Von Dutch Sl50bb00pb Spiral Mens Watch Review

Von Dutch Sl50bb00pb Spiral Mens Watch

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Von Dutch Sl50bb00pb Spiral Mens Watch review

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Von Dutch Sl50bb00pb Spiral Mens Watch
Von Dutch Sl50bb00pb Spiral Mens Watch

Chronology of African History - Colonizing Nations (19th - 20th Centries)

It is the purpose of this article to provide the general reader with a comprehensive picture of world's greatest civilization originating in Africa, a continent leading modern scholars today refer to it as the 'the cradle of civilization'. This chronology seeks to address sophisticated and intelligent readers who had never previously read anything serious about Africa, from the earliest times to the most recent. Most black people have lost their confidence, their true identity, because their history has been neglected, falsified and sometimes concealed. Diana Crawford Carson has been instrumental in the compilation of the chronology as she spent many hours synchronizing facts from many sources and verifying the language usage. Note: the century headings generally refer to the first date mentioned. Example: an entry covering the 14th to the 18th century will be found under '14th Century, 1300s'. The numbers in the left hand column are arbitrary, to help those using the indexes.

THE BLACK HOLOCAUST

The Black Holocaust is one of the more underreported tragedies in the annals of human history. The Black Holocaust refers to the millions of African lives lost during the centuries to slavery, colonization and oppression. The Black Holocaust refers to the horrors endured by millions of men, women, and children throughout the African Diaspora and the slave trade, from the 17th century, and continuing for at least the next two centuries. (In other guise, from and to many nations, the tragedy of slavery continues.) In sheer numbers, depth and brutality, it is a testimony to the worst elements of human behaviour and the strongest elements of survival.

Unknown numbers of Africans (possibly more than 4 million) died in slave wars and forced marches even before the other captives could be shipped to other nations. Within central Africa itself, the slave trade precipitated massive migrations; coastal tribes fled slave-raiding parties, and captured slaves were punished and transported, or were sold to slave owners in other regions in Africa.

The African slave trade and slave labour transformed the world. In Africa, slave trade stimulated the expansion of powerful West African kingdoms, made possible by the funds and guns provided by the income from the slave trade. In the Islamic world, African slave labour on plantations, in seaports, and within families expanded the commerce and trade of the Indian Ocean and Persian Gulf. In the Americas, both North and South, slave labour became the key component in trans-Atlantic agriculture and commerce, making possible the booming capitalist economy of the 17th and 18th centuries. The greatest demand came from Brazil (in South America) and the sugar plantations in the Caribbean islands.

84 THE RESISTANCE

Many Africans, such as Queen Nzingha of Angola and King Maremba of the Congo, fought valiantly, if vainly, against the European slavers and their African collaborators, without whom the massive numbers of men and women could not have been captured. Others resisted their captors by starting mutinies or even, in desperation, jumping overboard from slave ships during the horrendous 'middle passage' across the Atlantic Ocean. Many enslaved Africans destined for the Americas were subjected to a 'breaking in' process, often in the West Indies. Many of those captured, especially those of very strong spirit, were not 'broken', and managed to escape, eventually forming independent communities such as that of the Maroons ('escapees') in the West Indies. Some of these Maroon communities, numbering in the thousands in the Caribbean and South American, waged guerrilla warfare against slave hunters. If the escaped slave hunters were caught, they were terribly brutally executed.

85 THE DIASPORA: The forced and brutal dispersal of nearly thirty million Africans into foreign lands as slaves is the Black Diaspora. African slaves and their descendants carried with them their many skills and shared community values, rich cultural traditions, resiliency, and a resistance ethos that transformed and enriched the cultures they entered around the world. Thus, as African peoples were globally scattered, they carried their many strengths, and their traditions of cultural creativity and oral arts with them. This included a rich culture of music, using a wide variety of instruments, some primitive

and some very sophisticated, vibrant musical rhythms, dance, costumes in a rainbow of colours, almost an exploration of multi-coloured and diverse textures. There is enchanting use of repetition in poems, in the call-and-response of song, and story telling, all part of the rich traditions of most African peoples. African cultural musical and oral traditions

86 1789 A Nigerian slave from the Benin area of Nigeria, transported to the States (USA) as a young child, later achieved freedom and reached England. Somehow along the way, this young man, Equiano, learned to read and write, so that, once in freedom, he was able to write his autobiography. Perhaps as a matter of security, he wrote as Gustavo Vassa, though he used his true name in the title of his book, 'The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano'. This fascinating and painful book by Equiano (who was also called Igbo) was a clear exposition of his life as a slave, and then in freedom. One most interesting facet is Equiano's description of the difference between servitude under the African system, and the European 'chattel' slavery'. This was written in partial defence of the African system of servitude, as being more humane than the Europeans' system of slavery, ownership of another person. As possibly the first autobiography of a slave or former slave, this book aroused much interest. Equiano's book was followed by others, written by freed men, or smuggled out of slavery by those not yet free. All of these helped to stimulate the young but growing abolitionist movement in the States, and in Europe.

87 1790s The abolitionist movement (to abolish slavery) gained strength in England, and also in the USA.

88 1792 A slave uprising in Haiti (called Saint-Dominigue by the French), involving thousands of slaves, was led by Toussant L'Ouverture (1743-1803). His army eventually numbered 55,000 Africans, who waged guerrilla and frontal war against the British in Haiti for years.

