Friday, August 27, 2021

Some People Raise Gardens I Raise Antennas Ham Radio Tee Shirts Black

Some People Raise Gardens I Raise Antennas Ham Radio Tee Shirts Black

This is one great way to put your personal stamp on a gift for someone special (or tailor it specifically to that someone special’s style). Start from scratch to make your own concert t-shirts, college t-shirts, funny t-shirts, gym t-shirts, mothers day t-shirt, fathers day shirts, valentines day shirts, birthday shirts or much more special occasions. Every order is reviewed by an expert artist, confirming that your design turns out exactly the way you envisioned it! Custom clothing is also an excellent gift idea for tradeshows, reunions or corporate gifts. If you love this shirt, please click on the link to buy it now: Left Right Left Right LRLR shirt, hoodie, long sleeve tee There’s no way of lumping Loewe, Balmain, Maison Margiela, Dior Men, and Gabriela Hearst into one group, but in this fraught and fragile time, each of them succeeded in evoking emotions, sharing beliefs, and bestowing those rarest of luxuries—the involuntary urge to smile and the opportunity to think and learn. Olivier Rousteing’s brilliant Balmain show on a boat, #balmainsurseine, is surely one of the treasured moments—of youthful energy, defiance, joy, public exhilaration—that will be looked back on again and again. It was a moment (in trivializing fashion-speak), but it’s also there to access permanently on Balmain’s Instagram as a record of how a young, Black French fashion designer raised spirits across the world with his seamless combination of high glam and clenched fists in the Parisian sunshine. The production had effervescence and thrill, showing Rousteing as a character in love with fashion and Paris, conveying him at the center of a generational gang celebrating its beauty, power, and talent. Cleverly, it also honored the heritage of Balmain by From a show on a boat to a show in a box: Jonathan Anderson’s ingenuity in packaging up his two shows in tactile paper form and having them sent to the doorsteps of editors delivered the surprise of something that had never been done before. First, his JW Anderson men’s and women’s resort collections came as a physical pack of information; then the bigger production of a hessian-covered file arrived from Loewe. This was something better than a goodie bag—it was stuff to study and absorb at a new pace. Anderson expanded the potential of how time, and how we occupy it, can lengthen and deepen with the use of social media. He ran a 24-hour series of Instagram Live talks and demonstrations by craftspeople, a sort of online festival in place of what would’ve been a runway show. It was a much richer intellectual and human experience, which of course is open-access globally. What makes pearls an especially useful part of a wardrobe is their flexibility. Neutral in color, so there are no color conflicts. Pearls glow in low light and shine in daylight. They dress up and down. They provide the all-important bit of white near the face that Coco Chanel decreed essential. They aren’t gaudy. And, in the end, they are part of her style and culture. Here I date myself—the preppy craze of the 1980s was basically just a popular adoption of the very traditional clothing styles worn by the English aristocracy.  Princess Beatrice, like so many spring 2020 brides, was subject to unfortunate timing: Her May 29 wedding in London was postponed indefinitely due to the coronavirus epidemic. Buckingham Palace stayed mum on any rescheduling details—would Beatrice and her fiancé, Edoardo “Edo” Mapelli Mozzi, ever have their reception in its gardens? With so much in flux, it was impossible to know. The couple didn’t wait to find out. This weekend, they wed in a small ceremony at the Royal Chapel of All Saints in Windsor. It was a small, socially distant ceremony, where, due to government regulations, not even a hymn was sung. The palace confirmed “close family” was in attendance, which included the bride’s grandparents, Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip. Experiencing fashion digitally isn’t new—Helmut Lang sent around a CD-ROM in 1998, Style.com was founded in 2000, and Alexander McQueen organized the first Livestream in 2009. But a digital-only Fashion Week without the chaos and community of physical events is new territory for the industry. Over the past two months, Vogue Runway has chronicled the many ways brands are reacting, from minimal look books, artful videos, and 12-hour streams to events. Now, as we turn our eye to September, where physical and digital will continue to merge in New York, London, Milan, and Paris, our cast of critics is shares the highs, lows, and challenges of a virtual Fashion Week. I said it before—it feels as if the presentation of fashion is undergoing