#i appreciate this SO MUCH GRAA
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oh my GOODNESS! I LOOOVE THIS SO SO DEARLY THANK YOU VERYY KINDLY!! 💞💞🌟 AAA!!!!!
Stimboard for Lil Gideon (Gravity Falls) for one of my friends from over on my kin specific blog! Surprise @widdleolme I hope I did good!
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🧈THE TOAST 🍞
WELL… Wave and smile boys wave and smile UvU ) ✨
HAHAHAH YESSS I'M BACK AT IT AGAIN WITH THE HELP OF THE LORD!! Woo! 🌸✨👀!
✩*⢄⢁✧ ——— ✧⡈⡠*✩
Tbh, I had this idea in my mind for a while and decided- Why not! Let me just hit up my Bff, Boast through her door, point my finger at her AND THEN - Ask if she wants me to make her into a Freakin Simple chibi style again 👁️👁️ GRAA!!!
And apparently this happened 🤣🤣🤣✨🔥
Tbh This is also a way to show my love and appreciation towards my IRISH SCOTTISH CAT BREAD BFF!!! 🔥 She's a blessing from God and I cannot stand here and say nothing but shout out loudly how amazing God is for giving me such an amazing friend!! He had all this planned from the beginning, to meet each other and see his hand work in our lives, especially seeing How Much God has worked into my BFF's life!! God can turn any broken heart into a brand-new creation! Just Man God is so good and amazing!! He's THE BEST!! And of course, Praise the Lord for helping me make this silly hilarious gift for my bff 🤪🤣
✩*⢄⢁✧ ——— ✧⡈⡠*✩
It was really lots of fun working on this!! Loved the expressions HAHAHA IT JUST NEEDED TO BE THE STOOPID ENERGY HER!! 🤣✨🌸🔥💕
I really wanted this to look cool and funny and well also match each other a ref sheet chibi cuz why not- WE NEED THAT CUZ WE BUT NUT HEADS 👁️👁️✨🌸🔥
✩*⢄⢁✧ ——— ✧⡈⡠*✩
“Now the Lord is the Spirit, and where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is freedom. And we all, with unveiled face, beholding the glory of the Lord, are being transformed into the same image from one degree of glory to another. For this comes from the Lord who is the Spirit.”
2 Corinthians 3:17-18
#A Generation Tale#art#my art#digital art#procreate#chibi#christian#fan art#christian artist#self persona#warrior cats#ref#persona#cat sona#faith#bible verse#holy spirit#Christian art
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Local man thankful every day for organ donor who saved his life after diabetes meds caused enlarged heart
KANSAS CITY, Mo. – In 2008 John Shultz thought he was relatively healthy until his doctor told him a medication he took for diabetes caused serious heart problems and an enlarged heart.
For eight years, John managed those issues through lifestyle changes, but in 2017 he was on the heart transplant waiting list.
“They prepared me, they said that you may not live long enough for us to find a donor for you,” Shultz said.
It’s not what this energetic grandfather expected.
“So I prepared probably the most difficult conversation that I would have had in my life and that was to tell my grandsons that grandfather wasn`t going to be around for much longer,” Shultz said.
But within four days, John got the answer to his prayers, and nearly unprecedented news. He was getting the heart he needed.
“It was a perfect match, I`ve had no issues, no signs of rejection, no pain, no discomfort,” Shultz said.
While john was thrilled to get the life-saving transplant, he had to know who donated this heart.
He discovered it was a 24 year-old named Zach Graas.
24-year-old Zach Graas
“He was 24 at the time he passed, he had been told at age 18 that he had brain cancer,” Shultz said.
Shultz wrote Graas’ family a thank you note, and hoped one day to thank his family in person.
“John`s letter was the first letter that we received, and it took me awhile to open it. I actually couldn`t read it- I had to have somebody read it to me,” Graas’ mother, Dina, said.
Then one day, Shultz did meet Graas’ family. He allowed his mother, Dina, to listen to Graas’ heart beating strongly in his chest.