89 Late 18th- mid 19th C European political, economic, and scientific interests stimulated another era of exploration, and a search for new markets. British explorer James Bruce reached the source of the Blue Nile in 1770, Scottish explorer Mungo Park explored (1795 and 1805) the course of the Niger River, Scottish missionary David Livingstone explored the Zambezi River and, in 1855, named Victoria Falls, and British explorers John Hanning Speke and James Augustus Grant, travelling downstream, and Sir Samuel White Baker, working upstream, located the sources of the Nile in 1863. Following the explorers (and sometimes preceding them) were Christian missionaries and European merchants.

90 1795 The British seized control of Cape Colony, South Africa, from the Dutch.
19th century, 1800s

91 1800s and throughout the century Poetry written in the language of the Swahili had long been focussed mostly on Arab (and Muslim) themes. The new Kiswahili poetry looked at, and used, traditional Bantu cultural material, such as their ritual songs, and more. The famed Swahili poet, Sayyid Abdallah Bin Masir, wrote a strong religious poem, 'The Soul's Awakening' ('Utendi wa Inkishafi'). This account of the fall of Pate, a city-state, presented a strong message about the futility of selfish earthly life.

92 1804 This was the year that the Black Republic of Haiti came into being.

93 1807 The Wilberforce Law inEngland banned the slave trade. (Slavery itself was banned in1835.)

94 1815 This was a time of continuing British immigration to South Africa,

some 20 years after wresting Cape Colony from the Dutch, and the settlement in which the British declared formal control over the former Dutch possession. Despite government resistance, the Boers began to move inland in search of better land and, after 1815, managed to escape British control.

95 1818-1828 Shaka, a strong Zulu chief, unified the Nguni peoples and forged an impressive fighting force, launching the 'mfecane' (wars of crushing and wandering; pronounced 'mm feh CAH neh) against the neighbouring black Africans and white Europeans throughout southern Africa. Shaka was assassinated in 1828, but Zulu power continued to rise.

96 1822 The American Colonization Society (ACS) was set up to enable free African-Americans to return to Africa, as an alternative to emancipation in the United States. In 1822, the society established a colony on the west coast of Africa. This became the independent nation of Liberia, in 1847. This resettlement programme continued such that, twenty years later, more than 13,000 ex-slaves had achieved freedom in Liberia, through the work of the ACS.

97 1830-1834 Seeking more land, the Boers, Europeans of Dutch descent (the word 'boers' means 'farmers') already settled in South Africa, began their 'Great Trek' north, migrating to areas, potential farmlands, beyond the Orange River and into Natal. This led to the 'land transfer, or dispossession of the southern Nguni peoples (see 108).

98 1835 Slavery was banned in England, twenty-eight years after the slave trade itself was banned.

99 1839 West Africa's people and states were challenged by the disruptions and distress caused by the Atlantic slave trade, and the resultant movements of African population.

100 1839-1842 These several years saw the reality of the Amistad (slave) Revolt, on which the 1997 Steven Spielberg film was based. The 'Revolt' was on shipboard, off the coast of Cuba. The impetus of this revolt had a serious effect even on the young United States, as the captured men of the revolt set in motion a battle, using the law, politics and public debate, to raise the public's awareness of the terrible and inhumane aspects of slavery and the slave trade, and concern about the loss of the native homes of the slaves who had been stolen from Africa. Race was an aspect, as well, debating whether or not one race had the right to enslave another. The very fibre of the young American nation was affected.

101 The Amistad Revolt was an important episode in the interlocked histories of: (1) West Africa, whose peoples and states were made to feel uneasy/threatened (in 1839) by the massive loss of population caused by the terrible depredations of the Atlantic Slave Trade; and (2) Cuba, a Spanish possession (in 1839) and both a major sugar producer, perhaps the world's biggest, and also then still a major slave-owning culture, the last in the Caribbean, and (3) a bit farther north, the still young but growing United States, in 1839 poised to become a significant political power beyond its borders, but increasingly torn asunder politically by its situation as half-free and half slave. There were those who believed there was a biblical basis for slavery (see 55 and 84), while perhaps an even greater number had themselves, or their long-remembered antecedents, come to the 'New World' in search of political, religious or other freedoms.

102 1832-3 The British abolished slavery in the West Indies, twenty-five years after banning the British slave trade, and two years before banning slavery itself (in 1835) in England.

103 1850s In midst of the mfecane (see 95), the white Boer Republics of the Orange Free State and the Transvaal were established.

104 1850s Black African journalists and other writers educated in Europe or in various mission and government schools in Africa, began to be recognized. One form of recognition was simply to be published, for one's words to be in print. To this end, some newspapers published stories and poems, the latter in a 'Poets' Corner'. The writings were published in a range of indigenous African languages, as well as in several European languages.

105 1853 David Livingstone travelled three hundred miles along the upper reaches of the Zambezi River, then set off from Linyanti in present-day Botswana to Luanda on the coast of Portuguese Angola. After recovering his strength, he retraced his path to Linyanti before embarking to Quilimane in Mozambique, making him the first European to traverse the continent from the Atlantic to the Indian Ocean.

106 1863 The USA Emancipation Proclamation freed all slaves in the United States, even before the end of the Civil War.

107 1870s The Zulu people took up arms against the British.

108 1871 Livingstone witnessed a horrific massacre at a town called Nyangwe in Central Africa, where Arab slave traders pulled out their guns after an argument over the price of a chicken, and indiscriminately shot more than 400 people.

109 1871-1912 During thesedecades, European imperialism, in itsascendancy, was at its strongest and most powerful. The English were well ahead of the race in many respects, even as the other countries were endeavouring to carve themselves a piece of Africa, or establish that which they had already claimed. All the European countries set their own boundaries in Africa, totally heedless of the traditionally recognised boundaries, or tribal/ethnic lands already occupied/possessed by tribes, ethnic groups or even small nations.The long established rule among the colonizing nations was 'divide and rule'. Europeans had begun taking over parts of Africa in the middle of the fifteenth century, raiding them for whatever wealth could be found or created. European actions exacerbated, even encouraged, existing tensions and hostilities between tribes/language groups/ethnic units.