as big a shift as Hollywood did when it went from silent movies to the talkies. One thing the pandemic has done is to force creative directors to be more creative about what they want to say about their work, and I’m all for that. With the whole (limited) playbook of runway gatherings and glamorous shoots suddenly torn up, fashion is suddenly crossing the threshold of a vast new era of communication, so that far more interesting, honest, in-depth, and delightful things have been happening than could ever be conveyed by models walking back and forth in front of a crowd of seated people. In-person, as part of a digital-native generation who only started to travel to Europe for the shows last year, I have grown accustomed to writing and thinking critically about things I have never seen in person. The Queen is most often seen wearing two or three rows of pearls. Since most pearls look-alike in photographs, it’s difficult to know if it is always the same two rows. The Queen has inherited many, many necklaces. Sometimes she wears several one-row necklaces together. All we can be sure of it’s that she’s almost certainly going to wear pearls! But that wasn’t the bride’s only something borrowed. Upon Beatrice’s head was the Queen Mary diamond fringe tiara. In 1919, Queen Mary asked the London jewelers House of Garrard to turn a necklace into a tiara. That necklace had a special significance: It had been gifted to Mary by Queen Victoria, who had received it as a wedding gift in 1893. Garrard made a diadem comprised of 47 tapered diamond bars. The design was influenced by a Russian kokoshnik, an ornate halo-shaped headdress worn by women of the country’s imperial court. Though, true to British sensibility, this one was much simpler than those donned by the recently overthrown Romanovs. In 1936, Queen Mary passed it on to Queen Elizabeth. Eleven years later, the Queen Mother lent it to her daughter, the then Princess Elizabeth, for a very special occasion: her wedding to Lieutenant Philip Mountbatten. It’s then that the tiara had its most famous and infamous moment. Before Elizabeth was due to walk down the aisle, it snapped. Luckily, a court jeweler quickly mended the rare piece. In 1973, the Queen Mother loaned the tiara for another royal wedding that of her granddaughter Princess Anne. An estimated 500 million people watched the Westminster Abbey ceremony to Mark Phillips. And, just like her mother before her, Queen Elizabeth extended the same offer to her own granddaughter, Princess Beatrice. Now, an emotional connection to five Windsor women lives on. You neglected a third possibility that may be more common than boxers or briefs…panties! Likely millions of men are wearing them simply for comfort. Support is incredible and they don’t have to look girly. It’s possible now they could be more popular than anything else. Mostly dresses; they’re typically thin with slimmer skirts so that they don’t make her look overly bulky. I’d guess sometimes she wears a skirt and blouse. And for some coats which she knows she’ll never take off during the engagement, she might only wear undergarments and a slip the same things she would wear under a normal dress, or undergarments and a skirt consider look book images, zoom in for detail shirt, and scour social media for breadcrumbs revealing inspirations, motives, and alternative views of the shows. One of the things I have enjoyed doing things digitally was being able to have longer, more in-depth conversations with the designers I cover on Zoom—the best ones edged towards the two-hour mark. And while I always prefer seeing fashion. Product detail for this product: Suitable for Women/Men/Girl/Boy, Fashion 3D digital print drawstring hoodies, long sleeve with big pocket front. It’s a good gift for birthday/Christmas and so on, The real color of the item may be slightly different from the pictures shown on website caused by many factors such as brightness of your monitor and light brightness, The print on the item might be slightly different from pictures for different batch productions, There may be 1-2 cm deviation in different sizes, locations, and stretch of fabrics. Size chart is for reference only, there may be a little difference with what you get. Material Type: 35% Cotton – 65% Polyester Soft material feels great on your skin and very light Features pronounced sleeve cuffs, prominent waistband hem and kangaroo pocket fringes Taped neck and shoulders for comfort and style Print: Dye-sublimation printing, colors won’t fade or peel Wash Care: Recommendation Wash it by hand in below 30-degree water, hang to dry in shade, prohibit bleaching, Low Iron if Necessary Vist our store at: Flickrtees This product belong to trung-cuong Some People Raise Gardens I Raise Antennas Ham Radio Tee Shirts Black This is one great way to put your personal