#The Editorialist
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Toni Garrn for The Editorialist by Gilles Bensimon
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#Yashua Simmons#Olamide Ogundele#David Michael Burns#Harlem#The Editorialist Magazine#The Editorialist#Spring 2019#2019
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The Row Lukre Shirt
#the row#lukre shirt#chemise#editorialist#essentials#homme#mary kate olsen#ashley olsen#parisian style#parisian vibe#parisian homme
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Winter Outfits Stay Warm and Stylish
Winter is the perfect time to experiment with fashion and wrap up in cozy layers. Whether you're going for a chic and sophisticated look or something more casual and comfortable, there are endless possibilities for creating stylish winter fashion. In this article, we'll explore some of the latest trends and offer tips on how to stay warm and fashionable all season long.
Key Winter Wardrobe Essentials
To create versatile winter outfits, it's essential to have a few key pieces in your wardrobe:
A classic coat: Invest in a high-quality coat that will last for years. Consider options like a wool peacoat, a puffer jacket, or a trench coat.
Cozy knitwear: Sweaters, cardigans, and turtlenecks are essential for staying warm and adding texture to your outfits.
Stylish boots: A good pair of boots can elevate any winter outfit. Ankle boots, over-the-knee boots, and snow boots are all great options.
Versatile bottoms: Jeans, leggings, and corduroy pants are perfect for layering and creating a variety of looks.
Winter Outfit Ideas
Cozy and Chic: Pair an oversized sweater with high-waisted jeans and ankle boots. Add a beanie and a long coat for extra warmth.
Layer Up: Create a layered look with a turtleneck, a sweater, and a denim jacket. Finish with leggings and your favorite pair of sneakers.
Monochromatic Magic: Opt for a monochromatic look by wearing different shades of the same color. For example, pair a beige sweater with beige pants and a camel coat.
Statement Coat: Make your coat the focal point of your outfit. Pair a bold-colored or patterned coat with simple pieces like jeans and a turtleneck.
Winter Accessories
Accessories can make or break a winter outfit. Consider adding these pieces to your wardrobe:
Scarves: A scarf can add a pop of color and keep you warm.
Gloves: Choose a pair of gloves that are both stylish and functional.
Hats: Beanies, fedoras, and berets are all great options for winter.
Bags: A stylish bag can complete any outfit.
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View more: https://editorialist.com/fashion/casual-winter-outfits/
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Kate Upton for Editorialist Magazine
#kate upton#model#photoshoot#fashion#style#famous#celebrity#hair#makeup#magazine#editorialist magazine#actress#actor
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@yolanda.hadid: ❤️So proud of all that you do and all that you are my love…….. Always
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Editorialist
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Four days before the Hamas attack, the newspaper Ha’aretz published an editorial under the heading ‘Israeli Neo-Fascism Threatens Israelis and Palestinians Alike’. One month earlier 200 Israeli high school students declared their refusal to be conscripted thus: ‘We decided that we cannot, in good faith, serve a bunch of fascist settlers that are in control of the government right now.’ In May, a Ha’aretz editorial opined that the ‘sixth Netanyahu government is beginning to look like a totalitarian caricature. There is almost no move associated with totalitarianism that has not been proposed by one of its extremist members and adopted by the rest of the incompetents it comprises, in their competition to see who can be more fully full fascist,’ while one of its editorialists described an ‘Israeli fascist revolution’ ticking off all items in the checklist, from virulent racism to a contempt for weakness, from a lust for violence to anti-intellectualism. These recent polemics and prognoses were anticipated by prominent intellectuals like the renowned historian of the far Right Ze’ev Sternhell, who wrote of ‘growing fascism and a racism akin to early Nazism’ in contemporary Israel, or the journalist and peace activist Uri Avnery, who escaped Nazi Germany at age ten, and who, not long before his death in 2018, declared that the discrimination against the Palestinians in practically all spheres of life can be compared to the treatment of the Jews in the first phase of Nazi Germany. (The oppression of the Palestinians in the occupied territories resembles more the treatment of the Czechs in the “protectorate” after the Munich betrayal.) The rain of racist Bills in the Knesset, those already adopted and those in the works, strongly resembles the laws adopted by the Reichstag in the early days of the Nazi regime. Some rabbis call for a boycott of Arab shops. Like then. The call ‘Death to the Arabs’ (‘Judah verrecke’?) is regularly heard at soccer matches. There is nothing new in the analogy, of course. The likes of Hannah Arendt and Albert Einstein signed a letter to the New York Times in the wake of the Deir Yassin massacre in 1948 decrying Herut (the predecessor to Netanyahu’s Likud party) as ‘akin in its organization, methods, political philosophy and social appeal to the Nazi and Fascist parties’.
