the gap

miragemagazine fashiongonerogue
Gaps are everywhere, first and foremost in my mouth, but still, everywhere.
Posted in: Utvalgte moteblogger
March 13th, 2010

Posted in: Utvalgte moteblogger
Tags: Fashion, mote blogg, Moteblogg, Utvalgte moteblogger
Dette er en bufret versjon av artikkelen the gap fra motebloggen: Elen @ E L E-ista
Zara boots and bag. Gina Tricot ring. Levi’s blue dress. Bellapacella hat.
Angryface hehe! Vel, jeg har en tendens til å se sint ut på bilder når jeg ikke smiler ettersom munnen min er naturlig nedoverbuet. Blah! Men nok snakk om munn. I dag prøvde jeg meg på noe jeg ikke har gjort siden jeg var 12 [...]
Les mer om Sometimes even right is wrong
Jacket, Gina Tricot. Blouse, Malene Birger. Pants, Vero Moda. Ring and shoes, HM. Bag, Chanel.
Jeg skal ut og spise sammen med venner i dag. Jeg har det nesten for gøy for tida. Dra på byen når det er mulighet for det, sove lenge og være oppe med venner til langt på natt. Har sett [...]
Les mer om Flightless bird, American Mouth
Denim has become a universal phenomenon and most people are familiar with the words jean and denim. But does anyone actually know where the two words come from?
The word denim comes from the name of a sturdy fabric called serge, originally made in Nîmes, a city in South of France. Originally this fabric was called serge de Nîmes, the name was soon shortened to denim. The city Nîmes derives its name from that of a spring, Nemausus, in a village in the Roman Empire. Which again is named after the god Nemausios from Celtic mythology.
Denim was traditionally colored blue with indigo dye to make blue “jeans“, though “jean” then denoted a different, lighter cotton textile; the contemporary use of jean comes from the French word for Genoa, Italy (Gênes), where the first denim trousers were made. Genoa (Genua) was a city of the ancient Ligurians. Its name is probably Ligurian, meaning “knee”, i.e. “angle”, from its geographical position. Or it could derive from the Celtic root genu-, genawa, meaning “mouth”, or from the Latin word of Celtic origin “ianua”, meaning “door”.
ref. Wikipedia
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