stamp on a gift for someone special (or tailor it specifically to that someone special’s style). Start from scratch to make your own concert t-shirts, college t-shirts, funny t-shirts, gym t-shirts, mothers day t-shirt, fathers day shirts, valentines day shirts, birthday shirts or much more special occasions. Every order is reviewed by an expert artist, confirming that your design turns out exactly the way you envisioned it! Custom clothing is also an excellent gift idea for tradeshows, reunions or corporate gifts. If you love this shirt, please click on the link to buy it now: Left Right Left Right LRLR shirt, hoodie, long sleeve tee There’s no way of lumping Loewe, Balmain, Maison Margiela, Dior Men, and Gabriela Hearst into one group, but in this fraught and fragile time, each of them succeeded in evoking emotions, sharing beliefs, and bestowing those rarest of luxuries—the involuntary urge to smile and the opportunity to think and learn. Olivier Rousteing’s brilliant Balmain show on a boat, #balmainsurseine, is surely one of the treasured moments—of youthful energy, defiance, joy, public exhilaration—that will be looked back on again and again. It was a moment (in trivializing fashion-speak), but it’s also there to access permanently on Balmain’s Instagram as a record of how a young, Black French fashion designer raised spirits across the world with his seamless combination of high glam and clenched fists in the Parisian sunshine. The production had effervescence and thrill, showing Rousteing as a character in love with fashion and Paris, conveying him at the center of a generational gang celebrating its beauty, power, and talent. Cleverly, it also honored the heritage of Balmain by From a show on a boat to a show in a box: Jonathan Anderson’s ingenuity in packaging up his two shows in tactile paper form and having them sent to the doorsteps of editors delivered the surprise of something that had never been done before. First, his JW Anderson men’s and women’s resort collections came as a physical pack of information; then the bigger production of a hessian-covered file arrived from Loewe. This was something better than a goodie bag—it was stuff to study and absorb at a new pace. Anderson expanded the potential of how time, and how we occupy it, can lengthen and deepen with the use of social media. He ran a 24-hour series of Instagram Live talks and demonstrations by craftspeople, a sort of online festival in place of what would’ve been a runway show. It was a much richer intellectual and human experience, which of course is open-access globally. What makes pearls an especially useful part of a wardrobe is their flexibility. Neutral in color, so there are no color conflicts. Pearls glow in low light and shine in daylight. They dress up and down. They provide the all-important bit of white near the face that Coco Chanel decreed essential. They aren’t gaudy. And, in the end, they are part of her style and culture. Here I date myself—the preppy craze of the 1980s was basically just a popular adoption of the very traditional clothing styles worn by the English aristocracy.  Princess Beatrice, like so many spring 2020 brides, was subject to unfortunate timing: Her May 29 wedding in London was postponed indefinitely due to the coronavirus epidemic. Buckingham Palace stayed mum on any rescheduling details—would Beatrice and her fiancé, Edoardo “Edo” Mapelli Mozzi, ever have their reception in its gardens? With so much in flux, it was impossible to know. The couple didn’t wait to find out. This weekend, they wed in a small ceremony at the Royal Chapel of All Saints in Windsor. It was a small, socially distant ceremony, where, due to government regulations, not even a hymn was sung. The palace confirmed “close family” was in attendance, which included the bride’s grandparents, Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip. Experiencing fashion digitally isn’t new—Helmut Lang sent around a CD-ROM in 1998, Style.com was founded in 2000, and Alexander McQueen organized the first Livestream in 2009. But a digital-only Fashion Week without the chaos and community of physical events is new territory for the industry. Over the past two months, Vogue Runway has chronicled the many ways brands are reacting, from minimal look books, artful videos, and 12-hour streams to events. Now, as we turn our eye to September, where physical and digital will continue to merge in New York, London, Milan, and Paris, our cast of critics is shares the highs, lows, and challenges of a virtual Fashion Week. I said it before—it feels as if the presentation of fashion is undergoing as big a shift as Hollywood did when it went from silent movies to the talkies. One thing the pandemic has done is to force creative directors to be more creative about what they want to say about their