Enhance Your Puja Rituals with the Puja Aasan of ShriHit Radha
The Puja Aasan by ShriHit Radha Enterprises will take your puja ceremonies to a whole new level. For your spiritual routines, this holy mat, which was made with care and respect, is a calm and comfy place to start. While you pray and make gifts, this beautiful worship item will help you feel more peaceful and devoted.
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• Dress.
Date: 1967
Designer/Maker: Ann Lowe
Place of origin: United States: New York, New York City
Medium: Silk, cotton, velvet.
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Masculine cape made of green silk velvet with golden embroidery. Years 1651-1675.
Source: Museu Virtual de la Moda de Catalunya [Fashion Virtual Museum of Catalonia]. Kept in Museu del Disseny [Design Museum] in Barcelona, Catalonia.
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sometimes you just gotta put on the Dark Gothic Princess Dress that only gets to come out of the closet maybe once a winter and sit around in it doing nothing in particular. for a bit.
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I thought it was a shame that since everyone in Aurora is travelling, no one gets to dress up, so here is Erin in what I imagine he would wear back in Asera! (click on image for better quality)
@comicaurora let him be fancy!
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g3 winter exclusives 2006 ❄️✨
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• Woman's Evening Wrap.
Date: 1925
Artist: Designed by House of Worth, Paris (ca. 1858–1952)
Medium: Silk velvet with metallic supplementarty wefts.
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Charlotte Vignon (French, c.1639-c.1685)
Peaches and grapes on a table draped with a red velvet cloth, n.d.
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how does antiquing work in Star Trek?
like, okay, there's no scarcity Because Replicators. great! except you can't replicate an antique, not the real thing. probably some AMAZING reproductions- 24th-century historical costumers must be having the time of their lives, because as great as modern synthetic baleen is, imagine what you could do with a machine that literally replicates the exact molecular structure of the same! or that extinct flax that made medieval linen so great! -but I know antique collectors. there's nothing like the feeling of something you know so many other people have loved for centuries
is it like a barter system? do you go to the antique "shop" with things passed down in your family or found in the equivalent of a Facebook buy-nothing group, and trade what you have for what the history nerd running the place has based on your respective interests?
is Brimfield like a giant swap meet? could I go with, say...a big bag full of my grandmother's chunky 1950s costume jewelry and trade it for 1880s blouse waists because the stall owner wants the former and I want the latter? equivalent value wouldn't matter- what's value, beyond how much you treasure something? nobody's got rent to make or bills to pay, after all
do people become antiques "dealers" just for the thrill of the hunt and the pleasure of matching an object to someone who will love it? you don't have to work, after all; you can spend your whole life searching the world for rare treasures if that brings you joy
this is a nice thought
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