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On Etsy since 2007 MIKODESIGN a collection of handscreenprinted products thank you for visiting my shop Because I love presents, I will wrap every order with free gift wrapping. All packages are send with Post nl without track/trace if you like to have a track and trace please send me a mail! Report this shop to Etsy IndiaGrace on 18 Jan, 2017 Mrs. Fox costume set I love Paris doll vintage pink diy kit knitted hat and shawl set orche red and white stripe blouse Souvernirs de Paris fabric vintage pink 140 gram becuteBC on 18 Jan, 2017 Perfect - exactly as described and just cute .. Thanks also for the enchanting Viva packaging! D.I.Y Frida Flag banner kit Frida is so nice and most heartfelt thanks for the bell! I love it and am looking forward to giving away little Frida. Thanks for the wonderful Viva wrapping! Cissy Alexander on 06 Jan, 2017 I love this dark gray marled knit hat and scarf! It looks adorable on my doll and will surely keep her warm this winter.
Thanks too for the little extra. I will enjoy that as well. knitted hat and shawl set grey Accepts Etsy gift cards5 Things You Shouldn't Miss in 'Skyrim: Special Edition' Best quest, a new pet and the chance to fall into another dimension. The 'Skyrim: Special Edition' features updated graphics and mod support, as well as all the expansions. Skyrim: Special Edition – Bethesda's re-issue of its 2011 hit fantasy game now enhanced for current consoles and PC – is here, and that means it's time to agonize over creating a custom character one more time before dancing off into that wide open world to tell your own stories, possibly as a cat. But what stories should they be? You can easily spend hundreds of hours in this game and there's no shortage of things to do. Sure, you could just pick a compass direction and walk until the sun comes up on Turdas – stop laughing, that is a real and normal name of a day of the week in this world. Or you could enjoy a more guided experience that doesn't end with you stumbling into a swamp by revisiting these five highlights of Skyrim.
Pokemon Creators Talk 'Pokémon Go,' What's New for 'Sun' and 'Moon' 3 Things Xbox Owners Need to Know About VR, Gaming Future Review: 'Civilization VI' Is as Complex and Compulsive as Ever We Played Donald Trump Games So You Don't Have To 'Battlefield 1': How Realistic Are Games' WWI-Era Weapons?Miko Grimes just went off on ESPN’s Sage Steele over her tweet about Mike Evans’ decision to sit during the national anthem as a protest over Donald Trump’s election victory. — Sage Steele (@sagesteele) November 14, 2016 That set Mrs. Grimes off and she blasted Steele on Twitter with some seriously strong language including racial epithets: Please tell that COON @sagesteele (that thinks bc she sucks a white dick every night that means she isnt black) that i said FUCK HER! — Miko Grimes (@iHeartMiko) November 15, 2016 Black bitches get white privilege then forget SOLDIERS FOUGHT FOR EVERYONE'S RIGHTS, NOT JUST THE RIGHTS YOU CARE ABOUT!
— Miko Grimes (@iHeartMiko) November 14, 2016 This stupid bitch thinks national anthem sitting equals hatred for military! U ignorant little bitch! Fuck sage and @kateupton @sagesteeledayz epoch backpack glitchI’d say that’s fairly classic Miko Grimes.phenom backpack puma She also directed her ire towards Jason Whitlock:wyoming backpack night haze but when it happens to me its ok because I'm just regular black huh? pinocchio kdrama backpacktell her put her cooning ass big girl panties on and suck it up! longchamp backpack sbn
Miko’s husband Brent Grimes is Evans’ teammate on the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and obviously she agrees with his protest. That said, that’s a pretty insane, unhinged rant.laptop backpack bidorbuy Grimes and her husband are never far from controversy, and this is yet another example of that. Action FiguresVideo GamesBikes & Ride-onsElectronicsBuilding SetsLearningGames & PuzzlesOutdoor PlayVehicles, Hobby & R/CPretend PlayArts & CraftsPreschoolMusical InstrumentsStuffed AnimalsCooking for Kids Hot WheelsMinecraftLEGOStar WarsTransformersTeenage Mutant Ninja Turtles we got what's hot! These puppies are so cute, you'll want to make 101 of them.After weeks of waiting, we have a movie to go with the mugs, books and backpacks, and a chance to answer the summer's biggest question. Of course it is. For those keeping score, "Pocahontas" is less sexist than its recent Disney predecessors, and no more sexist than, say, "Romeo and Juliet," "Pride and Prejudice" or "The Bridges of Madison County," which it closely resembles (a man and a woman from different worlds fall in love, see the obstacles and, after a brief fling, nobly renounce each other)."