work, and I’m all for that. With the whole (limited) playbook of runway gatherings and glamorous shoots suddenly torn up, fashion is suddenly crossing the threshold of a vast new era of communication, so that far more interesting, honest, in-depth, and delightful things have been happening than could ever be conveyed by models walking back and forth in front of a crowd of seated people. In-person, as part of a digital-native generation who only started to travel to Europe for the shows last year, I have grown accustomed to writing and thinking critically about things I have never seen in person. The Queen is most often seen wearing two or three rows of pearls. Since most pearls look-alike in photographs, it’s difficult to know if it is always the same two rows. The Queen has inherited many, many necklaces. Sometimes she wears several one-row necklaces together. All we can be sure of it’s that she’s almost certainly going to wear pearls! But that wasn’t the bride’s only something borrowed. Upon Beatrice’s head was the Queen Mary diamond fringe tiara. In 1919, Queen Mary asked the London jewelers House of Garrard to turn a necklace into a tiara. That necklace had a special significance: It had been gifted to Mary by Queen Victoria, who had received it as a wedding gift in 1893. Garrard made a diadem comprised of 47 tapered diamond bars. The design was influenced by a Russian kokoshnik, an ornate halo-shaped headdress worn by women of the country’s imperial court. Though, true to British sensibility, this one was much simpler than those donned by the recently overthrown Romanovs. In 1936, Queen Mary passed it on to Queen Elizabeth. Eleven years later, the Queen Mother lent it to her daughter, the then Princess Elizabeth, for a very special occasion: her wedding to Lieutenant Philip Mountbatten. It’s then that the tiara had its most famous and infamous moment. Before Elizabeth was due to walk down the aisle, it snapped. Luckily, a court jeweler quickly mended the rare piece. In 1973, the Queen Mother loaned the tiara for another royal wedding that of her granddaughter Princess Anne. An estimated 500 million people watched the Westminster Abbey ceremony to Mark Phillips. And, just like her mother before her, Queen Elizabeth extended the same offer to her own granddaughter, Princess Beatrice. Now, an emotional connection to five Windsor women lives on. You neglected a third possibility that may be more common than boxers or briefs…panties! Likely millions of men are wearing them simply for comfort. Support is incredible and they don’t have to look girly. It’s possible now they could be more popular than anything else. Mostly dresses; they’re typically thin with slimmer skirts so that they don’t make her look overly bulky. I’d guess sometimes she wears a skirt and blouse. And for some coats which she knows she’ll never take off during the engagement, she might only wear undergarments and a slip the same things she would wear under a normal dress, or undergarments and a skirt consider look book images, zoom in for detail shirt, and scour social media for breadcrumbs revealing inspirations, motives, and alternative views of the shows. One of the things I have enjoyed doing things digitally was being able to have longer, more in-depth conversations with the designers I cover on Zoom—the best ones edged towards the two-hour mark. And while I always prefer seeing fashion. Product detail for this product: Suitable for Women/Men/Girl/Boy, Fashion 3D digital print drawstring hoodies, long sleeve with big pocket front. It’s a good gift for birthday/Christmas and so on, The real color of the item may be slightly different from the pictures shown on website caused by many factors such as brightness of your monitor and light brightness, The print on the item might be slightly different from pictures for different batch productions, There may be 1-2 cm deviation in different sizes, locations, and stretch of fabrics. Size chart is for reference only, there may be a little difference with what you get. Material Type: 35% Cotton – 65% Polyester Soft material feels great on your skin and very light Features pronounced sleeve cuffs, prominent waistband hem and kangaroo pocket fringes Taped neck and shoulders for comfort and style Print: Dye-sublimation printing, colors won’t fade or peel Wash Care: Recommendation Wash it by hand in below 30-degree water, hang to dry in shade, prohibit bleaching, Low Iron if Necessary Vist our store at: Flickrtees This product belong to trung-cuong

Some People Raise Gardens I Raise Antennas Ham Radio Tee Shirts Black - from miaprints.co 1

Some People Raise Gardens I Raise Antennas Ham Radio Tee Shirts Black - from miaprints.co 1

Some People Raise Gardens I Raise Antennas Ham Radio Tee Shirts Black - from miaprints.co 2