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Stumbled upon this rattish academic philosopher(?) with a substack complaining about how the "far left" are not willing to try and persuade ppl of their points of view on contentious topics like palestine and instead rely on purely emotional histrionics, citing as evidence that he spent 20min(!?) trying to confront random student protesters about their opposition to israel. Me fuming about this is maaaaybe a version of unproductive hunting for a guy online to get mad at but this is definitely a sentiment i have heard before, that the far left in particular is disinclined to argument and persuasion
My instinct every time someone says this shit is to ask, Have you ever flipped open a copy of jacobin? There are plenty of ppl on the "far left" willing to make this that or the other "case" for their pov if you actually seek out those arguments in the venues typical of lengthy political arguments. The domain of "arguments for why israel is bad and was a mistake" is famously about as richly inhabited as any on any topic. And if you want further left than jacobin (which has an editorial line that would absolutely still qualify as far left from this guys perspective), leninist pamphleteers and anarchist zine-writers are notoriously happy to provide. Some random university encampment foot soldiers arent likely going to be the ones doing that for the same reason the median participant at a hillary rally is not going to be the most eloquent apologist for centrist-wing democrats and an arbitrarily selected guy with a ron paul bumper sticker will not be particularly compelling when speaking on behalf of a return to the gold standard, theres nothing special about the student activists position on the political spectrum here other than thst ppl seem disproportionately likely to expect every "purple-haired androgynous man wearing a shirt that says [queers] for Palestine" to do the job of a professional editorialist for their faction while allowing for intellectual division of labour on others
If you talk to a Curtis Yarvin-type monarchist about the optimal government, they’ll argue about it for hours on end. Neoreactionaries were famous for writing absurdly long articles going back and forth with those who disagreed with them. Because they were fringe, because most people disagreed with them, they didn’t have the presumption that challenging them was gauche or indicative of moral failing. They were willing to get down dirty and argue.
No, man, mencius moldbug was "famous for writing absurdly long articles going back and forth with those who disagreed with" him. I remember the neoreactionary randos when that fad was still ongoing, and they spent most opportunities for debate instead being loudly self pitying. Which is not even really that much of a dig bc "highly articulate propagandist" will be an extreme minority in any political movt larger than a small friend circle of curious eccentrics, that is the whole point! You have to compare apples to apples, and instead of even looking for any you are deliberately hunting down the aisle for oranges and shaking yr head in disapproval
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april 14, 2016 | eight years ago today
taylor’s photoshoot for vogue may 2016 released
in one photo, she’s wearing a silver crystal embellished michael kors dress from the fall 2016 collection that karlie kloss would go on to wear for her fall 2016 editorialist cover
#april 14 2016#april 14#2016#karlie kloss#kaylor#matching clothes#gaylor throwbacks#gaylor#gaylor swift#lgbetty
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Dan Aykroyd and Tom Green, both from Ottawa, attacked controversial news editorialist Rex Murphy
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What is amber?
I am excited to announce that “What is amber in perfumery?” is an extremely simple question to answer. Like, it’s still interesting, but it doesn’t require 1200 words. The simplest definition is “labdanum with some other stuff”:
The scent of amber was originally derived from emulating the scent of ambergris and/or the plant resin labdanum, but since sperm whales are endangered, the scent of amber is now largely derived from labdanum. The term "amber" is loosely used to describe a scent that is warm, musky, rich and honey-like, and also somewhat earthy. Benzoin is usually part of the recipe. Vanilla and cloves are sometimes used to enhance the aroma. "Amber" perfumes may be created using combinations of labdanum, benzoin resin, copal (a type of tree resin used in incense manufacture), vanilla, Dammara resin and/or synthetic materials. (Wikipedia)
Experimental Perfume Club throws in patchouli and styrax:
Contrary to popular belief, amber is a ‘fantasy’ perfumery note. Amber is a blend of ingredients that describes a warm, powdery, sweet scent. It consists of a soiree of ingredients (natural and synthetic) such as vanilla, patchouli, labdanum, styrax, benzoin and a few more.
The Perfume Society brings in tonka and Peru balsam, plus Facts:
Even more confusingly, the perfume ingredient doesn’t even come from amber itself – that time-hardened resin of Pinus succinifera, which is often shaped into jewellery. Instead, it’s the name given to a simple fragrance accord of labdanum, benzoin and vanilla – and/or, sometimes, touches of tonka and Peru balsam, which also have a sweet, resinous quality. ‘Amber’ as a perfume ingredient first made its debut in the late 1800s, with the invention of synthetic vanilla (vanillin); nowadays, it’s so widely used in ambrée-style perfumes that it’s given rise to a whole category (Amber ambrée).
Note that ambré(e) (I’ve also seen "ambery," "resinous," “spicebomb,” and “amberspice”) is a replacement for the term “oriental,” which is both racist and useless as a scent descriptor. As I understand it, you could have a fragrance in that family without amber (or “spice,” for that matter), at which point it could perhaps be shuffled off into another grouping anyway. All in all, amber is a pretty strong candidate for genre-definer.