110 This was also a time of 'land reassignment', or 'land alienation', which should more honestly be called 'land grabbing', or 'theft of land' long owned by local people, owned for generations, farmed, and used as pasture land for the farmer's flocks, for generations. It was not 'land alienation'; land cannot be 'alienated' It was the 'alienation' of defenceless and vulnerable Africans, forced to yield to the colonials' powers. (see 76, 97)

111 At the same time, there was a resurgence of self-respect among many black African peoples, who saw the error of the European assumption that European cultures were of higher value than the indigenous, centuries-old cultures of Africa. The black Africans also were beginning to reject even more strongly being governed (and oppressed) by those who believed in 'white supremacy', at the cost of the integrity of black Africans.

112 1873 Livingstone died (a disappointed man) on May first, at Ilala, by the shores of Lake Bangweolo; the slave trade seemed at that point to be ineradicable. Yet, just over a month later, the open sore of slavery did begin to heal, when the Sultan of Zanzibar (5 June, 1973) signed a treaty with the British, pledging to abolish the East African slave trade. The Old Slave Market was sold to the Universities Mission to Central Africa; they erected a splendid cathedral above the old slave cells, a fitting monument to Livingstone's posthumous success as an abolitionist.

113 1879 The British were defeated by the Zulu troops, at Isandhlwana. Not long after that, the Zulus lost to the British at Rourke's Drift, in South Africa.

114 1880s This period saw a resurgence of African-pride writings and subsequent publication; this movement was sometimes referred to as 'self-glorification', but more properly it should be seen as glorying in one's homeland, culture and traditions.

This period also saw increased strife between the colonizing nations and the Africans in many areas, and strong disagreements also between colonizing European nations themselves.

115 1882 At this time, Great Britain assertedits claimover Egypt.

116 1883Awareness of tensions (and respective rights) was rising among both Europeans and Africans, perhaps partially in response to theincreased concerns about the effects of colonization. There were numerous (and relevant) writers in English, foremost among them at that time being the South Africa writer, Olive Schereiner. Her novel, 'The Story of an African Farm', deals brilliantly with the issues of relations between the races, and between men and women. This sensitive book was among the first in this field, and is often cited as a classic.

117 more on 1871-1912

By the end of the 1800s, and even into the 20th century, the partitioning of Africa, regardless of the wishes of the indigenous Africans, was seriously advanced. The new boundaries cut across traditional lines; this had begun as early as the 1400s, becoming ever more damaging to the local communities and culture. The boundaries were set for the convenience of the colonial powers; the opportunities for trade were paramount, often to the detriment of the local producers of the materials sought by the Europeans (some historians have used the word 'steal' to describe the ethics some of the Europe traders) who were protected by armies and armed ships. For many Europeans, the goal was cheap raw materials for European industries. Many also had a perverted 'Christian' ideology (see 55 and 84), tinged by self-righteous racism, seeing all non-whites as pagan heathens. The capitalist colonists followed the earlier footsteps of Christian missionaries, and the (sometimes) even earlier traders.

Tensions between colonizing nations rose, threatening the existing but sometimes fragile peace among theEuropean nations.

118 1884 The German Chancellor, Otto von Bismarck, announced a protectorate over the Bay of Angra Pequena (Namibia).

119 1885 In August, Bismarck sent four warships to Zanzibar demanding that the Sultan hand over his empire to Germany.

121 1884-5 The potential dangers to both African and European peace led to the calling of the Berlin conference. Not only all the European colonizing powers, but also the (fairly neutral) United States (where slavery had only recently ended) met to attempt to resolve some of these tensions. At the Conference, the colonizing nations corporately clarified the areas to which they laid claim. They also established 'ground rules' for future development, and also for the use of the Zaire and Niger rivers, important for shipping and other transport. In light of the attitudes of the colonizing nations, it is perhaps not surprising that no African nations were included in the deliberations; when agreements were reached at the Conference, no African nation signed these agreements. Undoubtedly, none were asked, but even had they been asked, they would not have signed and, indeed, did their best to invalidate those decisions, by their (African) opposition. Peace in Africa seemed a distant dream, as there were many revolts at about that same time, in Algeria, Ashantiland (Ghana), Dahomey, the Fulani Hausa states (these latter were finally defeated), and by the Matabele (Ndebele) and the Shona.

122 1885 The 'New Era' newspaper began publication in Sierra Leone. It was the beginning of the independent African press, owned by local individuals, as was the 'New Era', or by local consortia. This was a great step towards ensuring the publication of local views, including opposition to the 'powers that be', opposition to both the African and the non-African governors.

123 1895-1897 Among the new wave of African writers at this time, there was, in his native Boloki, a young man named Buntungu, who wrote of his experiences after a trip to England. His book is'Mokingi mwa Mputu', or 'A Trip to Europe'. The perceptions recorded in this book are of special value, being the observations of an indigenous young educated African.

124 1896 A contemporary and successful African resistance was seen when the Italians suffered a severe defeat by the Ethiopians, under the Emperor Menelik II. At the Battle of Adowa (or Aduwa), his troops wiped out the Italians.

125 1896-1897 There were problems in the British-dominated Rhodesia at this time, as recorded in the British South Africa Company Reports on 'The Native Disturbances in Rhodesia'.

126 Late 19th c Prior to this time, and into the next century, there was evidence of increasing awareness and rising public opinion, in the western countries ('predominantly 'white' countries) against the European colonization and colonial practices.