Some People Raise Gardens I Raise Antennas Ham Radio Tee Shirts Black - from miaprints.co 2

Some People Raise Gardens I Raise Antennas Ham Radio Tee Shirts Black - from miaprints.co 3

Some People Raise Gardens I Raise Antennas Ham Radio Tee Shirts Black - from miaprints.co 3

Some People Raise Gardens I Raise Antennas Ham Radio Tee Shirts Black - from miaprints.co 4

Some People Raise Gardens I Raise Antennas Ham Radio Tee Shirts Black - from miaprints.co 4

This is one great way to put your personal stamp on a gift for someone special (or tailor it specifically to that someone special’s style). Start from scratch to make your own concert t-shirts, college t-shirts, funny t-shirts, gym t-shirts, mothers day t-shirt, fathers day shirts, valentines day shirts, birthday shirts or much more special occasions. Every order is reviewed by an expert artist, confirming that your design turns out exactly the way you envisioned it! Custom clothing is also an excellent gift idea for tradeshows, reunions or corporate gifts. If you love this shirt, please click on the link to buy it now: Left Right Left Right LRLR shirt, hoodie, long sleeve tee There’s no way of lumping Loewe, Balmain, Maison Margiela, Dior Men, and Gabriela Hearst into one group, but in this fraught and fragile time, each of them succeeded in evoking emotions, sharing beliefs, and bestowing those rarest of luxuries—the involuntary urge to smile and the opportunity to think and learn. Olivier Rousteing’s brilliant Balmain show on a boat, #balmainsurseine, is surely one of the treasured moments—of youthful energy, defiance, joy, public exhilaration—that will be looked back on again and again. It was a moment (in trivializing fashion-speak), but it’s also there to access permanently on Balmain’s Instagram as a record of how a young, Black French fashion designer raised spirits across the world with his seamless combination of high glam and clenched fists in the Parisian sunshine. The production had effervescence and thrill, showing Rousteing as a character in love with fashion and Paris, conveying him at the center of a generational gang celebrating its beauty, power, and talent. Cleverly, it also honored the heritage of Balmain by From a show on a boat to a show in a box: Jonathan Anderson’s ingenuity in packaging up his two shows in tactile paper form and having them sent to the doorsteps of editors delivered the surprise of something that had never been done before. First, his JW Anderson men’s and women’s resort collections came as a physical pack of information; then the bigger production of a hessian-covered file arrived from Loewe. This was something better than a goodie bag—it was stuff to study and absorb at a new pace. Anderson expanded the potential of how time, and how we occupy it, can lengthen and deepen with the use of social media. He ran a 24-hour series of Instagram Live talks and demonstrations by craftspeople, a sort of online festival in place of what would’ve been a runway show. It was a much richer intellectual and human experience, which of course is open-access globally. What makes pearls an especially useful part of a wardrobe is their flexibility. Neutral in color, so there are no color conflicts. Pearls glow in low light and shine in daylight. They dress up and down. They provide the all-important bit of white near the face that Coco Chanel decreed essential. They aren’t gaudy. And, in the end, they are part of her style and culture. Here I date myself—the preppy craze of the 1980s was basically just a popular adoption of the very traditional clothing styles worn by the English aristocracy.  Princess Beatrice, like so many spring 2020 brides, was subject to unfortunate timing: Her May 29 wedding in London was postponed indefinitely due to the coronavirus epidemic. Buckingham Palace stayed mum on any rescheduling details—would Beatrice and her fiancé, Edoardo “Edo” Mapelli Mozzi, ever have their reception in its gardens? With so much in flux, it was impossible to know. The couple didn’t wait to find out. This weekend, they wed in a small ceremony at the Royal Chapel of All Saints in Windsor. It was a small, socially distant ceremony, where, due to government regulations, not even a hymn was sung. The palace confirmed “close family” was in attendance, which included the bride’s grandparents, Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip. Experiencing fashion digitally isn’t new—Helmut Lang sent around a CD-ROM in 1998, Style.com was founded in 2000, and Alexander McQueen organized the first Livestream in 2009. But a digital-only Fashion Week without the chaos and community of physical events is new territory for the industry. Over the past two months, Vogue Runway has chronicled the many ways brands are reacting, from minimal look books, artful videos, and 12-hour streams to events. Now, as we turn our eye to