Showing posts with label Fashion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fashion. Show all posts

Tuesday, 18 June 2013

What You don't know about the differences between Cologne and Perfume.

 I know a lot of people do not know the difference between these two seemingly unique items that a lot of us make use of everyday. It is this awareness that led me into extensive researches that led to this write up.

Cologne is a form of fragrance just like perfumes. Most of the people now a day are familiar with perfumes and colognes however, both the things are quite different from each other. Perfumes existed in ancient times also but have now transformed into a better and pleasant thing but cologne did not exist in ancient times. First cologne was introduced in 1709.
calvin-klein-eternity-cologne

Monday, 27 May 2013

Picture Of The Day. Mercy Aigbe.

Nollywood actress, Mercy Aigbe has been posting lovely fashionable pictures of herself lately, and it is fair to say that she has been impressing us so far. This current picture shows Mercy flaunting her bosom in a see-through black blouse paired with a colour block short skirt.


Friday, 19 April 2013

Woman Gets Creative With Breast Milk: Churns Out Jewelry From It.

After struggling with bosom-feeding her first child, Rhode Island mother of three Allicia Mogavero decided to commemorate the lactation process by turning her bosom milk into wearable jewelry.

“The whole nursing experience was really profound for me. I was like, I wonder if I can preserve this. I wonder if there’s a way I can make it last forever,” she tells The Daily Beast.

Mogavero launched a website to help others do the same. Her so-called MommyMilk Creations are made by petrifying customers’ bosom milk and encasing it in resin, which protects the hardened milk from shattering. The resins come in a range of shaped molds, including hearts, trees, and handprints, and can be customized to include a child’s name. Once the resin is cured, Mogavero then attaches chains to the molds so the pieces can be worn as necklaces, bracelets, and key chains.
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Thursday, 18 April 2013

Fresh April Collections By Leo & Levi.

















The April Collections made by Leo & Levi is out. The theme centers on "Simplicity". You don't have to dress loud to make a fashion statement. Keep it simple and you are good to go.

Make your orders or visit our office. We have products on display at Boutiques in Lagos, Nigeria. We also nationwide delivery.

Contact: 
GSM:        07033801718, 08054527192
Email:        leoandleviclothings@gmail.com
Twitter:     @LeoandLevi
Facebook @LeoandLevi



Monday, 8 April 2013

Rihanna Strikes a Sexy Pose in Ripped Denim.

As a long term fan of the Pop singer, i find this appearance of her on a sexy high and she flies with a 5 star rating from me.

Big ups, Riri!






 

This view shows a small frame of her butt. Sexy?

Thursday, 4 April 2013

Men Wear Makeups As Well?

Pictured below is a man, probably a makeup artiste who done a female make-up. How on earth would it be seen if this trend were to be adopted by men? I just can't imagine that.

Thursday, 21 March 2013

FRESH OUT: CYNIM CITYSCAPE COLLECTIONS.

This is a feature post promoting the CYNIM fashion collections.
The CYNIM Kings and Queens  espouses royalty in an urban lifestyle. The colour palettes  for this collection are bright, distinct colours with a lot of stripes  depicting royalty.
The CYNIM royal individual is dressed for all  events  especially the workplace or just hanging out. You could call them “Urban Royalty” and you will be spot on.
 
 

Sunday, 10 March 2013

Super Sexy Genevieve at the AMVCA.

Actress Genevieve Nnaji poses on the red carpet for paparazzi and fans. Is she not beautiful? You already know.

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Regards,

Mr. David-Leo Toyin Alabi
Website:    www.notifynigeria.com
Blog:      www.itsdavidleo.blogspot.com,
www.thereviewspage.blogspot.com

GSM:     234-703-3801-718, 234-805-4527-192, 234-802-1219-158
Cc:            davidleo@notifynigeria.com

Omotola in a Dashing Outfit at the AMVCA!

Nigeria Actress, Omotola Jalade-Ekehinde popular known as Omosexy, sure knows how to keep it sexy. She does! She was captured in a dashing outfit that exhumed nothing but radiance and glamour at the recent Africa Magic Movie Awards. See for yourself.