what else is new? For most of recorded history, a woman's socioeconomic status has been determined by the man she marries. Thus the main task of women has been to marry well. Check your Shakespeare, your Jane Austen, your fairy tales. Disney didn't exactly invent this.But Disney enlarged on it, and translated it into the plaintive language of adolescence: romantic longings vs. parental restrictions. Anyone with a child past the age of 3 will recognize this as the pattern of Disney's recent blockbuster animated movies. In each, a gorgeous girl defies her father to follow a hormonal impulse, or, in Aladdin's words, to let her "heart decide."* "The Little Mermaid": Bikini-clad Ariel pines for a foreign prince. Dad, who happens to rule the ocean, says no. Mermaid runs away, almost dies, marries prince anyway. College plans put on hold indefinitely.* "Beauty and the Beast": Bookish Belle shuns the advances of a mindless hunk, and ends up kidnapped by a hulk who turns out to have been a hunk all along.* "Aladdin": Slinky royal teen refuses suitors in her peer group, runs away to inner city where she gets picked up by a homeless criminal with Tom Cruise-like features.
They share a "magic carpet ride," and, after much talk of honesty in relationships and much subterfuge, they marry.Its eponymous heroine is a buxom Native American princess who, bored by the warrior her father wants her to marry, spends her time prowling through the woods with a raccoon and paddling down a river daydreaming about her destiny. She falls for a man of different race, nationality and political leanings from her father's. Their relationship leads to the warrior's death, and ends badly for the princess as well.Same pattern, slightly more adult treatment. Is Pocahontas, so physically like her beauteous Disney predecessors, also just another teen in trouble? More than any of its predecessors, "Pocahontas" seems conflicted on this point.A tomboyOn the plus side, Pocahontas is a tomboy who canoes and high-dives. Granted, there are a few too many sequences of her sidling silently through the Virginia forest, flexing first one shapely calf then another as her deerskin hems reach higher and fTC higher.
She's not just flashing leg, she's scouting the enemy! This is one Disney heroine with plenty of, well, testosterone.But then there are those breasts, rising from Pocahontas' off-the-shoulder decolletage like the rolling hills of the Piedmont: another natural resource to be plundered by the white man. The breasts have garnered much attention from concerned feminists, probably because they were so visible on the mugs, backpacks, etc. Before we even saw the movie trailer, we saw the cleavage. Is it just scenery?Nothing is ever just scenery. I expect that Pocahontas' fabulous figure is working subliminally in the minds of my daughters, translating into negative messages about fat percentage, but I can no more stop that tape from rolling than I can halt the manufacture of Barbies. (As Barbie had Skipper, Pocahontas has Nikemo, a flat-chested sidekick full of sensible advice.)I wish Disney would give us an animated heroine with a regular-looking body. But, life is sexist. And note: John Smith's hips are a bit too slim for credibility, too.
No, breasts aside, this Disney heroine is OK. She's smitten, but John Smith is equally smitten; she's disobedient, but it's for the good of the tribe; in the end, she's the bravest warrior of all. I'm not worried about my children receiving these messages; at 7 and 5, they're more interested in Meeko the raccoon anyway.What does worry me about "Pocahontas" is not its heroine's body but her brain. It's full of dreams. In a poignant early moment, Pocahontas paddles toward a fork in the river, pondering the suitable warrior."Should I marry Kokoum? Is all my dreaming at an end?"It's doubtful her "dreaming" is about particle physics or economies of scale in tobacco farming. She's dreaming about two men: one she's already met, one she hasn't. What looks like a choice really isn't much of one.Looking for love"Pocahontas" fools you the same way "Beauty & the Beast" did. In the earlier movie, Belle read books, all right. Like Pocahontas, she seemed to be breaking free, but never really eluded the restrictions of the genre.