O maior conquistador não é aquele que conquista grandes coisas, mas sim o que conquista as pequenas e as torna grandes!


quarta-feira, 4 de agosto de 2021

Vintage Haute Couture

 







Dior




Givenchy


Givenchy





Chanel


Evening coat was made by Jacques Fath, a French designer. 
It was made in 1950-1954

terça-feira, 3 de agosto de 2021

Beautiful Vintage and Retro Evening Gowns




An Alexander McQueen for Givenchy chain-fringed grey 
crêpe de chine evening gown, 1998,




Emilio Pucci


House of Givenchy






House of Balenciaga. Cocktail dress, early 1960's

Beautiful Cocktail Dresses









segunda-feira, 2 de agosto de 2021

Alimentos que te deixam mais felizes.

 



When People Used the Postal Service to Mail Their Children

 


In January 1913, one Ohio couple took advantage of the U.S. Postal Service’s new parcel service to make a very special delivery: their infant son. The Beagues paid 15 cents for his stamps and an unknown amount to insure him for $50, then handed him over to the mailman, who dropped the boy off at his grandmother’s house about a mile away.

Regulations about what you could and couldn’t send through the mail were vague when post offices began accepting parcels over four pounds on January 1, 1913. People immediately started testing its limits by mailing eggs, bricks, snakes and other unusual “packages.” So were people allowed to mail their children? Technically, there was no postal regulation against it.

www.history.com

domingo, 1 de agosto de 2021

Iconic Fashion close up


Marilyn Monroe and Maria Callas at JFK’s birthday
 gala, 1962.







Breakfast at Tiffany's, 1961




Funny Face (1957), Audrey plays a serious bookshop clerk








Queen Elizabeth wearing a Normal Hartnell evening dress, 
 used in a sitting for photographer 
Cecil Beaton at Buckingham Palace1945


 
Norman Hartnell evening dress worn by the Queen, right, for a performance
 of the Royal Ballet at the Royal Opera House in August 1971


Everything you love will probably be lost, but in the end, love will return otherwise.

 



At age 40, Franz Kafka (1883-1924), who never married and had no children, crossed the park in Berlin when he met a girl who was crying because she had lost her favorite doll.
She and Kafka searched for the doll to no avail.
Kafka told him to meet him there the day after they'd be looking again.
The next day, when they still haven't found the doll, Kafka gave the girl a letter ′′ written ′′ by the doll saying ′′ please don't cry.
Took a trip to see the world. I will write to you about my adventures."
So began a story that continued until the end of Kafka's life.
During their meetings, Kafka read the doll's letters carefully written with adventures and conversations that the girl found adorable.
Finally, Kafka brought back the doll (bought one)
′′ It doesn't look like my doll at all," the girl said.
Kafka gave her another letter in which the doll wrote: ′′ My travels changed me." the girl hugged the new doll and happily brought her home.
A year later Kafka died.
Many years later, the now adult girl found a letter inside the doll.
In the tiny letter signed by Kafka it was written:
′′ Everything you love will probably be lost, but in the end, love will return otherwise.

https://www.facebook.com/culturaemdoses/


Here's a dozen of my favorite things never to apologize for:


1) Never apologize for acting on your instincts.
2) Never apologize for being passionate.
3) Never apologize for being smart.
4) Never apologize for demanding respect.
5) Never apologize for saying no.
6) Never apologize for not embracing someone else's agenda.
7) Never apologize for disagreeing.
8) Never apologize for your faith.
9) Never apologize for your own sense of creativity.
10) Never apologize for ordering dessert.
11) Never apologize for being funny.
12) Never apologize for living your truth.


Every one of us casts a shadow.

There hangs about us, a sort of a strange, indefinable something, which we call personal influence--that has its effect on every other life on which it falls. It goes with us wherever we go. It is not something we can have when we want to have it--and then lay aside when we will, as we lay aside a garment. It is something that always pours out from our lives . . . as light from a lamp, as heat from flame, as perfume from a flower.

The ministry of personal influence is something very wonderful. Without being conscious of it, we are always impressing others by this strange power that exudes from us. Others watch us--and their thinking and actions are modified by our influence."

"Be very careful, then, how you live--not as unwise but as wise, making the most of every opportunity." Ephesians 5:15-16

~J. R. Miller, "The Shadows We Cast"

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