Fashion

Move
Display 0 | 5 | 10 | 15 Posts

Fashion Tips

Tags
Newest Post

Fashion History of Bbw and Plus Size Women

Fashion History of Bbw and Plus Size Women BBW is an acronym for “Big Beautiful Women.” In the past, a big beautiful body was associated with health and wealth. As a matter of fact, up until the 1960’s, BBW and plus size women were lauded for their beautiful physiques. The plus size woman appeared in [...]

What does punk fashion express about a person?

Question by Dieter Maggs: What does punk fashion express about a person? what statement are people trying to make when they dress or used to dress punk? What do you think? Answer below!

Go Punk At The Prom Night: Mix Animal Prints With Rhinestones And Lace

Go Punk At The Prom Night: Mix Animal Prints With Rhinestones And Lace Are you looking for a style that differs from the regular silky prom dresses that are all you can seem to find? If you are looking to have a more punk look for your night at the prom then there are definitely [...]

Punk And Rock And Roll Revisited

Punk And Rock And Roll Revisited Overview Music genre is a cycle. A fashion trend to some who go along with the times, the type of hype and promotions that go along with it are critical elements that contribute to making it one of the in things today. Along with the musical influences are the [...]

fashion tips please?

Question by scribella: fashion tips please? i have a plum shape body. I like to impress my bf. what should i wear that did not show much of my skin???? Give your answer to this question below!

7 Easy Maternity Fashion Tips

7 Easy Maternity Fashion Tips Pregnancy no longer means being confined to boring, plain clothes. Pregnant celebrities have been instrumental in changing popular views on maternity fashion in recent years. Designers like Liz Lange have made it their goal to give pregnant women the accessories they need to look great even with the swollen belly. [...]

The Right Nursing Scrub for Your Body Shape

The Right Nursing Scrub for Your Body Shape To look good should not be limited by the job you have. Simply put, it does not mean that because you are a nurse and you are always wearing lab coats or nursing scrubs disqualifies you for desiring to look good and emphasize your body with your [...]

Fashion Tips for Looking Best

Fashion Tips for Looking Best What is the difference between looking best and beautiful? It is, one who looks best is beautiful but one who is beautiful does not always look best. Certainly your next question is why? It is so because beautiful person if does not know how to carry them cannot look best [...]

The Arrival Of Punk Rock

The Arrival Of Punk Rock Punk is described in the dictionary as a ‘loud, fast-moving, and aggressive form of rock music, popular in the late 1970s and early 1980s’. So, with bands in the 90s and 00s still being labelled as punk, did it really end in the early 80s and if so, why did [...]

Jeans: Dedicated Followers of Fashion

Jeans: Dedicated Followers of Fashion A world famous UK clothing designer once said that fashion is a gentle progression of revisited ideas – and it’s difficult to argue with this sentiment. Whilst fashion by its very definition is something that is constantly changing, there are only so many changes clothing trends can go through before [...]

fashion tips!!!!!!!!!!?

Question by ♥Mustard♥: fashion tips!!!!!!!!!!? okay I’m a sort of pear shaped almost hour glass body type i have light brown layered shoulder length hair I’m going shopping for a nice dress and hand bag and things that suit my body! does anyone have some fashion tips that would suit my body type Give your [...]

High Fashion Brands List – E and F – Samta Khinda

High Fashion Brands List – E and F – Samta Khinda E Eley Kishimoto Eley Kishimoto, is a global British fashion and design company with headquarters in London, UK. Founded in the early 1990′s by Mark Eley and Wakako Kishimoto, the company is primarily known for its print design. The principle commercial activity of the [...]

Fashion tips and tricks at Bratz games

Fashion tips and tricks at Bratz games When a new season comes, it also means new fashion. However, if this is the rule, how would you know if the clothes that you are wearing on, are still included in the fashion list? Or does it mean that you have to overhaul your clothes in the [...]

1950′s fashion

some clip of clasic fashion from the 1950′s

What decade was known for punk fashion?

Question by Raven: What decade was known for punk fashion? This is for my fashion marketing class. Some people are saying its the 70′s and others say the 80′s. What do you think? Answer below!

