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On the aircraft, she tied a rope around her skirt at her ankles to keep it from blowing in the wind during the flight. A French fashion designer watching the flight noticed her walk away from the aircraft with her skirt still tied. This image is said to have influenced the subsequent hobble skirt fashion of the early 20th century. [9]
それ見よ, literally "look at that," but actually a pun on "'O sole mio", a Neapolitan song translating to "my sunshine"), that again featured scenes of her mini-skirt blowing up. By the late 1960s, panchira had spread to the mainstream comic industry, as fledgling manga artists such as Go Nagai began exploring sexual imagery in boys' comics ...
"On this day [...], all those who were married in the carnival year that ended a year earlier, on the same day, gather in disguise and masks [...]. The last bridegroom among them wears a pitchfork with two ox horns stuck in the two prongs [...]. The troop [...] goes in procession to the home of the first groom of the carnival year that ends today.
The best White Elephant gifts that everyone will be jostling for
The light-colored ivory cocktail dress.. The dress is a light-colored ivory cocktail dress in a style that was in vogue in the 1950s and 1960s. The halter-like bodice has a plunging neckline and is made of two pieces of softly pleated cellulose acetate (then considered a type of rayon) fabric [22] that come together behind the neck, leaving the wearer's arms, shoulders and back bare.
Blowing snow could prompt power outages and snarl travel across a swath of the nation's northern tier, and it's so cold in the South that iguanas could start falling from trees in Florida as waves ...
Since its first showing at Milan Fashion Week, designers have rallied behind the barn jacket. Hermès nodded to the late Queen with a series of jackets sporting leather collars and multiple ...
The jina of this kanga is Bahati ni upepo sasa upo kwangu, which can be translated as "Luck is like the (blowing of the) wind, now it is on my side" The kanga (in some areas known as leso) is a colourful fabric similar to kitenge, but lighter, worn by women and occasionally by men throughout the African Great Lakes region.