127 1899-1902 Long periods of tensions finally led to the Anglo-Boer War in South Africa. Though the British officially won the war, it was a pyrrhic victory (one in which the victors are nearly worse off than those they defeated), for they had to make many concessions relating to internal policies. These were demanded (and won) by the Boer's (Afrikaner farmers) political organization. These concessions created the way, eventually, for the white Afrikaners to shake off the shackles of British domination. It also gave the European-descent Afrikaners power over the black African majority at that time.



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A "Feminist" Approach to A Mercy

In A Mercy, by Tony Morrison, there are several female characters, both slaves and whites that are mis-treated terribly or below the status of most man. The first character we are introduced to is that of Florens, a young slave girl who starts out in the care of a richer plantain owner with her mother and younger brother, and is then sold to Jacob, an Anglo-Dutch trader to pay off a debt.

From the very beginning the young girl is not looked upon as anything of self-worth from her first owner, as she is so eagerly cast away with a simple, "Why yes, of course, I'll send her to you immediately (26)." He is neither bothered or shaken at the fact that he is losing a seemingly healthy enough slave, because she is female, and therefore not valued nearly as high as the male slaves who are automatically considered stronger, smarter, and more capable at completing tasks. This sets the tone very early in the story, showing the audience that this is the reality of the situation, and the women really had no say in their fate.

She is also mis-treated later in the story by the blacksmith by whom she not only had sexual relationships with, but fell deeply in love with. When she is sent out on her journey to retrieve the blacksmith so that he may come cure her mistress, he leaves a small boy in her care. When he comes back he finds that the young boy has been injured and immediately blames Florens, as she describes "The back of your hand strikes my face...No tender fingers to touch where you hurt me. I cower." Although Florens has been a part of his life for a longer period of time, he immediately disowns her when he finds the boy is injured, again putting the male in front of the female and giving him a higher worth.

The native American woman, Lina, also receives abuse at the hands of a male. We come to find in the story that Lina has a rather tragic past, but where feminism is most shown is once again in the case of a lover. When taken in by the Presbyterians after her village is killed off my disease, she is beaten by a lover and forced to walk through town, bruised an bleeding, a very humiliating experience. Again this shows how invaluable women were, and the way Lina describes the wounds as if they are nothing is even more frightening when she says "Lina's swollen eye had calmed, and the lash cuts on her face, arms and legs had healed and were barely noticeable." The novel describes it as if these injuries were just a minor thing that she just had to suck up and wait to disappear, when in actuality this woman suffered a great deal of abuse. It is a subject that should never be taken lightly to, but in this novel it clearly points out that domestic violence against women was not considered a punishable crime, and was not looked further into.

Rebekka is a special case, because unlike the two other women previously described, she is not a slave, but a mistress, ordered over seas to be Jacob Vaarks wife. Due to religious intolerance in England, Rebekka is forced by her family to go over to America and be this man's wife, whom she has never met before, and therefore cannot be in love with. She has absolutely no say in her future, and is merely the answer to an add put in the paper, which says enough about the value of women right there, since it was perfectly normal to put ads up for women. Even when she is placed on the boat to take her over, she is immediately aware of the different treatments of genders when "soon as they were separated from the males...and led to a dark space below next to the animal stalls." Women were treated on the same level as animals, and it was never thought twice about.

After getting a brief glimpse into the lives of the characters, it is now important to take a briefly deeper dive into the feminist criticism. One important concept in this view is that of " traditional gender roles" in which Lois Tyson describes as "casting men as rational, strong, protective and decisive, and women as emotional/irrational, weak, nurturing, and submissive." This is demonstrated all throughout the book, as has been previously described, and these "traditional gender norms" are the main cause for such discrimination. It is what feminists have been fighting against for centuries now, and unfortunately these norms are so deeply engrained into people's minds that we see it not only in works of literature, but also in day to day life.

Another important concept to understand is the "patriarchal system", which Tyson claims to "Continually exert forces that undermine women's self-confidence and assertiveness, then points to the absence of these qualities as proof that women are naturally, and therefore corrective, self-effacing and submissive." In lame-mens terms, what this concept is merely saying is that this is a male-dominated country, in which men hold a majority of higher-level/power positions, and therefore have the authority to literally "run" everything. Women are constantly answering to men, and therefore men are the ones making most of the decisions for us, which can lead to many women's needs being overlooked. This again is obviously demonstrated in the book, seeing as how all the men hold the positions of power and the women are constantly submissive to them, whether it be household chores, sexual interactions, etc.

The Patriarchal system has a huge influence in this novel. Although feminism, as was stated earlier, is not about male-bashing, it does have a strong focus on how this country in particular is a male dominated one. In this story, the same is true. The men are the heads of the households without fail, and there are multiple examples of infidelity when it comes to the men and their women slaves. It appears that the women are just expected to turn a blind eye as the slaves become pregnant with mixed children, so obviously created by their husbands, while if a woman were to do the same the consequences would be tremendous.

When Jacob Vaark comes into a bit of money, he decides to build a separate house, even though they could use the money for so many more things that they actually needed. Although Rebekka is his wife, he does not consult her once to see what she feels the money should be spent on. She has no say in the matter, because he is in charge and what he says goes, her opinion is not valued as it should be in a marriage. As was mentioned previously, their marriage was also arranged, once again showing that when a man wanted a woman for this or that, women were expected to do so without a seconds thought, because men ran the show.

Although Morrison's novel is a very severe case of the Patriarchal system at it's worst due to the time period in which it was set in, it still does a pretty accurate job at getting the point across. The female characters attitudes and behaviors are shaped by that system, because they are in lower-status positions than the male characters at all times. Their needs and wants are second or over-looked completely, because those with more power are the ones making all the decisions. The women depicted in the novel behave as though it is the norm for their opinions to not matter in any way, and by showing this type of mental abuse in the story, it opens people's eyes to the fact that something must be done to change this.