--
Regards,

Mr. David-Leo Toyin Alabi
Website:    www.notifynigeria.com
Blog:      www.itsdavidleo.blogspot.com,
www.thereviewspage.blogspot.com

GSM:     234-703-3801-718, 234-805-4527-192, 234-802-1219-158
Cc:            davidleo@notifynigeria.com

Saturday, 26 January 2013

Hands On Experience with Rubber/Rubber-soled shoes: Just Why we Love them.


I sometimes wonder what the effect of each passing trend pose, and what, if there are any lessons to be drawn when the trend must have taken its bow in our faces. A lot of people are trend stimulants  being that, they embrace whatever trend that inventors put forward to them. For many in this category, the creativity in every product draws an attention that is equal or sequel to it it. Hence, to take  a product at face value comes with a price that is paid after the desire it initially generated has long been quenched.


IMG00525-20120618-0737.jpg
My white rubber shoe i bought early 2012.

Rubber shoes have long been in existence, but no better time were they widely appreciated than in the past year. Almost everyone had it, albeit the very elderly ones and few people with biased mind towards anything or all things rubber. This perhaps is because, the actual formality and style at which shoes are made, are often as a result of the determinable factors (material of the soles) that are put together. As a result, a traditional dress shoe naturally feature a leather sole. As such, rubber soled shoes tend to be less formal, and are usually designed for comfort or mere specific needs.
ZHONI.jpg
A Zhoni leather shoe with a rubber sole
Why rubber-soled shoes?
Yes! Why rubber-soled shoes? I get this question every other day. And don't ask me again, I love rubber shoes, or shoes with rubber sole. As a truth, rubber-sole shoes give a far less formal appearance, and they are are built for performance-oriented purposes and for specific sports or casual occasions  Thus, rubber-sole can be said to be primarily designed for traction.

The Pros.
For starters, rubber shoes can actually cost more than leather or other equivalents. This may perhaps be because, the cost of raw rubber, the molding process, finishing and handling are all high costing resources, hence, the typical rubber shoe might up a leather shoe by at least N1,500-2,000.

As observed in the aforementioned, rubber soles have a high traction than most shoes. It has better appeals.

A vast majority of rubber-shoes are waterproof. They have the natural ability to resist water penetration. Leather shoes cannot do this. 


Rubber shoes are very comfortable for walking, and very easy to wear. This is chiefly because, the absorb the foot strike impacts better. For me, rubber shoes rock and does not necessarily require that you wear socks before you done them.


Rubber shoes don't make noise or constrict with the floor/ground when walking.


For all practical purposes, rubber  shoes/rubber soles seem to be the clear winner. And it leaves me musing if in truth, there any reasons/benefits for choosing leather over rubber? Clearly, there is none. So I believe!    


The Likely Cons?

With my appraisals thus far, you might wonder if ever I'll come to this, but then, nothing good is free from sin. But for its aesthetic appeal, both the shoe, the wearer and most pertinently, the foot, clumping around in rubber shoes is intransigent  Rubber shoes are seeming transmitters of heat, and they are superficially in defunct with the skin if worn consistently. Believe it or not, this is an adverse effect, but that is when you make wearing rubber shoes your spot priority.

A friend of mine was like, "sure, i like rubber shoes for bad weather, but for regular times, Omo mehn, na leather shoe ooo... a good leather shoe is more elegant, beautiful, striking and more authoritative.!" 


Adding to that, lots of rubber shoes and rubber-soled ones are mere works of art. They crack easily. Rubber will crack first before a decent quality leather sole will do. The rubber naturally lacks the fiber that keep material intact upon stress like leather would do at molecular level.

My Conclusion.
For the regular person who may have bone or feet related problems, rubber shoes and rubber soled shoes may be a better solution but that is not to say it acts upright in that regard.  Leather shoes on the one hand may be for the uptight reason of smart and collate dressing. One can not appear any smarter on leather shoes than he/she would on rubber shoes or rubber-soled shoes. At the end of the day, it buoys down to choice and perhaps, an individuals taste and dress inclinations.

This article was first published by me on my other blog; Thereviewspage.blogspot.com

Friday, 16 November 2012

Insane? As Shoppers queue through night for H&M Maison Martin Margiela collection.

Na wa ooo!

The above is common exclamation among people from Nigeria. Well, if the topic of this blogpost is anything to go by (trust me, it sure is), then fashion has a strong stranglehold on humanity.