SIXTH GRADE: Connor Anthony, Justin Baluyot, Payton Barr, Tess Barr, Abigail Bernhardt, Casey Boldt, Riley Chadwick, Savannah Clough, Charles Coffey, Dylan Davis, Kyla Davis, Cameron Doney, Christen Eshleman, Elizabeth Farrell, Victoria Garbesi, Stephen Gozzo, James Hagopian, Bailey Hakala, Eleanor Harrison, Andrew Hartley, Miranda Higgs, John Joseph, Joanna Lilly, Calvin Ludwig, Chloe Manuncia, Kevin Miller, Lauren Millette, Lance Miranda, Lucy Mulford, Olivia Murray, LeAn Nguyen, Corey Odom Jr., Kristen Palardy, Samantha Park, Austin Parker, Caroline Parsons, Zachary Pena, Connor Pennington, Tristana Sanders, Katherine Selley, Anna Settle, Perry Shaughnessy, Molly Stevenson, Emily Stolarczyk, Kirah Strandquist, Katherine Sweany, Marisa Switzman, Shannon Tait, Julia Tingle, Jorgine Vick, Brody Vinson, Isabella Wagner, Breanna Walker, Connor White, Hailey Wilberger, Zoie Wilson and Riley Yanchulis.

SEVENTH GRADE: James Baker, Madilyn Barnett, Caroline Baron, Amalie Bauman, Jessica Bennett, Erin Bialousz, Bridget Burkley, Matthew Burns, Matthew Caggiano, Michaela Cassidy, Peyton Cassidy, Julissa Chaidez, Samuel Connick, Owen Crandall, James Dant, Muriel Dawson, Benjamin Dean, Zachary Dissen, Hayden Donnelly, Alexandra Doxey, Caitlyn Dugan, Leah Dunn, Greta Easthom, Taylor Eling, Caroline Emery, Anya Fisher, Taylor Gates, Natalie Gibson, Allison Hannahs, Lauren Henderson, Katherine Hines, Isa Matilda Hoggard, Delaney Horbal, Graeme Joyce, Lillianne Keplinger, Susan Kim, Shannon Kramer, Samantha Leitholf, Regan Littell, Patrick Mahan, Andrew Mainhart, Douglas Mainhart, Sydney Martin, Mckinsey Middleton, Gina Mogelinski, William Pesnell, Jessica Ritenour, Alec Ruden, Kieran Schnell, Nina Shea, Tanya Smit, Kevin Smith, Jonah Stewart, Tatiana Tabacek, Kathryn Wesdyk, Sydney Wess, Claire Whitaker, Darcy Williams and Caroline Yearwood.

EIGHTH GRADE: Shannon Derksen, else Drooff, Evan Flack, Patrick Goetzke, Noah Green, Keonte' Henson, Nathan Johnson, Connor Joyce, Scott Lanoue, Kasie Lilly, Sarah Lucas, Joseph Mejia, Maia Sarwer, Emily Stephenson, David Thornton, Katherine Valett and Mariel White.

The following students made the honor roll for the fourth marking period:

SIXTH GRADE: Hayley Anna, Steven Baker, Samuel Barnes, Sofia Barnes Horowitz, Melissa Beer, Ena Belch, Zoe Bell, Amanda Benitez, Meghan Boosinger, Antonio Boston, Alexander Bravo, Courtney bright, Douglas Brough, Justin Bullock Costta, Richard Calabrese, Colleen Chapin, Sara Charles, Benjamin Coale, Justin Collinson, Amanda Craft, Christopher Cumberpatch, Stephen Cunningham, Jericho Dancel, Heather DeVal, Vincent Dominick, Audrey Donovan, Chey Dowell, Madeleine DuPaix, Alessandra Edwards, Leah Egelanian, Mateo Escobosa, Joseph Esterling III, Dominique Evans, Tiffany Fong, Alesandro Gargano, Ethan Garren, Matthew Geckle, Sarah Givens, Joshua Gonos, Austin Green, Conner Green, Gabriel Green, Paul Greene II, Brady Hall, John Harrell III, Alena Hartman, Theadora Haseldine, Eric Hertel, Evan Herzing, Eryka Hines, Lars Hoffman, Jillian Horaneck, Sean Hurley, Dalton Hutt,Terrell Johnson, Alexander Kille, Aspen King, Brendan Kiteley, Skipper Knappen, Tanner Kutchman, Owen Lamb, Alexander Lamp, William LaRussa, Sydnee Lipscomb, Dakoda Liverette, Hillary Maynard, Shelby McClung, Alexander McConkie, Taylor McDowell, Emily Merrill, Michael Meyers, Anthony Mirenzi, Katherine Moore, Danyelle Mozingo, John Murphy, Kyle Murphy, Joseph Nardick III, Adam Needle, Bethany Pavek, Daniel Pena, Sarah Pena, Hannah Poole, Alexandra Radovic, Arsham Rashidi, Bailey Ray, Rebecca Regan, Matthew Rillon, Valentina Ross, Jacob Ryan, Allison Sanders, Ashley Scardina, Matthew Schofield, Niko Smith, Katherine Somoza, Daniel Sork, Kaitlyn Stokes, Alexis Superczynski, Seth Superczynski, Sarah Sutherland, Julia Tasker, Zachary Tennant, John Torres, Joshua Tosoni, Ryan Toth, Mary Tsueda, Jacob Tubis, Uriel Vega, Jaqueline Velazquez, William Vining, Eric Waggoner, Carlie Rose Wand, Tyrone Washington, Alexa Waters, Lindsey Whitaker, mark Willard, Tyler Windebank, Joseph Wright and Ardalon Zahedi.

SEVENTH GRADE: Sean Baity, Krishia Balageas, Judy Barron, Zachary Barton, Madeline Becker, John Bee, Stephen Belt, Lauren Beyer, Alexandra Brown, Melissa Brown, Andrew Bush, Steven Byerly, Alyssa Caggiano, Christos Christopoulos, Destini Clarke, Ryne Clifton, Kevin Coffey, Colleen Coleman, Danielle Consugar, Ashley Cook, Brett Cooper, Paige Creek Abdullah, Christopher DeAngelo, Alexandra Delgado, Nicholas Deremer, Bryce Dickey, Hannah Dickinson, Joanie Dixon, Kennedy Dorsey, Hannah Earnest, Margaret Eldridge, Elizabeth Engleman, Cassidy Fisher, Elijah Franklin, Elizabeth French, Abraham Garcia, Michael Garrity, Jada George, Christian Hageman, Andrew Haislip, Garrett Hall, Jordan Hall, Shaun Halla, William Hankins, Sally Hannigan, Jessica Heckart, Paul Hicks, Andrew Hiltner, Courtney Hinkle, Jeffrey Horst, Caitlin Hurley, Kaitlin Ireland, William Johnson, Matthew Kamens, Michael Karanja, Alexander Kawecki, Amanda Kelley, Samantha Kennedy, Ross Kenworthy, Makayla Kilgore, Zachary Klar, Lauren Kromas, Chloe Kubit, Joshua Maisel, Antonio Martinez, Samantha McAllister, Katherine McCarren, Conner McClung, Hannah McGee, Samuel McKinney, Margaret McNulty, Alexander Morales, Abigail Nash, Colleen Naylor, Mariah Paddock, Aleczander Parsons, Matthew Pennington, Jeremy Peterson, Russell Platt, Daniel Policelli, Minna Qureshi, Andrew Reagan, Kaitlyn Rentfrow, Matthew Rezendes, Evan Richard, Lauren Robinson, John Rogers, Marisa Roper, Megan Ross, Collin Seydler, Nydia Shenton, Hannah Shevitz, Richard Shuett, Sean Stansbury, Randy Steen, Kent Stein, Kathryn Stevenson, Anna Thomas, Brooke Thomas, Justin Torrelli, Jacob Trently, Thomas Walker, Patrick Wicker, Damonte' Williams, Daniel Willis, Carter Wilson and Ally Wright.

