Petite vanessa does the silhouette challenge again - Page 2

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petite vanessa does the silhouette challenge again

petite vanessa does the silhouette challenge again

petite vanessa does the silhouette challenge again
petite vanessa does the silhouette challenge again

petite vanessa does the silhouette challenge again

petite vanessa does the silhouette challenge again

petite vanessa does the silhouette challenge again

petite vanessa does the silhouette challenge again
petite vanessa does the silhouette challenge again

Thank you to Kate Badger for these practical challenges!

Ester Manas, the emerging and ingenious Belgian brand, offers inclusive, sustainable, and refreshing fashion! How? By revolutionizing the one-size-fits-all concept: a single garment can fit as many sizes as possible thanks to elements that allow it to adapt to all silhouettes according to morphology, the passage of time, and changing bodies. It’s a completely new concept for dressing women of all shapes and sizes!

Now more than ever with the holidays approaching, Simons wants all Canadians to have a hot meal on their table. Since no one deserves to go hungry and in order to draw this year full of challenges and emotions to a close, help us in making this period a bit brighter for those in need.

Every year, finding the perfect gift to match the personality of every man in your entourage can be a challenge. What do you give to the guy who loves nights in watching Netflix? To the master chef or to the man who’s just learning his way around the kitchen? To the insatiable jetsetter? Even more difficult is finding gift ideas for men who have everything.

Black Friday is without a doubt the most anticipated shopping day of the year. Falling on the day after American Thanksgiving, shoppers rush in store and online to pick up tons of items at reduced prices to give as holiday gifts. This day is intense and full quick decision making, as much for consumers as it is for the stores. But where does the name “Black Friday” come from? Discover the origins of this day of incredible deals.

Actress Vanessa Pilon, the bubbly young host of VRAK.TV, can count us here at Simons among her biggest fans.

The cautious observations and honest reveals that follow are literally and figuratively quieter moments than that initial blare. On “All I Want,” against a wall of whirling guitar, Murphy recognizes a relationship that can’t be saved, and instead asks for “your pity” and “your bitter tears.” “Get Along” shuffles over pulsing keys and bubbling percussion as Murphy tries to bridge physical and emotional distance, singing, “You might forget, forget the sound of a voice / Still, you shouldn’t forget the things we laughed about.” Conversely, the sparsely decorated, sauntering “Somebody’s Calling Me” is almost hopeful in comparison: “Somebody’s calling me” Murphy half whispers, “to be my girl.”

At long last, Factory Floor presents their highly anticipated self-titled debut album. A vivid snapshot of a progressive band smashing through yet another ceiling, it’s the first full-length statement from the group that earned a powerful reputation on the strength of the “Fall Back” and “Two Different Ways” singles for DFA—not to mention early releases for Optimo Music and Blast First Petite. Leading up to the release of Factory Floor, the band will play select European festival dates this summer.

Produced and recorded by the group in their North London warehouse space on a vintage mixing desk originally used by Dave Stewart three decades ago to record all the Eurythmics’ early hits, Factory Floor is a visceral trip through the band’s repertoire. The record opens with “Turn It Up,” their most minimal track to date, mixed in astonishing detail by Timothy “Q” Wiles (VCMG, Afrika Bambaataa). “Here Again” is almost (but not quite) their pop song, replete with cascading arpeggios counterbalanced by bubbly synth melody lines and plaintive vocals.

The complexity of the project mirrors the complexities within Essaie Pas’ career to date – forever unpredictable, their wiry, individual sound offers a tangled vision of tomorrow’s aesthetics. “I think this was the main challenge,” muses Pierre. “To adapt what we’ve been doing live thru the last 2 years, which before was always changing, and corner it, make it cohesive”.

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