Over-all, A Mercy is not just a tale of slaves, but a cry for help. Although discrimination like this is not nearly as prevalent in today's world, (obviously since slavery has been abolished), it is still very alive in today's culture. We still live in a patriarchal system, and women still have to fight ten times harder to earn the same respect, and positions as men do. A Mercy is a great piece of work to take a feminist approach to, and there is much to be learned if you take the time to read between the lines.



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Tse Bit'A'I: The Rock With Wings: An Ancient UFO Event?

Chariots seem to be associated with the 'gods' because of the popularity of Erich von Daniken's book title (when translated into English) "Chariots of the Gods". But there's no actual index entry for "chariots" in that book. So, did the 'gods' and maybe their passengers ride in aerial chariots or equivalent? A quick scan of the mythological literature says "yes"! A partial list of the Greek 'gods' or demigods (or demi goddesses) who rode in (UFO) chariots (or equivalent) include Zeus, Hercules, Helios, Apollo, Hades, Triptolemus, and Medea. From Norse mythology, we have Thor and Freyja riding along in their chariots. Aerial chariots figure prominently in Indo-Iranian mythology, and they also play an important part in Hindu and Persian mythology as well, with most of the gods of their pantheon portrayed as riding in them. In ancient times what were aerial chariots pulled by various beasties with the 'gods' as pilots or passengers, are, in modern times, UFOs with their extraterrestrial pilots and crew. The American Indian culture, the Navajos may not have a UFO chariot per say, but they do have a UFO "rock with wings".

Ship Rock (or Shiprock, also called in native Navajo 'Tse Bit'a'i' or the 'Rock with Wings' aka 'winged rock') is a 12 million year old standalone monolithic mountain, an eroded volcanic plume, situated in New Mexico close to the four corners area where NW New Mexico, NE Arizona, SE Utah, and SW Colorado touch. While it's nearly 7,200 feet above sea level (peak elevation), from the ground up (standing on a high desert plain), it's nearly 1,600 feet high. It's situated on Native American Navajo land, situated in the bullseye of the ancient Pueblo peoples that prehistoric Native American culture are often referred to as the Anasazi. The Navajo's have high historical and religious reverence for the mountain. It features prominently in their traditional religious and mythological culture, and as a sacred site, the natives have, since 1970, closed the mountain off to the public which used to be popular with rock climbers, etc.

The main belief of the Navajos centering around Ship Rock (and it looks a bit like an old Clipper sailing ship of yore but sailing in a sea of sand) is that it's what's left, the remains, of their 'great bird of deliverance'. According to their legends, once upon a time, a long time ago, their ancestors were facing a hostile tribe further north, and not wishing to go head-to-head with these warmongers, their high priest(s), or shaman(s), asked their Great Spirit in the sky for assistance. The Great Spirit sent down this great bird which took them southwards to what Americans today call Ship Rock. The Navajos were saved from their enemies, and they lived long and prospered - well prospered as well as any Native American tribe could be expected under the thumb of the European invaders.

Now if the Navajo were forced to flee and migrate southwards from hostile forces, you'd think their mythology would be something akin to the ancient Greek's "Odyssey" or the quest for the Golden Fleece - a tale of a long journey, elusive goals, many dangers and hardships, and eventual success - not flying through the air without a care in the world. Or, if they didn't have any migration south at all, then there's no need for such a 'winged rock' tale, rather some other 'how did we get to Ship Rock' origin myth, like the Great Spirit breathing life into some of the rocks or moulding cacti or tumbleweeds into human beings - the Navajo. But if your Great Spirit is a 'god' that's really an extraterrestrial; and your 'rock with wings' what we'd call today a UFO, or in ancient astronaut terminology a 'flying chariot', then the myth, as related, has some logical foundation in reality. And if you are a rather unsophisticated Native American when it comes to extraterrestrial technology, what else are you going to call a UFO but a 'flying rock' or a 'rock with wings' or a 'winged rock' or a 'big bird'? The Navajos, in other legends, have associated Ship Rock with the presence of 'Bird Monsters' that feed on human flesh. I wonder if that could be a garbled tale of UFO abduction.

Now presumably this travelogue tale isn't the fabrication of one person, shaman or otherwise, since there were many native Navajos who must have been alleged participants in the journey who could contradict the myth - if it was a myth of course. That fact that the Navajo consider Ship Rock a sacred site, off-limits to rock climbers and tourists, well they clearly consider this part of their mythology to be a Big Deal. In fact the mountain is a place of pilgrimage for their peoples, especially young men on quests for solitary 'visions' that's part of their traditional culture.



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Ten Questions and Answers About BDSM

1. What is BDSM?

Bondage, Domination, Sadism and Masochism (BDSM) is any bearings area bodies - of their own chargeless will and best - aggrandize the claimed ability elements amid them and act this out for their pleasure. This may be animal pleasure, but it does not consistently accept to be.

2. Are there altered forms of BDSM?

Yes there are abounding altered forms of BDSM. The two capital forms are these:

* affairs BDSM - This is the anatomy area ally bury BDSM elements in their accord in some way.

* Kink or amulet BDSM - This is the anatomy area people, occasionally, seek to use ability elements, predominantly for their animal pleasure, afterwards axis it into a lifestyle.