H&M store in Regent Street, London
Insane? A whole lot of people queued all night for a chance to buy a Maison Martin Margiela creation. Photograph: Martin Godwin


Two long queues stretching down Regent Street on either side of the flagship H&M store on Thursday morning offer the telltale sign that their latest designer collaboration is about to go on sale. There are people standing in line who have been there since 10.30pm the night before and they are all set to buy into the avant garde world of Maison Martin Margiela, a label specialising in rather unconventional clothes. On sale are jackets with odd pointy shoulders, fabrics used inside out, coats and jeans cut in gargantuan oversized proportions. It is not for the uninitiated.

As a group of shoppers sweep into the Regent Street store - politely at first but soon madly running up escalators - the H&M website crashes. The first 20 customers allowed to shop from the women's collection in a specially cordoned off area, meanwhile, begin by pouncing on "sweetie wrapper" clutches in silver or metallic purple; leaving TV camera crews and photographers blinded by a £34.99 reflective handbag.

Sunday, 4 November 2012

Style Byte: A Conversation With Fashion Icon Ozwald Boateng on Style, Africa, and His New Film A Man's Story

During his meteoric career, Ozwald Boateng's been called the coolest man on Earth, and the fashion world's best-kept secret. Yet the candid new documentary A Man's Story, opening this weekend in New York and Los Angeles, makes certain that the British fashion designer and style icon no longer remains a secret.
In a career already spanning two decades, the 45 year-old Boateng has outfitted celebrities from Will Smith to Russell Crowe, from Jamie Foxx to Mick Jagger. At age 28, he became the youngest tailor - and the first of African descent - to open a store on London's legendary Savile Row. Boateng's also designed menswear for Givenchy and bespoke costumes for films like The Matrix and Ocean's Thirteen, and he's even been the subject of his own Sundance Channel TV series, House of Boateng. He's also the recipient of an OBE (Order of the British Empire) for his contributions to the clothing industry.

Throughout all this, however, Boateng's private side - such as his quiet struggles in the rarified world of British fashion, or his efforts to foster entrepreneurial investment in Africa - have taken a back seat in public to his style innovations.



Director Varon Bonicos' new documentary, A Man's Story - for which Bonicos filmed Boateng from 1998 through 2010 - reveals much about Boateng's personal life: from the challenges of growing up as a young man of African descent in London of the '70s and '80s, to the abiding influence of his father on his life and career. The result is a warm and often poignant film that humanizes Boateng, while doing full justice to the glamorous place he occupies in the world of men's fashion.

We spoke with Ozwald Boateng and Varon Bonicos in Los Angeles, where they are promoting A Man's Story. The interview has been edited for length.

GM: What is your passion for film - and in particular, how are you inspired by the intersection of film and fashion?
OB: Film has always been a really good tool for me to communicate emotion about why I create a collection. I'm probably one of the first designers to make short films. The first time I did it was back in 1994. The invite for my first fashion show was a VHS cassette. And it kind of became part of the language of my designing collections - I was always putting together short films.
Apart from that, I think fashion designers are directors anyway. We spend a year designing a collection for a fashion show that lasts maybe fifteen minutes. We have to design the look of the catwalk, cast the model for each look, work up the sound, the lighting - it's a lot of work that goes into that fifteen minutes.
JA: Film has been so important in terms of influencing men's style, men's self-perceptions. I was curious whether there were film icons, movie stars who have influenced your sense of style?
OB: Sean Connery, of course, since I was a kid - you know, James Bond. Or The Thomas Crown Affair - you can't beat those three piece suits. The Italian Job with Michael Caine - again the suits. If you're a designer, there's got to be some films that you've seen that have inspired you creatively. There's no escaping that. Film is such a very good tool for communicating emotions, and all designers and creative people look to inspire an emotional response.
JA: You mention Connery and Bond, and he was so crucial in selling the Savile Row style here in the States.
OB: Absolutely.
2012-11-03-OzwaldBoatengHuffPost1.jpg