EIGHTH GRADE: Connor Alwan, Rachel Armstrong, Emily Barton, Alden Bauman, Taylor Bayat, Rowan Belch, David Bernhardt, Jared Bishop, Richard Blanchard III, Nathan Boldyga, Margaret Brown, Jonathan Burger, Joseph Buto, Rachel Campbell, Sarah Campbell, William Chester Jr., Samantha Chittim, Carolyn Clements, Nicolas Cloud, Olivia Collins, Kathleen Crane, Breanna Crankfield, Logan Crum, Christopher Dell, Susan Doetsch, Aishani Eggenberger, Hailey Ensor, Bradley Felton, Graham Ferguson, Katharina Fernandez, Fred Fillah, Lyndsey Gardner, Charis Gozzo, Lindsay Gregoire, Catherine Griswold, Austin Gunther, Julia Harrison, Samantha Hasselhoff, Connor Heckert, James Henderson, Gabrielle Henson, Rachael Heron, Brendan Hertel, Cara Hiltabidle, Annalise Hiskey, Elizabeth Howell, Shelby Itzel, Vadim Jacobson, Laurence Jaross, Jackson Knappen, Gabrielle Lawinger, Michelle Lemperg, Lakerera little, Rebecca Luck, Benjamin Madison, Justin Maggard, Kristin Marsh, Kevin Marshall, Brandon Mathieu, Julia McAuliffe, Bradley McCready, Connor McLaughlin, Michael Meeks, Shaine Middleton, Emily Mintz, Abhaya Moturu, Christopher Murphy Jr., Nicholas Nagy, Joseph Nemarich, Ravyn Newcomb, Maria Olivares Colotl, Kerri Orgera, Bethany Pezza, Raichele Privette, Gabriella Radovic, Charles Regan, Julia Rey, Dawit Samson, Ti Jae Sellman, Patrick Shelby, Clarize Smit, Logan Smith, Vanessa Smith, Amanda Tennant, Colin Tillar, Austyn Vinson, Bryan Wand, Thomas Welch, Henry Welsh, Zachary Wilde, Casey Williams, Christopher Windebank and Nicholas Wright.

Honor Roll: Severn River Middle School

 

WELL-LOVED pair has yet to tie the knot, but their devotion to each other could put to shame those of long-married couples.

WP gives a new twist to the vow:

 

In Part 1 of this piece, which can be seen here, I discuss YouTube’s first five years and present number five in my the countdown of the YouTube clips I watched most. here, in reverse order, are the remaining four. – Scott Jordan Harris

4. Charlie Chaplin – Table Ballet

I’ve written about ‘the most exquisite sequence in cinema’ before and – as it deserves (far more than) a post to itself and as I’m sure I’ll pen more detailed discussions of it in future – I won’t write at length here. I’ll simply say that, save perhaps for the next video in my countdown, ‘The Dance of the Bread Rolls’ is the most beautiful few minutes of film I have seen.

Cinema has never known another talent, or another fame, like Charlie Chaplin’s and this scene is the purest expression of both his brilliance and his appeal. that it exists as a YouTube clip, endlessly and instantly re-watchable, is to me a perpetual joy. There is no bad movie or bad mood, stressful situation or mundane moment that it cannot alleviate. Famously, the projectionist who first screened it was so astounded by the sequence that, after it played through, he paused the film to rewind and replay it twice more. thanks to YouTube, I have imitated him hundreds of times.

3. Britney Spears – Baby one more Time – Official Video

I love Britney Spears and I don’t care what you think about that unless you are Britney Spears. Preceding, as it did, both the loss of my virginity and my discovery of gourmet jelly beans, the release of the video for ‘(Hit Me) …Baby one more Time’ – as we purists know it should be correctly called – was, at the time, the highlight of my teenage years. (And I have to be honest: it’s still one of the highlights of my life.)

I have friends, several of them also critics, who believe my critical faculties are somehow sent askew by the merest mention of Britney Spears. They’re all insane. I have entirely sensible opinions about Britney Spears. Crossroads is a greatest movie ever made and has an opening sequence that eclipses Eisenstein’s work in Battleship Potemkin’s Odessa Steps scene. Channel 4 was right to give Britney one of the spots in the top ten of its 50 Greatest Pop Videos; it was just wrong not to give her the other nine. Oh, and any one minute from the Oops … I did It Again album is better than all of Beethoven’s 9th. And The Ring Cycle.

put together.