For Dina- knowing her witty, ambitious and talented son lives on through organ donation helps.
“It`s given me some sense of comfort, you know I guess with the whole thing,” Dina said.
“When your son dies, you know everything that`s happening on your end of things, but to hear other stories of what these other families went through at the same time we were dealing with our side and to see it evolve and see how Zach`s organs are still thriving- it kind of brings the whole thing full circle,” Dina said.
Shultz said having a friendship with Graas’ family helps him feel closer to his donor.
“I wake up every morning with an appreciation of the people that made this possible for me,” Shultz said.
People such as the young man who replaced Shultz’s enlarged heart with his normal-sized, but better than average heart.
“He had a heart of gold, and I told John he got the best part,” Dina said.
from FOX 4 Kansas City WDAF-TV | News, Weather, Sports https://fox4kc.com/2019/09/18/local-man-thankful-every-day-for-organ-donor-who-saved-his-life-after-diabetes-meds-caused-enlarged-heart/
from Kansas City Happenings https://kansascityhappenings.wordpress.com/2019/09/18/local-man-thankful-every-day-for-organ-donor-who-saved-his-life-after-diabetes-meds-caused-enlarged-heart/
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Hats are big this summer, really BIG
New Post has been published on https://latestnews2018.com/hats-are-big-this-summer-really-big/
Hats are big this summer, really BIG
Gigantic straw sun hats – larger than certain area rugs and priced above Dh2,000 – is the flavour of the season, and how!
Fashion sometimes goes to gobsmacking, seemingly incomprehensible extremes. The gigantic straw sun hat of summer 2018 is one of those.
This headgear is larger than certain area rugs. But to certain fashion aficionados, it is the inexpressible ultimate, sold out just about everywhere, cooed over online and in person.
“Never has anything I’ve ever worn attracted so much attention,” said Jeanette Jones, a corporate publicist from Toronto visiting Paris with her Lola Spinner hat. “Women keep stopping me in the street and engaging me.”
“People snap their neck, in a good way, when they see me in these huge hats,” said Daniella Van Graas, a model and actress who lives in New York. “They really are fashion statements.”
To give unsuspecting readers an idea, the largest of them, the Palapa Hat, from the Mexican design team Olmos & Flores, has a 57-cm brim with a 25-cm fringe. That’s more than twice the expanse of the brim on the already sizable Eric Javits Giant Floppy, worn by Serena Williams on the cover of the August issue of InStyle magazine.
And who needs “It” Girls when there are Hat Girls: American model Bella Hadid, Denni Elias, a blogger from Mexico, and Giovanna Battaglia Engelbert, an Italian fashion editor. As Jacqueline Lamont, an associate professor at Pratt Institute who is also a milliner, pointed out: “A lot of these young women never wore hats before. Now they get to wear these big, elegant creations.”
The most talked-about hat on the market is the Grand Chapeau La Bomba, by self-taught French designer Simon Porte Jacquemus and priced around $700 (Dh2,570). Exuding the same off-kilter-sexy South-of-France chic that’s evident in his clothing designs, La Bomba is a geometrically perfect circle of wheat straw, with the 54.6-cm brim curled up at one side for visibility as well as flirtation. (If both sides were rolled up, it would become a humongous Napoleonic tricorn.) It was prudently produced as well with a 30.5-cm brim. Either hat could be ballast for that other current Jacquemus best-seller, the teensy Sac Chiquito handbag.
Leo Maribo, a junior buyer at the Copenhagen luxury fur and clothing shop Birger Christensen, tried on La Bomba on a trip to Paris. “It’s light and comfortable,” he said, “but very hard to incorporate in your everyday life.” Maribo purchased just one for the store, “for merchandising use.” It was shipped, he recalled, in a giant box, like a flat-screen TV.