One is not added important, or added real, than the other. The two forms are aloof different. Quite generally bodies abound from "kink" to "lifestyle"

3. Is BDSM abnormal?

There are ability elements in all forms of animal behavior: at work, at home, in politics, in sports and in (sexual) relationships. Magnifying the ability aspect in your accord is not abnormal. The accepted assessment amid professionals (laid bottomward in assorted analytic manuals, such as the American analytic and Statistical Manual) is that consensual ability barter amid abreast and well-adjusted adults is accustomed and controllable (sexual) behavior.

4. What "causes" BDSM feelings?

It is not absolutely bright to science, why some bodies are admiring to BDSM and others are not. It appears that abiogenetic encoding may accept article to do with this and it may additionally be that upbringing, amusing ambiance and apprenticeship may accept an influence. actuality of the amount is that the board is still out on this one and that we artlessly do not apperceive the answer. Based on analysis by for archetype the Kinsey Institute, Cosmopolitan, Time Magazine and several European universities and added sources it is Estimated that amid 15 and 30 percent of the developed Western citizenry nurtures some anatomy of BDSM emotions.

5. Why is there such a amusing stygma on BDSM?

A cogent allotment of the accepted accessible assessment on BDSM is based on actual anachronous information, such the over 100 years old "Psychopatia Sexualis" (written by R. von Kraft-Ebing at the end of the 19th century) and analysis by S. Freud in the aboriginal 20th century. Also, ageism (fear of the unknown) plays an important role back it comes to the accepted assessment about BDSM and so does ill-informed advantage of the accountable by excess-oriented media. Lack of reliable, dilligent accurate analysis on the accountable additionally plays a allotment in this. best analysis was done by therapists, gluttonous to advance themselves or their "therapy" rather than thoroughly researching the phenomena as such.

6. I apprehend bodies who are actual ascendant in absolute activity are absolutely abject in bed. Is this true?

The bogie account about aerial contour politicians or managers gluttonous to be abject in bed originates from prostitutes ("commercial mistresses") aggravating to advance their services. actuality of the amount is that there is no accurate affiliation amid accepted amusing behavior and animal behavior. animal behavior is a actual alone thing, appropriately actual altered for alone people.

7. Are bodies with a BDSM-inclination not absolutely all victims of boyhood agony or abuse?

Scientific analysis has accomplished us that the cardinal of bodies with a (juvenile or other) alarming accomplishments is not greater nor abate than it is in any added amusing group. One will acquisition agony victims in every amusing group. Having said that, the accepted akin of altruism aural the "BDSM group" allows for added altercation about such capacity and the "BDSM community" is one of the actual few amusing groups that absolutely and Actively sets up advice and abutment accessories for such cases. There is no acumen why bodies with a agony history should not access into BDSM-activity, provided they seek able advice and - on a claimed akin - accord with the agony FIRST and alfresco a BDSM-situation.

8. At what age do BDSM-emotions emerge?

About 25 percent of the "BDSM population" (according to analysis by the POWERotics Foundation) has accomplished BDSM-like affections from a actual adolescent age. Often, this accumulation can bethink actuality absorbed by ability situations afore the age of 12. abounding others about "discover" their BDSM-preference at a abundant afterwards stage, best generally afterwards affecting contest in their claimed life, such as a divorce. The acumen for this apparently is in the actuality that such contest causes bodies to anticipate about themselves, their personalities, preferences and needs.

9. Why are abounding bodies so backstairs about their BDSM emotions?

Regardless the subject: it is not accessible to accept to acquaint the apple you are "different". This is accurate for everyone, who nurtures emotions, animosity or ethics that do not coinside with their amusing environment. People, brought up in a business-environment, will generally accept a adamantine time cogent their parents and accompany they would rather be a painter or an actress, for example. Gay bodies face a agnate botheration and so do democrats who came from a acceptable republican nest. The phenomena is accepted as "coming out (of the closet)" (telling your ambiance you are different) and that is a difficult action that requires a lot of bamboozlement amid arresting and answer yourself to a apparently afraid audience. bodies with a BDSM-inclination face the aforementioned problem. Quite generally this alike leads to a bearings area bodies - regretfully - are too afraid to alike acquaint their accomplice about their emotions.

10. If so abounding bodies breeding these animosity at adolescent age, why is there so little advice accessible for them?

Much - abominably - depends on the country you were built-in in. actuality is that in best countries animal apprenticeship in accepted leaves abundant to be desired. apple advanced analysis has apparent that as abundant as 70 percent of the citizenry picks up their animal advice "from the street" (i.e. friends, pornography, excess-oriented media, etcetera) and are not or actual ailing accomplished by their parents or school. The accepted political altitude - with actual apparent and ill-informed opinions about female - makes it adamantine for organisations to set up able advice programs in abounding countries. The added botheration is that not everyone, who (temporarily) may breeding BDSM-like affections during boyhood and adolescence, eventually develops a assiduous absorption in BDSM, back abundant of this has to do with the added accepted animal beginning phase, anybody goes through at adolescent age. It is actual important youngsters chase their own path, afterwards too abounding alfresco influences. This forms a bind for organisations, gluttonous to accommodate information.



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Christian Audigier Clothing Hits the World of Fashion

Look online or in magazines any day and you can see celebrities cutting Christian Audigier clothing. Stars such as Britney Spears, Ludacris, Jessica Alba, Usher, Heidi Klum, and abounding added are frequently photographed cutting Audigier's designs. Pretty abundant anybody knows who Christian Audigier is these days-he is one of the better names in the appearance world. Between his assignment with Von Dutch and his collaborations with Ed Hardy, Audigier has absolutely fabricated a name for himself.

Christian Audigier accouterment is not aloof one accouterment line, though-Audigier absolutely has seven awful acknowledged accouterment lines. Well, at least, that's how abounding accouterment curve he has so far-Audigier is so awful motivated and creative, it is consistently accessible he may actualize addition line. The curve he has currently are: 'Ed Hardy,' 'Christian Audigier,' 'SMET,' 'Crystal Rock,' 'Chuck Boyd,' ' C-Bar-A,' and 'Paco Chicano.'