2. Wales – Scotland 1972

Since my top two most-viewed videos are so similar, I’ll consider them together. as clips from rugby matches, they’d be out of place on a culture blog in just about any post except this one. They are, though, as inspirational and entertaining as any clip from any film, television programme or art installation we could ever embed. at least to me.

both are tries scored in amateur rugby matches in the early 1970s, and both star Gareth Edwards, brightest of that generation of geniuses who coalesced into the two greatest sports teams of the century: the 1971 and ’74 British Lions. (Not Bradman’s ‘Invincibles’; Pele’s thrice-world champion Brazil; or the US Olympic basketball squad fittingly named ‘The Dream Team’ had so many undeniable contenders for spots in their sport’s all-time team; overcame such odds; or created such beauty.)

I adore all sports, but only rugby union is sown into my soul. (As a Rugby native, I would have had to make an enormous effort for it not to be, but I never suffered an urge to rebel against the philosophy expressed on the games field or by the town centre’s statue of William Webb Ellis.) as I approach 28, and realise that for 12 years of my life I’ve been frequently housebound by physical disability, I’m beginning to suspect I’m not going to captain the British Lions to three successive Test series victories after all. But YouTube and a laptop allow me the vicarious sporting thrills that both feed my fantasies and dispel my disappointments.

YouTube gives instant and incessant access to just about every highlight reel from just about every sport; and, for me, the highest of all the highlights are these two. Edwards’s try against Scotland is as inspired as any other single act in sport and I can with utter honesty (and, I think, utter accuracy) describe ‘The Barbarian’s Try’ as the greatest player of the greatest sport starring in the greatest passage of play in the greatest match ever played. Frankly, I’m not sure ‘The Barbarians Try’ isn’t the high point of human endeavour.

1.    The Greatest Try of all Time, 1973 all Blacks vs. Barbarians

What makes these videos classic clips, rather than simply classic moments of sporting success, is the commentary. bill McLaren, that king of commentators, could make the most dire, rain-ruined match an adventure for the viewer simply by saying the first thoughts that occurred to him about it – but when he was allowed to describe rugby as it could be played, as it was played in the best moments by Blanco and Campese and JPR Williams and Willie-John McBride, his talent was fully revealed. In this first video, his voice, its rises and plunges, its sounds and its sentiments, are always equal to Edwards’s abilities – abilities that a lesser commentator would, quite understandably, have called indescribable.

It is not just McLaren’s voice that makes Wales – Scotland 1972 so special to me, but Edwards’s too. that interview at the end is charm itself. though Edwards had a talent that eclipses any in the money-rich modern game (there is no player today, anywhere in the world in either code of rugby, who merits mention alongside him), his is not the chest-thumping, inarticulate interview of a vacuous professional ruffian. His modesty amazes – but then he couldn’t be big-headed: he had to go into work on Monday.   The only time I can recall bill McLaren being overshadowed as a rugby commentator is on the final video here. Cliff Morgan (a late substitute for McLaren) describes the mounting surge of ‘The Barbarians Try’ so aptly it would thrill us even if we just heard it on the radio and never saw the accompanying images. His words are delivered like an incantation, like a spell summoning the magic in front of us. I could listen – and, of course, have listened – over and over to those delighted phrases:

The excited ejaculations of ‘Brilliant!’ as Phil Bennett sidesteps oncoming all Blacks in his own 22. The exact timing of those wonderfully descriptive but entirely unremarkable five words, ‘Tom David – the halfway line’. The irresistible climax: ‘Gareth Edwards – a dramatic start!’ And, unforgettably, the calm summation: ‘if the greatest writer of the written word…’

for a while, I harboured the ambition to learn Morgan’s commentary and perform it as a poem, but any effort to do either would have been unnecessary. It is already a poem, and it couldn’t be performed better than it is by Morgan. What’s more, I don’t need to learn it: YouTube has ensured I already know it by heart. I’m surprised this video, and the other four I’ve included here, aren’t burnt into my computer screen. They’re certainly burnt into my brain.

ShareThis

<a href="http://www.spectator.co.uk/touching-from-a-distance/6132783/a-dramatic-start-part-2.thtmltag:news.google.com,2005:cluster=http://www.spectator.co.uk/touching-from-a-distance/6132783/a-dramatic-start-part-2.thtmlFri, 09 Jul 2010 15:08:06 GMT 00:00″>A Dramatic Start – Part 2