Thursday, December 5, 2019

Story image for iconic gown from Brides.com

5 Ways Kate Middleton's Wedding Dress Is Still Influencing the ...

Brides.com-Apr. 29, 2016
You're not just seeing things: When it comes to wedding dresses, the Kate Middleton effect is still very much present. The now-iconic Sarah Burton for Alexander ...
Story image for iconic gown from HarpersBAZAAR.com

And the Bride Wore: Pandora Sykes' Wedding Dress Fitting

HarpersBAZAAR.com-Apr. 25, 2016
Pandora shared, "I had always dreamt that Alice would make my dress. She's this iconic British designer and I love her whimsical, romantic designs but also the ...
Story image for iconic gown from Cosmopolitan.com

47 Scandalous Dresses That Made People Lose Their Sh*t

Cosmopolitan.com-May 23, 2016
Her most iconic routine was the danse sauvage, in which she wore a skirt ... It's hard not to think of the Art Deco age and bias cut gowns without picturing this ...
Story image for iconic gown from Evening Standard

Nicole Kidman recreates Angelina Jolie's famous split dress ...

Evening Standard-Oct. 12, 2016
Nicole Kidman recreated the iconic look made famous by Angelina Jolie at the London Film Festival premiere of new film Lion. The Australian A-lister wore a ...

1 comment:

Pearl Necklace said...

The nature of the fact in the consciousness remains intact, it completely takes the form of empirical, or real, facts, and it is invested in full compliance with the nature of the fact some kind of content. Embedded is the contents that would fit conceivable consciousness of reality. For a fact in consciousness can only exist as a conceivable reality.
But the difficulty lies in the fact that conceivable reality may not match the reality, which is dealing with people in solving their tasks. Or conceivable reality may not correspond exactly to (partially matching) the reality that exists as a real fact. Therefore, the difference between the conceivable and the real facts on the nature of education no. The difference is only in the content fact. This equally applies to any other fact, because all of the facts differ from one another only by their contents. And in this sense conceivable fact no different from real, or empirical, fact.