JA: You yourself have become an icon on behalf of that style. Was that something you planned from the outset as a designer - to be so out front selling the look yourself?
OB: No, actually, I tried to stay out of it. In the early years, it was because I was a very young guy working in a very old discipline - so really, that's tough to begin with. And then I was trying to do it in a very modern way - so again, that's tough. Add me, visually, into the mix of all that, and that just complicates things. So for the first few years, I didn't let anyone take any pictures of me. Basically, a lot of people had no idea what I looked like. And because my name did not necessarily sound African, a lot of people ... just thought I was some kind of middle aged white guy [laughs]. So no-one actually knew what I looked like, and that was the best thing - because it allowed everyone to focus on the work.
JA: You were hidden, basically.
OB: Yeah, but it was all very deliberate. Because I'm good at what I do, and I just wanted to focus on the work. Let people talk about my cut, the influence of the cut, the detail, and that's all it was about - for years.
And then there was this famous magazine in London called The Face - this was in the late '80s, early '90s - and that's the first time I kind of revealed myself. And the reason was that the journalist was so adamant that she take a picture, and I was fighting it and fighting it, and anyway, I did it. And then the moment I had the picture taken, the dynamics completely changed. I got a lot more interest, but the interest always came back to that they wanted to take a picture of me - and that's when I got into Italian Vogue, and all those magazines at that time.
GM: One of the most powerful parts of your story is that you are of Ghanaian descent, you were born in London - and you broke into a place as tradition-bound as Savile Row. How was your background as an African an asset to you - in your fashion, in your creative work - and at the same time, what challenges did it pose that you had to overcome?

OB: As I say very early on in the film, at the time I was growing up, it was tricky. You had two options: allow it to become a headache, or just get on with your life [laughs]. So I chose to just get on with my life and not let it bother me. So even when I was experiencing real issues, I just didn't see it. So, I think that when someone's got an issue about where you're from, and they're going at you - and you ignore it ... it makes them powerless.
So that's been my way of dealing. When I went to school, there were two black kids in the whole school. I think the first time I saw only black people was when I went to Ghana - I must have been 21, or 22, at that time. To have that visual experience - I remember going, "oh, wow - I've not seen that before."
GM: You're very proud of your culture and of the artistry that comes with it. And you have collections inspired by African style, but also by Japanese samurai style, Native American culture, Russian style. You show all this interest in different cultures - and I think in part that's because you yourself come from a culture different from that of the UK.
OB: Exactly. And that's why Savile Row was so relevant, because Savile Row is an important street in British history. So my opening a shop there had much greater meaning than just opening a store. And I think, subconsciously, I was aware of that. Because I'm always about change for a greater meaning. But the way to do it is without putting any badges on it. Because the more you put a badge on something, the more it becomes something else.
2012-11-03-OzwaldBoatengHuffPost2.jpg


GM: I'd like to ask you about your commitment to helping Africa through development. You've said in your interviews that you believe private investment and entrepreneurship are more effective in helping Africa than government aid.
OB: Yes, absolutely.
GM: I'd love to hear more about your philosophy and how you think you can accomplish your goals through your Made in Africa Foundation and also through this film.
OB: Designers are creating for the future ... [we're] basically visionaries ... so when you visualize something, you don't visualize it to be worse than it is, you visualize it to be better [laughs]. That's how designers think. So when I go to Africa, I don't visualize it being worse, I visualize that if we did everything right, what would that look like, and suddenly it's an amazing vision.
Africa controls 50% of the world's natural resources, in some cases 70% - so the concept of poverty [in Africa] makes no sense. And in the world, resources are key. So when you understand those points, the only thing left is: 'why?' And the 'why' is the infrastructure. So infrastructure development is the key. And you balance that out with how much aid has been invested, which is billions, and of the aid money that's been put in, if 20% actually hit the ground and got deployed, I'd be shocked. So that's why I set up the foundation.
In terms of what we're dealing with: we've written a paper for the British government on policy for Africa, we've campaigned the World Bank, the African Development Bank - and the African Development Bank is doing a $22 billion dollar infrastructure bond. So now there's more interest in investment in Africa than there's ever been since I can remember. The main thing we've done in Africa is to change views, which is the key.
JA: For both of you, what is the big takeaway that you want people to have on this film? And Varon, you put twelve years into this - all that footage going back to the late '90s. We see documentaries all the time, and no-one is rolling cameras over that length of time.
VB: The film is 96 minutes out of five hundred and something hours. It was really hard to craft. It's like little tiny dots of newsprint - and then you pull out, and you get the picture. The editor Tom Hemmings had to sit in a darkened room for two months just watching footage. But you know, I met Ozwald and I'd never met anyone like him before. I was only supposed to film for a few weeks ... [but it wound up being twelve years]. The central message of the film really is about belief, the core structure of belief. It's got a man's story - and fashion, it's a great backdrop. The film also highlights one of the most important relations in life, which is a relationship between a parent and a child. But the central message is about belief. I'm proud of the film. It's great to be sitting here with you to be able to talk about it.
OB: I think each person's going to take a very personalized viewpoint about what the film's doing for them. I make bespoke suits that are made to fit men as individuals - and that's somehow worked through the film, [with] the film fitting the individual. That seems to be the poetry of life.
JA: In the final shot of the film, you're walking off stage with your father. That was very touching. He inspired you - and look what it created. I just thought that was wonderful.
OB: That's interesting. Many people see the film, but no-one's mentioned that. So let me tell you about that. I decided I was going to do this fashion show based around this movie, and I called it, "A Man's Story." I wanted to figure out: at what point do you become a man? Is it 18, is it 21, is it when you get married, when you have kids? So I'm sitting at dinner with five mates of mine, and the guys say, "actually, you only become a man when you lose your father. It's when you have a problem, and you can't call him - because he's not there." And I said, "wow." So at that point I realized I'd done all this stuff, and I'd never celebrated my dad. So my whole focus moved from what I was doing to making it all about him. Which is why, at the end of the show, I'm applauding him. [...] So that's really what A Man's Story is about. It's really about your moments, and remembering them. And also, enjoying them as they happen.
VB: I agree. Enjoy every moment as it happens.