September, where physical and digital will continue to merge in New York, London, Milan, and Paris, our cast of critics is shares the highs, lows, and challenges of a virtual Fashion Week. I said it before—it feels as if the presentation of fashion is undergoing as big a shift as Hollywood did when it went from silent movies to the talkies. One thing the pandemic has done is to force creative directors to be more creative about what they want to say about their work, and I’m all for that. With the whole (limited) playbook of runway gatherings and glamorous shoots suddenly torn up, fashion is suddenly crossing the threshold of a vast new era of communication, so that far more interesting, honest, in-depth, and delightful things have been happening than could ever be conveyed by models walking back and forth in front of a crowd of seated people. In-person, as part of a digital-native generation who only started to travel to Europe for the shows last year, I have grown accustomed to writing and thinking critically about things I have never seen in person. The Queen is most often seen wearing two or three rows of pearls. Since most pearls look-alike in photographs, it’s difficult to know if it is always the same two rows. The Queen has inherited many, many necklaces. Sometimes she wears several one-row necklaces together. All we can be sure of it’s that she’s almost certainly going to wear pearls! But that wasn’t the bride’s only something borrowed. Upon Beatrice’s head was the Queen Mary diamond fringe tiara. In 1919, Queen Mary asked the London jewelers House of Garrard to turn a necklace into a tiara. That necklace had a special significance: It had been gifted to Mary by Queen Victoria, who had received it as a wedding gift in 1893. Garrard made a diadem comprised of 47 tapered diamond bars. The design was influenced by a Russian kokoshnik, an ornate halo-shaped headdress worn by women of the country’s imperial court. Though, true to British sensibility, this one was much simpler than those donned by the recently overthrown Romanovs. In 1936, Queen Mary passed it on to Queen Elizabeth. Eleven years later, the Queen Mother lent it to her daughter, the then Princess Elizabeth, for a very special occasion: her wedding to Lieutenant Philip Mountbatten. It’s then that the tiara had its most famous and infamous moment. Before Elizabeth was due to walk down the aisle, it snapped. Luckily, a court jeweler quickly mended the rare piece. In 1973, the Queen Mother loaned the tiara for another royal wedding that of her granddaughter Princess Anne. An estimated 500 million people watched the Westminster Abbey ceremony to Mark Phillips. And, just like her mother before her, Queen Elizabeth extended the same offer to her own granddaughter, Princess Beatrice. Now, an emotional connection to five Windsor women lives on. You neglected a third possibility that may be more common than boxers or briefs…panties! Likely millions of men are wearing them simply for comfort. Support is incredible and they don’t have to look girly. It’s possible now they could be more popular than anything else. Mostly dresses; they’re typically thin with slimmer skirts so that they don’t make her look overly bulky. I’d guess sometimes she wears a skirt and blouse. And for some coats which she knows she’ll never take off during the engagement, she might only wear undergarments and a slip the same things she would wear under a normal dress, or undergarments and a skirt consider look book images, zoom in for detail shirt, and scour social media for breadcrumbs revealing inspirations, motives, and alternative views of the shows. One of the things I have enjoyed doing things digitally was being able to have longer, more in-depth conversations with the designers I cover on Zoom—the best ones edged towards the two-hour mark. And while I always prefer seeing fashion. Product detail for this product: Suitable for Women/Men/Girl/Boy, Fashion 3D digital print drawstring hoodies, long sleeve with big pocket front. It’s a good gift for birthday/Christmas and so on, The real color of the item may be slightly different from the pictures shown on website caused by many factors such as brightness of your monitor and light brightness, The print on the item might be slightly different from pictures for different batch productions, There may be 1-2 cm deviation in different sizes, locations, and stretch of fabrics. Size chart is for reference only, there may be a little difference with what you get. Material Type: 35% Cotton – 65% Polyester Soft material feels great on your skin and very light Features pronounced sleeve cuffs, prominent waistband hem and kangaroo pocket fringes Taped neck and shoulders for comfort and style Print: Dye-sublimation printing, colors won’t fade or peel Wash Care: Recommendation Wash it by hand in