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新的智能手机应用程序的份额婚礼回忆

华盛顿杰西卡,一个移动登入程式设计师






 

羽毛是在夏天和秋天的时尚 

 



 

时尚在今年夏天已经基本鸟。


羽毛已经看到一切从耳环和项链,头巾和腰带。基于一些设计师在2011年秋季跑道提出今年早些时候,羽毛将结转到较凉的月份,装饰一些裙子,花式鸡尾酒礼服和帽子。(如何穿的趋势在这里。) 


发型师也都是名人,如柯$公顷和史蒂文Tyler后趋势开始运动的羽毛头发扩展。


在地铁伯明翰地区的几个美容院提供羽毛的头发扩展,可水洗,吹干,平烫或卷曲。根据羽毛的质量,扩展可以持续几个星期到几个月。


在霍姆伍德发集团开始提供四月闻讯后有多大,他们在西部的扩展。客户的厚爱,共同拥有罗布哈里森说。“大部分客户都是在他们早期的十几岁,但我们有各年龄段,”他说。“他们会了解他们从自己的孩子或孙子,那么他们就会想,太。”


哈里森说,他们使用的雄鸡羽毛,更高的质量和使用寿命更长的。他说,通常情况下,他们的羽毛在头发上约90天举行。


在各种不同的颜色和客户来的羽毛通常挑选他们想要的颜色组合。要应用扩展,亚当发集团一怒之下将通过一个微小的粘接珠拉几束头发。然后,羽毛被放置在与头发珠。哈夫夹珠封闭一双尖嘴钳。可放置在那里他们可以很容易看到或在不太显眼的地方,使消费者可以炫耀的羽毛,或隐藏在头部领域的羽毛。


第一个应用程序是45元,第二个是35美元,第三次是30元。客户端可以除去羽毛,或一个设计师可以做到这一点。


波莉里基茨,17日,山布鲁克已发集团自春季以来的毛发羽毛。她说,她无法想象没有他们。


“我已经测试过煤矿的第n个程度,”她说。“你可以用它做任何可以隐藏在你的头发,穿上它或在一个马尾辫。”

Summer colors bring cautious optimism to Copenhagen fashion week


COPENHAGEN, Aug. 7 (Xinhua) -- Pastel shades and cautious optimism stalked the catwalks at the Copenhagen Fashion Week that ended here Sunday.

As designers showcased collections for spring and summer 2012, industry professionals hoped consumer spending would pick up and propel growth in the fashion sector, which has been buffeted by recession.

"I think Danish and Scandinavian fashion has potential in a market with an economy like this," said Eva Kruse, CEO of Copenhagen Fashion Week (CFW) and Director of the Danish Fashion Institute.

"That is because the prices are fairly low. You get a lot of brand value and original design for your money when buying Danish brands," she told Xinhua.

Indeed, while avant-garde styles were displayed at CFW, many of the collections reflected the sharp, simple, value-for-money fashion that Nordic design is associated with.

In all, the week featured 39 runway shows, including nine designers exhibiting collections for the first time.

According to Kruse, the large number of newcomers sends a signal that, "designers are taking up the challenge of meeting the market" and are reflecting the optimism of an industry that is recovering after being buffeted by the 2008 global financial crisis.

GLAMOROUSLY MINIMAL

Among other typical offerings, flat pastels of pistachio, peach and beige marked the oversize jackets, tight shorts and trousers presented by designer Veronica B. Vallenes.

The trend continued in Trine Wackerhaus's show which unveiled grey-tone cocktail dresses, flamingo-printed jumpsuits and more pastels in yellow, blue and pink.

According to Iben Albinus Sabroe, Editor-in-Chief of Dansk Daily, the official CFW newspaper, the creations shown during the week add up to a "new sort of glamorous minimalism".

"Minimalism still rules the fashion world. That doesn't mean it's dull," she said in an editorial Friday.

However, it was considered a one-sided argument by some designers.


 

 

 

Kareena, Saif to marry in 2012?


Looks like Kareena Kapoor is signing up to play the role of a lifetime – a blushing bride in real life. The grapevine says Bebo will tie the knot with her long time beau Saif Ali Khan in February 2012.

Apparently, the Kapoor lass has been making frequent trips to New Delhi for her bridal dress, which will be designed by Ritu Kumar, a favourite of mom-in-law Sharmila Tagore.