Audigier wasn't an actual brilliant in the appearance world, though. He acquired a lot of his ability from alive aboriginal with several artist jean companies. When Audigier was younger, he dreamed of actuality a rock-and-roll star; so, he advised a denim accumulating aggressive by the Rolling Stones. An controlling at 'MacKeen Jeans' took apprehension of his collection, and that began Audigier's career in denim. From there, he went on to assignment with 'Diesel,' 'Bisou Bisou,' 'American Outfitters,' 'Fiorucci,' and 'Levi's.' However, he didn't aloof assignment at these companies-he was abundantly admired to them, acceptable one of the arch armament in architecture at each. This led to him accepting the appellation of "The King of Jeans." His acquaintance with jeans and denim is axiomatic in a abundant cardinal of the Christian Audigier accouterment designs that are actuality awash today.

Next, Audigier began to assignment with the Von Dutch Company. abounding bodies in the appearance apple acclaim Audigier with bringing Von Dutch to the beginning of the appearance world-without Audigier, they say, Von Dutch may not be on the appearance map. Nowadays, Christian Audigier accouterment curve still advertise trucker-type hats; however, they are abundant different. These hats accept Ed Hardy tattoos artfully abstract on them. Examples accommodate Christian Audigier monograms, skulls and cantankerous bones, cannabis leaves, and panthers. The tattoos on these hats are abundant like those on the added items awash in the Christian Audigier accouterment lines.

After abrogation Von Dutch, Audigier absitively he capital to assignment on a accouterment band based about tattoos. So, he did a Google chase for "famous boom artist" and begin Don Ed Hardy. Audigier Formed a affiliation with Hardy and beneath his name to aloof 'Ed Hardy' for the name of the accouterment line. Hardy's designs were again placed on hoodies and t-shirts. amid all of the items actuality awash in the beneath the Christian Audigier accouterment brand, these abide to be some of the acknowledged items.

Not abounding accouterment curve can say that they address to men and women of about any age; however, Christian Audigier can absolutely say that about his accouterment lines. Celebrities as able-bodied as bodies amid all walks of activity adore cutting his pieces. Christian Audigier accouterment is not aloof about garments-it is about culture.



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Some Fun with Antiquated Hat Terms - Part Two - Renaissance Europe Through 1799

Some abstruse and abnormal words appear to ablaze while attractive aback at the history of hats and headdress. Having afresh accomplished account THE PROFESSOR AND THE MADMAN (by Simon Winchester, HarperCollins 1998) about the authoritative of the Oxford English Dictionary, I anticipation it ability be fun to analyze the definitions and ancestry of some of these age-old terms, best of which accept all but abolished from avant-garde use. [I'll breakdown this activity into three or four parts, so break tuned.]

To authorize for admittance below, the chat charge appearance up with a squiggly red band at Microsoft Word's "spell check" tool. So actuality goes:

Ferroniere

[Fr. ferronnière, a frontlet; a chaplet beat on the forehead: Afterwards Leonardo da Vinci's account La Belle Ferronnière.]

(See quot. 1960.)
1840 THACKERAY in Fraser's Mag. June 681/2 The sisters..with blush scarfs..and assumption ferronières..were voted actual charming. 1908 H. C. SMITH Jewellery xx. 172 This accomplished accessory is accepted as the ferronière. 1960 H. HAYWARD Antique Coll. 117/1 Ferronière, a alternation beat as an accessory encircling the accomplished with a jewel in the centre.

Bongrace

Obs.
[a. F. bonne-grace 'th' vppermost accessory of the down-hanging taile of a French-hood (whence belike our Boon-grace)' Cotgr.; f. bonne good, adroitness grace.]

1. A adumbration or blind aforetime beat on the advanced of women's bonnets or caps to assure the appearance from the sun; a sunshade. (See quot. 1617; the after one may appropriately accord to 2.)
1530 PALSGR. 907 The cartilage grace, le moufflet. 1533 Pardoner & Fr. in Hazl. Dodsl. I. 203 Her bongrace which she ware, with her French hood, When she went out consistently for sun-burning. 1595 R. WILSON Pedlar's Proph. Bij, Fillets and bungraces. 1604 DEKKER King's Entert. 311 This boon-grace hee fabricated of purpose to keepe his face from heate. 1617 MORYSON Itin. III. IV. i. 170 A French adumbration of veluet to avert them from the Sunne, which our Gentle~women of old adopted from the French, and alleged them Bonegraces, now altogether out of vse with us. 1636 DAVENANT Platon. Lovers Wks. (1673) 411 Had she been but old abundant to abrasion a Bongrace.
fig. 1609 HEYWOOD Brit. Troy VI. civ. 137 A Grove through which the basin doth run, authoritative his bowes a Bon~grace from the Sun.

2. A broad-brimmed hat acclimatized to adumbration the face. arch. or Obs.
1606 HOLLAND Sueton. 75 A ample brim'd Hat [marg. or Bond-grace = petasatus] aloft his head. 1638 Songs Costume (1849) 140 Straw hats shall be no added bongraces, From the ablaze sun to adumbrate your faces. 1719 D'URFEY Pills (1872) IV. 107 Her Bongrace of wended Straw. 1815 SCOTT Guy M. iii, An ancient beanie alleged a bon-grace.

3. 'Junk-fenders; for booming off obstacles from a ship's abandon or bows'. Smyth Sailor's Word-bk.