below 30-degree water, hang to dry in shade, prohibit bleaching, Low Iron if Necessary Vist our store at: Flickrtees This product belong to trung-cuong Some People Raise Gardens I Raise Antennas Ham Radio Tee Shirts Black This is one great way to put your personal stamp on a gift for someone special (or tailor it specifically to that someone special’s style). Start from scratch to make your own concert t-shirts, college t-shirts, funny t-shirts, gym t-shirts, mothers day t-shirt, fathers day shirts, valentines day shirts, birthday shirts or much more special occasions. Every order is reviewed by an expert artist, confirming that your design turns out exactly the way you envisioned it! Custom clothing is also an excellent gift idea for tradeshows, reunions or corporate gifts. If you love this shirt, please click on the link to buy it now: Left Right Left Right LRLR shirt, hoodie, long sleeve tee There’s no way of lumping Loewe, Balmain, Maison Margiela, Dior Men, and Gabriela Hearst into one group, but in this fraught and fragile time, each of them succeeded in evoking emotions, sharing beliefs, and bestowing those rarest of luxuries—the involuntary urge to smile and the opportunity to think and learn. Olivier Rousteing’s brilliant Balmain show on a boat, #balmainsurseine, is surely one of the treasured moments—of youthful energy, defiance, joy, public exhilaration—that will be looked back on again and again. It was a moment (in trivializing fashion-speak), but it’s also there to access permanently on Balmain’s Instagram as a record of how a young, Black French fashion designer raised spirits across the world with his seamless combination of high glam and clenched fists in the Parisian sunshine. The production had effervescence and thrill, showing Rousteing as a character in love with fashion and Paris, conveying him at the center of a generational gang celebrating its beauty, power, and talent. Cleverly, it also honored the heritage of Balmain by From a show on a boat to a show in a box: Jonathan Anderson’s ingenuity in packaging up his two shows in tactile paper form and having them sent to the doorsteps of editors delivered the surprise of something that had never been done before. First, his JW Anderson men’s and women’s resort collections came as a physical pack of information; then the bigger production of a hessian-covered file arrived from Loewe. This was something better than a goodie bag—it was stuff to study and absorb at a new pace. Anderson expanded the potential of how time, and how we occupy it, can lengthen and deepen with the use of social media. He ran a 24-hour series of Instagram Live talks and demonstrations by craftspeople, a sort of online festival in place of what would’ve been a runway show. It was a much richer intellectual and human experience, which of course is open-access globally. What makes pearls an especially useful part of a wardrobe is their flexibility. Neutral in color, so there are no color conflicts. Pearls glow in low light and shine in daylight. They dress up and down. They provide the all-important bit of white near the face that Coco Chanel decreed essential. They aren’t gaudy. And, in the end, they are part of her style and culture. Here I date myself—the preppy craze of the 1980s was basically just a popular adoption of the very traditional clothing styles worn by the English aristocracy.  Princess Beatrice, like so many spring 2020 brides, was subject to unfortunate timing: Her May 29 wedding in London was postponed indefinitely due to the coronavirus epidemic. Buckingham Palace stayed mum on any rescheduling details—would Beatrice and her fiancé, Edoardo “Edo” Mapelli Mozzi, ever have their reception in its gardens? With so much in flux, it was impossible to know. The couple didn’t wait to find out. This weekend, they wed in a small ceremony at the Royal Chapel of All Saints in Windsor. It was a small, socially distant ceremony, where, due to government regulations, not even a hymn was sung. The palace confirmed “close family” was in attendance, which included the bride’s grandparents, Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip. Experiencing fashion digitally isn’t new—Helmut Lang sent around a CD-ROM in 1998, Style.com was founded in 2000, and Alexander McQueen organized the first Livestream in 2009. But a digital-only Fashion Week without the chaos and community of physical events is new territory for the industry. Over the past two months, Vogue Runway has chronicled the many ways brands are reacting, from minimal look books, artful videos, and 12-hour streams to events. Now, as we turn our eye to September, where physical and digital will continue to merge in New York, London, Milan, and Paris, our cast of critics is shares the highs, lows, and challenges of a virtual Fashion Week. I said it before—it