Saif’s mom wants his new bride to look every inch a royal and who better than Ritu Kumar to add the regal touch. Kareena, who recently signed Madhur Bhandarkar’s Heroine for a reported 10 crore, is going slow on signing new assignments.

The grapevine also has it that the couple is likely to make a formal announcement about their wedding sometime in December, when Saif’s home production Agent Vinod releases.

 

Macedonia has 'no legal basis' for Roma travel bans

 

It sounds like a bad joke. A Macedonian family of five is on its way from its home town to Belgrade to attend the wedding of a close relative. Their car is packed with traditional wedding dresses and gifts for the young couple. Yet, at the Tabanovce border crossing, when a Macedonian border guard picks up their passports, he claims that they want to go to Surcin, the Belgrade airport, and board a plane to the European Union.

The guard alleges that they are false asylum seekers, like those that have been getting Macedonia into trouble with the EU. The family denies it. After all, they have left two school children behind so of course they will return to Macedonia after the wedding. But their protestations are to no avail as the border guard stamps their passports to signify a travel ban. The family is sent back home.

Cases like this one – which was reported by the non-governmental organisation network ARKA – have become frequent since Macedonian citizens have been granted a visa waiver for short term travel to the EU. One month ago, the internet magazine Balkan Insight quoted the spokesman of the Macedonian police, Ivo Kotevski, who claimed that 800 people had been turned back at the border.

Macedonia's Minister for the Interior Gordana Jankulovska has been even more specific. At a meeting of the Salzburg Forum, a ministerial gathering which brings together ministers from eight central and east European states, she announced that 764 people had been prevented from leaving Macedonia between April 29 and June 27. She claimed that the purpose of this "energetic measure" was to prevent people from abusing the visa-free regime – in 2010, 7,550 Macedonian citizens applied for asylum in the EU.

The problem is that the Macedonian authorities do not have any legal basis upon which they can issue a travel ban. In response to a request we were told that the measure is based on article 15 of the Macedonian Law on Border Surveillance, which borrows elements of the so-called Schengen Borders Code. But while the latter defines the criteria upon which third country nationals can be refused entry into the Schengen area, Macedonia has actually started to prevent its citizens from leaving their country, which is entirely different.

Diana’s wedding dress, other items bound for Foxwoods Resort show

For New Englanders, it’s an opportunity to see a piece of royal history. An exhibition opening next month will allow people to get an up close look at Princess Diana’s wedding dress, complete with its famous 25-foot train. The exhibition also includes the diamond tiara she wore on her wedding day along with 28 of her designer dresses, personal mementos, and photos. The pieces are on loan from the Althorp Estate, the Spencer family home in England.

Although proceeds from the display will be donated to charity, there is one detail that is troubling some followers of the royal family: Diana’s historic wedding dress will be on exhibit in a casino. The show opens on Sept. 16 at Foxwoods Resort & Casino in Connecticut.

“It is tacky,’’ says Charles Jacoby, author of “The Royal Family Almanac.’’ “But it does bring into focus the debate over whether members of the royal family are celebrities - like pop stars - or aristocrats, or something else. Princess Diana’s dress in a casino indicates to me that they are just celebrities.’’

CBS News royal contributor Victoria Arbiter was too polite to say she found the idea of Diana’s dress in a casino tacky, but she did find it striking that while the newly married Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge’s wedding dress is on display at Buckingham Palace, Diana’s wedding dress will be in the vicinity of slot machines.

“It would have been lovely to see Kate’s dress displayed beside Diana’s dress,’’ Arbiter said. “I would imagine that it would be difficult for William and Harry. They’re so protective of their mother’s image and legacy that it would be quite hard for them to know that her dress is in a casino. With someone like Diana, you’d hope that it would be on display at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.’’

Foxwoods is the dress’s only stop in the Northeast. Since 1998, the exhibition, which is primarily displayed at Diana’s ancestral home, has raised more than $2 million for the Diana, Princess of Wales Memorial Fund. Arbiter says that is something Diana would have applauded.

“It’s an unfortunate choice of venue when you’re talking about this humanitarian and global fashion icon. Her dress is reduced to this,’’ Arbiter said. “But I guess you have to take the positive from it and hope that a large amount of money is raised for charity, because ultimately Diana would appreciate that.’’