Author

Sunday, 8 July 2012

FASHION THIS, FASHION THAT: EXPOSING THE THRILLS OF FASHION (PART 1)


Ask the regular Joe on the street what he thinks the concept of fashion is, and I can bet you will get as many response as it corresponds with the number of people the said question is asked. Within the frame work of common understanding, fashion is loosely taken to mean anything that ‘fits and subscribes to a certain trend.’ This understanding easily precludes the individual as the centre of attraction, thereby subjecting him or her to an assuming position that objectifies the true meaning of fashion. Hence, its very easy for the true meaning of fashion to be taken for granted or toy with.
Fashion trends come and go in a cyclic manner. That is to say, trends are evergreen albeit transient through eras. As such, no single trend is uniquely common to a particular society or group of people; neither is it typical with any era. We can conveniently say that, what is peculiar to say Society A, may have shared a semblance with a Society B or C. Hence, since every human person has near-same features, it is only natural to find fashion trends commonly accepted across every society.
Looking at what obtains in our contemporary age, all thanks to the internet; there seems to be a slight reversal to fashion trends of the past. Our age has taken to dress-codes that used to be. Most fashionables we find around now are alluring in one way or the other to the 60s and 70s. Recall I noted earlier that fashion works in a cyclic manner; it goes round into extinction only to resurface much later like a ghost from the past.
Our orientation has shifted its base to some forty and fifty years ago. This is true with the colour combinations commonly used by dress makers these days. The trend is traceable to the late 50s and early 60s, through the 70s. Most of the colour matching appear off and do not rhyme nor make courteous meaning, yet they seem to be en vogue and have huge appeal to the youths. Tight pant trousers and saggy jean linings which date back to the early 70s are commonly worn by teenagers, youngsters, and some older folks who incline to the trend. Wizkid, Denrele and Charly boy come to mind here!
Be it as it may, the thrills of fashion has gone beyond words. It can only get better. Fashion designers are still on a further match to discovering and rediscovering trends and styles that are best imagined. Fashion runways, fashion events and fashion shows are on the increase. A testament to this is the many ‘Fashion Week’ that continue to hold worldwide every other month.
Though the 2011 Nigeria Fashion Week (NFW) held late last year, the show succeeded in throwing up a ‘creative theme,’ that has dominated the scene this year. If only the show can be supported to full purpose, one can only imagine how far such an event can go to bolster the fashion industry in Nigeria.

Monday, 23 May 2011

The Keynotes to Starting A Fashion line Business.