feels as if the presentation of fashion is undergoing as big a shift as Hollywood did when it went from silent movies to the talkies. One thing the pandemic has done is to force creative directors to be more creative about what they want to say about their work, and I’m all for that. With the whole (limited) playbook of runway gatherings and glamorous shoots suddenly torn up, fashion is suddenly crossing the threshold of a vast new era of communication, so that far more interesting, honest, in-depth, and delightful things have been happening than could ever be conveyed by models walking back and forth in front of a crowd of seated people. In-person, as part of a digital-native generation who only started to travel to Europe for the shows last year, I have grown accustomed to writing and thinking critically about things I have never seen in person. The Queen is most often seen wearing two or three rows of pearls. Since most pearls look-alike in photographs, it’s difficult to know if it is always the same two rows. The Queen has inherited many, many necklaces. Sometimes she wears several one-row necklaces together. All we can be sure of it’s that she’s almost certainly going to wear pearls! But that wasn’t the bride’s only something borrowed. Upon Beatrice’s head was the Queen Mary diamond fringe tiara. In 1919, Queen Mary asked the London jewelers House of Garrard to turn a necklace into a tiara. That necklace had a special significance: It had been gifted to Mary by Queen Victoria, who had received it as a wedding gift in 1893. Garrard made a diadem comprised of 47 tapered diamond bars. The design was influenced by a Russian kokoshnik, an ornate halo-shaped headdress worn by women of the country’s imperial court. Though, true to British sensibility, this one was much simpler than those donned by the recently overthrown Romanovs. In 1936, Queen Mary passed it on to Queen Elizabeth. Eleven years later, the Queen Mother lent it to her daughter, the then Princess Elizabeth, for a very special occasion: her wedding to Lieutenant Philip Mountbatten. It’s then that the tiara had its most famous and infamous moment. Before Elizabeth was due to walk down the aisle, it snapped. Luckily, a court jeweler quickly mended the rare piece. In 1973, the Queen Mother loaned the tiara for another royal wedding that of her granddaughter Princess Anne. An estimated 500 million people watched the Westminster Abbey ceremony to Mark Phillips. And, just like her mother before her, Queen Elizabeth extended the same offer to her own granddaughter, Princess Beatrice. Now, an emotional connection to five Windsor women lives on. You neglected a third possibility that may be more common than boxers or briefs…panties! Likely millions of men are wearing them simply for comfort. Support is incredible and they don’t have to look girly. It’s possible now they could be more popular than anything else. Mostly dresses; they’re typically thin with slimmer skirts so that they don’t make her look overly bulky. I’d guess sometimes she wears a skirt and blouse. And for some coats which she knows she’ll never take off during the engagement, she might only wear undergarments and a slip the same things she would wear under a normal dress, or undergarments and a skirt consider look book images, zoom in for detail shirt, and scour social media for breadcrumbs revealing inspirations, motives, and alternative views of the shows. One of the things I have enjoyed doing things digitally was being able to have longer, more in-depth conversations with the designers I cover on Zoom—the best ones edged towards the two-hour mark. And while I always prefer seeing fashion. Product detail for this product: Suitable for Women/Men/Girl/Boy, Fashion 3D digital print drawstring hoodies, long sleeve with big pocket front. It’s a good gift for birthday/Christmas and so on, The real color of the item may be slightly different from the pictures shown on website caused by many factors such as brightness of your monitor and light brightness, The print on the item might be slightly different from pictures for different batch productions, There may be 1-2 cm deviation in different sizes, locations, and stretch of fabrics. Size chart is for reference only, there may be a little difference with what you get. Material Type: 35% Cotton – 65% Polyester Soft material feels great on your skin and very light Features pronounced sleeve cuffs, prominent waistband hem and kangaroo pocket fringes Taped neck and shoulders for comfort and style Print: Dye-sublimation printing, colors won’t fade or peel Wash Care: Recommendation Wash it by hand in below 30-degree water, hang to dry in shade, prohibit bleaching, Low Iron if Necessary Vist our store at: Flickrtees This product belong to trung-cuong

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