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Post by refia on Apr 23, 2014 18:23:11 GMT -5
If it´s true then he is currently studying in Madrid. But who knows?
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Post by axelle on Apr 23, 2014 18:33:01 GMT -5
refia your avatar is a hoot!!
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Post by refia on Jun 30, 2014 9:34:45 GMT -5
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Post by emmeline on Jun 30, 2014 13:17:27 GMT -5
He looks like Tatiana. Very very blond indeed.
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Post by agentf on Jul 1, 2014 10:53:00 GMT -5
They all look terrifically healthy. I'm glad. Parenthood agrees with them
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Post by paca on Jul 1, 2014 13:19:17 GMT -5
yeah, if they could just start doing sth useful with their privilidged lives...
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Post by agentf on Jul 5, 2014 10:31:44 GMT -5
The happy couple at the game: World Cup funLove the faux wood frames, I almost bought some in Le Marais last March. I wish I had...
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Post by paca on Jul 5, 2014 16:05:35 GMT -5
and thx to Albert they got special seats and for free too... don't like the glasses though. They look like sth his kid could wear...
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Post by refia on Jul 6, 2014 6:57:29 GMT -5
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Post by emmeline on Jul 6, 2014 13:47:43 GMT -5
What an ugly baby Charlene was. Well, she was still ugly as a kid, teen and adult. If the baby gets lucky he/she could inherit something from Lynette and Grace and do something about it.
Raphaël looks a lot like Charlotte. And Sacha looks like two different babies everytime i see a pic of him.
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Post by agentf on Jul 6, 2014 15:17:49 GMT -5
What a cute baby! Definitely Casiraghi though some of Tatiana's siblings are fair. As per CC's mom, she looks or looked natural anyway, though not a particularly great beauty. Pretty? Yes. I wonder if CC as an only girl felt inferior to her mom. I personally was fantastically ugly as a baby, but years later I modelled - go figure. If baby pictures are any indication of how you age back, as most seniors end up looking like they did as babies, I'm going to be one ugly senior LOL
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Post by agentf on Jul 6, 2014 15:23:27 GMT -5
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Post by emmeline on Jul 6, 2014 18:24:46 GMT -5
Seems to be his new thing. I wouldn't get surprised if he keeps getting more tattoes with time. I've been told by people with tattoes that is kind of an addiction. You get one, then you'd like to get another one and it goes on...
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Post by paca on Jul 7, 2014 1:47:35 GMT -5
heard that too. And they'll all look horrible when they get old... It used to be a signature for rebellion or standing outside the establishment. These days it seems to be the seal to belong. Like a stamp of approval. If you won't to b a rebel or different you have to refuse tats and piercing etc. these days. I find people with tats these days unimaginative and boring. NOthing exciting about them and proof for lack of ideas of their own. It ranges on the same level as fast food...
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Post by agentf on Jul 7, 2014 9:16:14 GMT -5
heard that too. And they'll all look horrible when they get old... It used to be a signature for rebellion or standing outside the establishment. These days it seems to be the seal to belong. Like a stamp of approval. If you won't to b a rebel or different you have to refuse tats and piercing etc. these days. I find people with tats these days unimaginative and boring. NOthing exciting about them and proof for lack of ideas of their own. It ranges on the same level as fast food... You know, just two weeks ago, I was picking up fresh fish for a party at home and leaving the fishmonger, I saw this young man, face totally black. I struck a conversation, he turned around and under the black ink on his face was the number 21 on his forehead but he was pleasant enough. Then he removed his sunglasses to show me his "trademarked" tattooed eyeballs. He was looking at me through blackened eyes. My first response was that I hope they had used some kind of organic ink like squid. N'importe quoi. You're staring at a manifestation of someone's worse nightmare and yet, we talked like this was body art which for some it really is. I keep thinking of my $150 a session to have one removed years ago. And Pax, you're right on - it looks really stupid when you age. Sailors? Sure. Prisoners? Sure. But civilians? Think twice, thrice etc. Walking away from the young man, I had a thought for his mother and I wonder if it broke her heart.
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Post by paca on Jul 7, 2014 10:50:13 GMT -5
LOL my dad was a sailor and always refused to get one. One he thought it looked cheap and vulgar (he started in his teens so that was the 50s). The other point he made that it was too much of a risk to catch an infection or other disease. And then of course the age and change of body part. He also made sure that we got the drift early on that we could neither shock him or grasp attention from him by getting tats. He did make sure as well that he would expect his children to be smarter than that, so getting a tat in my family would have been an official statement about the degree of intelligence. My dad also mentioned some great tats he had seen and that he considered them artwork, but he said they should have chosen a different canvas. But that of course refers to the tattooist, not the wearer. He is just the canvas of various artists and at best a collage. He is at the merci of whoever holds the needle and his or her talent. Instead of becoming more individual and unique you are objectifying yourself with a tattoo. Even more so if stencils are being used...
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Post by agentf on Aug 4, 2014 11:22:46 GMT -5
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Post by mrszinck on Aug 30, 2014 2:16:20 GMT -5
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Post by axelle on Aug 30, 2014 6:54:03 GMT -5
Awww cute!
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Post by hibou on Aug 30, 2014 8:23:19 GMT -5
heard that too. And they'll all look horrible when they get old... It used to be a signature for rebellion or standing outside the establishment. These days it seems to be the seal to belong. Like a stamp of approval. If you won't to b a rebel or different you have to refuse tats and piercing etc. these days. I find people with tats these days unimaginative and boring. NOthing exciting about them and proof for lack of ideas of their own. It ranges on the same level as fast food... There's nothing worse than seeing a 50 or older woman with a tattoo. It's like trying to stay eternally young. After a while it just looks ridiculous like Joan River's plastic surgeries ( I wish her good health soon in her recent health crisis.). Tattoos do fade over time and then look really bad. The laser removal process is apparently very painful and expensive. Kids don't think about the long term effects. What does all that dye injected into your body do to your health long-term?
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