Following this, SCP-3984 was transferred to the Foundation along with a handwritten letter detailing where it came from, who made it, and how to counter its effects.

Addendum 3984-A: After SCP-3984 was acquired and placed in containment, it had entered both active states simultaneously and caused a containment breach as well. Following this, it has been upgraded to Euclid class and will not respond to the counter methods outlined in the original letter.

Addendum 3984-B: Following the acquisition of SCP-3984, a group calling itself the “House of O’Hara” has repeatedly contacted the Foundation demanding the return of their “asset.”
When asked, they refer to it as “DeLouge” and it will “revolutionize fashion and place Versace and those other fossils of fashion out of business.” The House of O’Hara is now considered a Group of Interest following this connection.

Addendum 3984-C: The transcript of the letter that was sent with SCP-3984:

I don’t even care about the formalities right now, I want to make this short and sweet.
This fabric, DeLouge, is incredibly dangerous. I tried to tell them not to sell it, but they didn’t even listen. And now, 50 people are dead either by being smothered by it or going brain dead after looking at it. I was the only one who cared to read what the Factory and Are We Cool Yet? said about it. That it had to be kept in the dark, that it had to be kept below 7.5 degrees Celsius, and that working with it was impossible, but nobody listened. That stupid fashion designer Taylor O’Hara wants to make clothes out of it even though the Factory, the group who made it and made it to kill people, and Are We Cool Yet?, the ones who were dumb enough to crack open that dimensional hole and actually find that fucking, godforsaken color that was used to dye it, repeatedly told Taylor it’s dangerous and that it shouldn’t go on the market.
We got it through a liaison at the House of O’Hara and wanted to sell it to other people to keep it off the market, but I guess this massacre is what Taylor wanted in the end. It’s his fabric and nobody else can have it. Only he knows how to tame it, make it marketable, and clothe models in it, but all of his ideas are just pure speculation made on baseless conjecture found in the notes the Factory and Are We Cool Yet? had made during its discovery.
I warn you, the House of O’Hara is not what it seems. They say they are a fashion house, but in reality, they have connections to incredibly dangerous groups, like the aforementioned Factory and Are We Cool Yet?, but they also have dealt with us on occasion and are currently in talks with Dr. Wondertainment on a new fashion line based on the Little Misters series, but really, who knows if they’re telling the truth or not?
Godspeed,
Vivian Darkbloom.

All attempts to trace Vivian Darkbloom have proven futile, leading to the conclusion that the name is a pseudonym. Following their letter, subsequent investigations have revealed that Marshall, Carter and Dark Ltd. has cut all ties with the House of O’Hara, banned their members from attending House of O’Hara fashion shows, banned their members from wearing House of O’Hara clothing, and blacklisted anything the House produces from being put on auction.