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Getbig Female Info Boards => Open Talk for Girl Discussion => Topic started by: Butterbean on October 02, 2007, 09:31:09 AM
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:-\
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to cover up the smell of her dead body? ???
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to cover up the smell of her dead body? ???
lololoz Seriously, I was thinking..."Stand by Me" the movie where they go to see the dead body by the river. Really strange choice of photo IMO.
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to cover up the smell of her dead body? ???
hahaha.... ;D
Short answer...NO it does not make me want to buy perfume.
Long answer involves a lot of wtf??'s.
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um, ...no. :-X
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Ummm, maybe it's not an ad for perfume. Maybe it's and ad for embalming fluid. ;D
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Ummm, maybe it's not an ad for perfume. Maybe it's and ad for embalming fluid. ;D
hehehe! The pefume is actually called "Daisy." Maybe it should be called "Pushing up Daisies." :(
Check out this model at the Guy Laroche fashion show in Oct of 2006. This is not photoshopped :-\ (pic from Allure magazine)
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What the hell is wrong with all these fashon people. They are the one's warping young girls minds into thinking that is what they should look like. >:( Bastards!
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Check out this model at the Guy Laroche fashion show in Oct of 2006. This is not photoshopped :-\ (pic from Allure magazine)
That guy is skinny. ::)
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That guy is skinny. ::)
you're on a roll ;D
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That guy is skinny. ::)
no that guy is anorexic. That's a whole nother level beyong skinny.
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no that guy is anorexic. That's a whole nother level beyong skinny.
You'd think since he's wearing a sack he would have money to buy food cause sacks are cheap!! ;D
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Hey, that skinny guy has a bit of gyno :o
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I think the people who made that ad saw:
Millais's Ophelia
Tate Gallery, London
26 Sep - 13 Jan
Ophelia was part of the original Henry Tate Gift in 1894 and remains one of the most popular Pre-Raphaelite works in the Tate's collection. Shakespeare was a frequent source of inspiration for Victorian painters. Millais's image of the tragic death of Ophelia, as she falls into the stream and drowns, is one of the best-known illustrations from Shakespeare's play Hamlet.
John Everett Millais, William Holman Hunt and Dante Gabriel Rossetti were the founding members of a group of artists called the Pre-Raphaelites formed in 1848. They rejected the art of the Renaissance in favour of art before Raphael, Michelangelo and Leonardo (15th-16th centuries). The Pre-Raphaelites focused on serious and significant subjects and were best known for painting subjects from modern life and literature often using historical costumes. They painted directly from nature itself, as truthfully as possible and with incredible attention to detail. They were inspired by the advice of John Ruskin, the English critic and art theorist in Modern Painters (1843-60). He encouraged artists to 'go to Nature in all singleness of heart, rejecting nothing, selecting nothing, and scorning nothing.'
The Pre-Raphaelites developed techniques to exploit the luminosity of pure colour and define forms in their quest for achieving 'truth to nature'. They strongly believed that respectable divine art could only be achieved if the artist focused on the truth and what was real in the natural world.
Millais will also travel to the Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam from 15 February to 18 May 2008.
(I went to see it yesterday, & it was amazing...
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The Pre-Raphaelites developed techniques to exploit the luminosity of pure colour and define forms in their quest for achieving 'truth to nature'. They strongly believed that respectable divine art could only be achieved if the artist focused on the truth and what was real in the natural world.
Of the pre-Raphaelites, My favourite by far is Bougearaux's "The Seduction of Psyche".
It's like an orgasm on canvas.