My favorite amber single note is Kuumba Made’s amber paste, a syrupy-thick jojoba base with a nutmeg and pine resin opening (a nod to the origin of actual amber, I think) that dries down into a warm vanilla. Would you know what I meant if I said sandy? Like, not grainy or crystalline, but the dry desert-beach scent that radiates up to your nose from a handful of sand? But also vanilla. The resinous opening is very strong at first, but it mellows away completely after a while—on me, at least.
Nemat’s Amber is pretty good, but seems softer and more abstract to me, a little “perfumy," and without the big pine-spice opening (and that might appeal more to you).
I had a sample of Demeter Fragrance’s Witching Hour—amber, blood orange, and vanilla orchid—and I Did Not Like It. Harsh, sharp, unideal. Their (environmentally responsible and synthetic) sandalwood is also strangely harsh on me; I don't know what's going on there to make that a trend.
Anyway, amber is a note I’m highly likely to seek out, so I will report back with any amber-centric Fine Fragrances I sample. I hear Dior’s Ambre Nuit and the Hermès L'Ambre des Merveilles are great, and the Tom Ford Amber Absolute was good before it was reformulated? And this is not to mention a ton of indie companies I have seen.
Further reading:
"Ambery" synthetic components at the Perfumer's Apprentice supplier site
Fragrantica: Best in Show: Amber (2018)
Fragrantica: The Evolution of Amber, Vol. II: The Sun Gods, Shalimar, and Iso E Super
Perfume Shrine: Labdanum: an important material
Perfume Shrine: Frequent Questions: Amber or Ambergris?
Editorialist: These 13 Amber Perfumes Will Give You That Warm, Fuzzy Feeling
Perfume.com: 15 Best Amber Perfumes of All Time
#perfume: amber#perfume discussion#perfume#welcome to hell it's my blog#perfume: nemat#perfume: demeter#perfume: kuumba made#queue#long post
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In 1875 London, an editorialist and a gentleman have an unusual first meeting… 👓💌🎩
The Extended Demo for Of Sense and Soul, a Queer Victorian Romance Visual Novel is now available!
Download it at ofsenseandsoul.com/demo
For more Of Sense and Soul, check out the following... Patreon | Itch.io | Steam | Discord | Newsletter | Linktr.ee
#visual novel#indie game#victorian#bl game#gay game#queer fiction#historical fiction#historical romance#of sense and soul#announcement
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BOTTEGA VENETA $2,700.00
Atomic Over-the-knee || Boot - Navy/sea Salt/tomato
"Find BOTTEGA VENETA Atomic Over-the-knee Boot on Editorialist. Knitted striped wool sock over-the-knee boot.
Unlined. Color: Navy/Sea Salt/Tomato. Lugged rubber outsole. Heel: 9 cm | 3.5\". Wool."
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Elevate Your Style with Tahari Dresses
When it comes to sophisticated and timeless fashion, Tahari dresses are a go-to choice for women seeking elegance and class. Known for their high-quality materials and exquisite designs, these dresses are perfect for any occasion, from formal events to casual outings.
Why Choose Tahari Dresses?
Tahari is a brand synonymous with luxury and attention to detail. Their dresses are designed to flatter various body types, offering a perfect blend of comfort and style. Whether you're looking for a sleek cocktail dress or a chic office outfit, Tahari provides a wide range of options to suit your needs.
Explore the Collection
The collection of Tahari dresses features a variety of styles, colors, and patterns. From classic black dresses to vibrant floral prints, there's something for every taste. Each dress is meticulously crafted to ensure a perfect fit and lasting quality, making it a valuable addition to your wardrobe.
Styling Tips for Tahari Dresses
Tahari dresses are incredibly versatile and can be styled in numerous ways. Pair a fitted sheath dress with a tailored blazer for a professional look, or accessorize a flowy maxi dress with statement jewelry for a glamorous evening out. The timeless designs of Tahari dresses make them suitable for both day and night events.
Where to Buy Tahari Dresses
You can find Tahari dresses at high-end department stores, specialty boutiques, and online retailers. Shopping online allows you to explore the full range of styles and sizes from the comfort of your home. Be sure to check out reputable fashion websites to ensure you are purchasing authentic Tahari products.
Conclusion
Tahari dresses are the epitome of elegance and sophistication. Their timeless designs and high-quality craftsmanship make them a must-have for any fashion-forward wardrobe. Whether you're dressing up for a special occasion or looking to elevate your everyday style, Tahari dresses are the perfect choice. Explore their collection today and discover the elegance of Tahari.
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View more: https://editorialist.com/shop/tahari-dresses/
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Sarah Brannon for The Editorialist by Nick Hudson
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