Emma Rosenzweig, a Danish model who has worked for Balenciaga, soon spotted the hat in a Birger Christensen window display and bought it to wear at her May wedding to Tal R., an artist, instead of a veil. “When we kissed after the ceremony, I could hide both me and my husband underneath the hat,” she said.
Melissa Dunne, a stylist, bought the smaller La Bomba, “luckily before it sold out. It’s wearable and manageable, but still quite large and cumbersome,” she said. Calling it “a very expensive status symbol,” she found it “certainly attention-grabbing. I get no end of compliments when I wear it, even on the streets of Boston,” where she lives.
Only a short while after Jacquemus designed the La Bomba in Paris, the Palapa hat emerged from Guadalajara, Mexico, named for a beach hut with an umbrella-like straw roof popular in Baja California. Its designers, Ali Daniel Flores and Victor Olmos, conceived their royal palm straw creation as a tribute to the sombrero — regarded as an embarrassment by today’s youth of Mexico — and to help restore local straw-weaving traditions.
A minor internet scandal erupted when Vogue Mexico pictured the Olmos & Flores hat atop Hadid, mistakenly attributing it to Jacquemus. He permitted the image to go viral, with a caption indicating it was his. Diet Prada, an Instagram account that exposes copycat designs, intervened and blew the whistle on the French designer. His response: “fake news.”
Thanks in part to this kerfuffle, the Palapa is selling briskly in Mexico, and may soon be retailed abroad. Foldable for travel, it’s showing up at beaches and indoors as wall art. As for walking around in it? “I think you could, but it would be a bit complex,” said Flores. “It’s hard to wear on a daily basis.”
Then there is the Spinner, a supersize straw rendition of the oilskin Southwester, whose elongated back brim keeps rain from coursing down the back of sailors’ necks. Developed by New York designer Lola Ehrlich, the Spinner’s brim measures 40.6cm in the back and 21.6cm in the front.
Made from narrow, zigzagged raffia tape, this mega-hat is easy to pin or scrunch back, so the face is visible and less communal space is taken. It’s also commended for quickly springing back to its original shape. “It’s not like wearing an enormous sundial on your head; it folds around the face in different ways,” said Kirsten Ulve, an illustrator in New York, of her Spinner.
It also can collapse into laptop size or be rolled up, like a yoga mat, for travel.
Accessories designer Eric Javits, who started his career in 1978, assessed that beyond occasions where “wearing an outrageous hat would be fun, a brim that is wider than 30cm is too extreme, and would not be feasible for other than runway, a photo or Instagram use.”
“Everyone knows how to wear a necklace, handbags and shoes,” Javits added. “But hats are the last frontier of accessories.”Which not everyone can cross.
“They take guts and confidence,” said Dunne, the stylist.
“They have to be worn fearlessly,” said DeAnna Gibbons, a San Francisco milliner. “When customers come to my studio, they want to try the big hats on,” she said. “But then they don’t press ‘Go.’”
Some are going halfway: hanging their huge hats from handbags or backpacks, or displaying them Zorro-style on their back, secured with chin ties.
It all hearkens to a time of turmoil at the start of the Industrial Revolution, when the satirical term “bonnetism” was coined to describe the wearing of hats so huge they required assistance when entering carriages (just as today’s might require an Uber seat of their own or wreak havoc in a crowded subway car).
The last time big hats had such command were the Dynasty ‘80s.
Women now are more appreciative of built-in SPF. Shannon Schafer, senior fashion director at Nordstrom, added that this season’s “looser and languid silhouettes are complimented with an oversized rustic hat.”
“They have an almost architectural quality when worn against impressive backdrops,” said Jodi Kaplan, Moda Operandi’s vice-president of non-apparel.
And so Ehrlich plans to further increase the size of the Spinner for next year. Javits will be doing a 30cm brim. Designer Eugenia Kim will have a 22.8-cm one named the Veruschka, and the San Diego Hat Co. will offer a 22.8-cm boater.
“By then,” Ehrlich said, “women will understand how to wear these hats. But they’ll stay big for only one more season.”
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