Getting off with your own business is never an easy task to start. So many little things in various parchments are involved. It raises quite a lot of challenges that really test your initial resolve and ability to hold firm to your own innovation. To that light, the idea of conceiving a business of any nature has scared off so many young people, thereby killing off several possible ventures that would have ushered in more job creation and entrepreneurial satisfaction. It is to that upshot that this piece is out to expose the process of opening up a business in whatever environment you find yourself.

As an individual, starting up my business was no strobe in the walk. The early days were the roughest I ever conceived of, that would ever be my portion. There were times I thought of giving up; to quit and go about a search for some conventional jobs, but then, all thanks to my business partner, we strove on regardless of the initial daunts. The framework of this write-up would be basically a product of my own little experience, mentoring and research.
It must be noted that, I take a greater fancy in writing about dating and relationship issues. I chose to delve into this area just to pass out a lesson or two to those who might need the information I have to offer. Hence, what you'd get here may not be a true reflection of my writing prowess, but a mirage of some thoughts conceived and subsequently experienced.
Who is an Entrepreneur?
This question is of paramount importance when talking about setting up a business. An entrepreneur is anyone who identifies an opportunity and exploits it creatively with a mindset of getting satisfaction and/or profit. He brings together all the various factors of production; land, labour, IT, raw material, capital etc for the purpose of producing goods and services for the satisfaction of the end users.
Entrepreneurs are primarily motivated to satisfy a personal need, usually by bringing into being new products/services that are meaningful to them as well as to the market.

Why start your own enterprise?

There are several reasons as to why people venture into business. But believe me, quite a whole lot of them are subjective reasons which borders on the single fact that, the individual seeks profit maximization through little or no investment. Some of the popular reasons include:
However, there are challenges that come with owning your own business, as I said earlier. Some of them include:
There are countless advantages or benefits of owning your own business:
Furthermore, there are critical aspects that must be looked at before starting your own business.
First, you must have a clear cut idea of what you want to do. Every business enterprise starts as a raw idea, which derives from perceived opportunity, and then translated into a product or service that a customer needs and is prepared to pay for. There are many sources of business ideas; literature, books, journals, newspapers, internet, television, seminars/workshops and so on.
Second, and most importantly, all business ideas must be confirmed and/or validated, using factors such as legality, achievable/feasible structures and that, it meets a need. More so, that people would be willing to pay for it. And that there are opportunities for linkages wit bigger firms or co-operation with similar firms in the future. There must also be an ability to identify your advantage over existing firms, and how quickly can you adapt to meet changes in users’ need and taste. You must also ask, “Can I create a special demand for my business output?”
Of good note is the “idea validation” stage of an enterprise. This is a highly important stage, because any error at this stage may lead to the total loss of resources in the future.

Third, you must set SMART (Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Realistic and Time-bound) goals for yourself. These goals will serve as guide to how soon you can achieve your dreams.
Fourth, you must undertake an honest self-assessment of yourself. To self-access, you must answer the following questions:
Getting yourself through the precise exercises stated in this piece may just be the soft guile you need to get your entrepreneurial skills up and running. You must be determined first and foremost, and you must ensure you continue to remind yourself of the vision you set out to achieve from the outset. Doing this will help ensure you do not derail from the track that would lead to your success in the desired business. I hope this helps. Thanks for the time taking to read through this. Your constructive criticisms, questions and evaluation would be of great value in setting up a sequel to this piece.

Tuesday, 26 April 2011

Bringing an African sense to corporate dressing: The case of the Nigerian 'Adire' attire.

Over the course of the recent past till date, we've seen a remarkable acceptance of the 'Adire' simple styled dressing among many Nigerians. This is a welcome growth as it helps to stand the Fashion industry on a high staple. By this way, we can only hope for a brighter future for the industry.


The pics presented in this post is a sample showcase of some of the trendy designs currently envogue in Nigeria and some countries of West Africa
Sent from my BlackBerry® wireless handheld from Glo Mobile.

What is fashion to you?

For a very long time now,i have asked myself this question and have seen others ask what is fashion? This indicates clearly that, there is no one single approach to fashion or what fashion should be. There are several trends to fashion, and there will always be appreciations render to whatever thing, style or brand that people put on. I want to officially welcome you to my blog. I hope to keep up with founting write-ups and pictorial representations of happenings within the fashion world.With myself, a fashion entrepreneur, i hope we both arrive at a good and valuable blogging. Thanks and welcome.
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