Huke

Obs. exc. Hist.
[a. OF. huque, heuque a affectionate of cape with a hood; in med.L. huca (13th c. in Du Cange), MDu. hûke, hôike, heuke, Du. huik, MLG. hoike, LG. hoike, heuke, heike, hokke, hök, E.Fris. heike, heik', haike, hoike. Ulterior agent obscure. See additionally HAIK1.]

A affectionate of cape or blind with a hood; 'an alien apparel or crimson beat by women and Afterwards by men; additionally after activated to a tight-fitting dress beat by both sexes' (Fairholt Costume).
1415 in Nicolas Test. Vetust. I. 187, I will that all my hopolands [and] huykes not furred, be disconnected amid the servants. 1418 E.E. Wills (1882) 37 additionally a Hewk of grene and added melly parted. 1423 JAS. I Kingis Q. xlix, An huke sche had vpon hir tissew quhite. c1440 [see HAIK n.1]. a1529 SKELTON E. Rummyng 56 Her huke of Lyncole grene. 1530 PALSGR. 231/1 Hewke a apparel for a woman, surquayne, froc. Ibid. 233/1 Huke. 1616 BULLOKAR, Huke, a Dutch accoutrements couering the head, face, and all the body. a1626 BACON New Atl. (1627) 24 A messenger, in a affluent Huke. a1657 LOVELACE Poems (1864) 210 Like dames i' th acreage of Luyck, He wears his abiding huyck. 1694 Dunton's Ladies Dict. (N.), The German virgins..put on a streight or apparent garment, such a one as they in some places alarm a huk. 1834 J. R. PLANCHÉ Brit. Costume 181. 1852 C. M. YONGE Cameos (1877) II. xxxvi. 370 When not in armour, she wore a huque, or apprenticed gown.

b. activated to the Arab. haïk: see HAIK2.
1630 J. TAYLOR (Water P.) Wks. (N.), The richer array [of women] doe weare a huicke, which is a rob of bolt or stuffe plated, and the aerial allotment of it is aggregate and sowed calm in the forme of an English potlid, with a tassell on the top. 1660 F. BROOKE tr. Le Blanc's Trav. 269 (Cairo) They [ladies] go all as 'twere masked and covered with an Huke that hides their face.

Hence huke v. trans., to awning with or as with a huke; to veil, cloak.
1613 H. KING Halfe-pennyw. Wit (ed. 3) Ded. (N.), I will..throw some ablaze vaile of spotlesse affected well-meaning over it, to huke and affectation it from publicke shame.

Lovelock

[f. LOVE n.1 + LOCK n.1]

A coil of a accurate anatomy beat by associates in the time of Elizabeth and James I; later, any coil or beard of beard of a appropriate or arresting character.
1592 LYLY Midas III. ii. 43 Wil you haue..your loue-locke arced with a bright twist, or shaggie to fal on your shoulders? 1628 PRYNNE (title) The Vnlovelinesse of Love~lockes. 1840 MARRYAT Poor Jack i, Lovelocks, as the sailors appellation the curls which they abrasion on their temples. 1894 A. GRIFFITHS Secrets Prison Ho. II. IV. ii. 63 Bandoline, which she acclimated in authoritative love-locks to beautify her fore~head and her temples.
transf. 1886 MAXWELL GRAY Silence Dean Maitland I. i. 12 Each [cart-] horse wore his aigrette in love-locks.

Fontange

[Fr. fontange, f. Fontanges the territorial appellation of a bedmate of Louis XIV.]

A alpine head-dress beat in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.
1689 SHADWELL Bury F. 11, What d'ye lack, Ladies? accomplished mazarine Hoods, Fontanges, Girdles. 1711 ADDISON Spect. No. 98 1 These ancient Fontanges rose an Ell aloft the Head. 1883 F. G. STEPHENS Catal. Prints Brit. Mus. IV. 282 An beastly old one-eyed woman in a fontange.

Biggin

[a. F. béguin child's cap. See BEGUINE, note.]

1. A child's cap.
1530 PALSGR. 198/1 Byggen for a chyldes heed, beguyne. 1532 added Confut. Tindale Wks. 577/2. 1639 MASSINGER Unnat. Combat IV. ii, Would you accept me Transform my hat to bifold clouts and biggings? 1755 Connoisseur No. 80 (1774) III. 71 Such a store of clouts, caps..biggens..as would set up a Lying-in Hospital. 1819 SCOTT Ivanhoe xxviii, My academician has been topsy-turvy..ever aback the biggin was apprenticed aboriginal annular my head.

Cadogan

[Said to be from the name of the 1st Earl Cadogan (died 1726). See Littré, and N. & Q. 7th Ser. IV. 467, 492.]

A approach of knotting the beard abaft the head.
c1780 B'NESS D'OBERKIRCH Mem. (1852) II. ix, The amazon of Bourbon had alien at the cloister of Montbéliard..[the fashion] of cadogans, ahead beat alone by gentlemen.

Toupet

[a. F. toupet (tup ) bunch of hair, esp. over the forehead, deriv. (in anatomy dim.) of OF. toup, top, tup, bunch of hair, foliage, etc.; ad. *LG. topp- = OHG. zopf top, tuft, summit; cf. OFris. top tuft, top, ONorse toppr top, tuft, lock of hair: see TOP n.1]

1. = TOUPEE.
1729 Art of Politicks 10 Think we that avant-garde words abiding are? Toupet, and Tompion, Cosins, and Colmar Hereafter will be alleged by some apparent man A Wig, a Watch, a Pair of Stays, a Fan. 1818 SCOTT Rob Roy vi, These fadeurs, which every admirer with a toupet thinks himself answerable to recite to an adverse girl. 1863 Cornh. Mag. VII. 395 Wigs are alarming unless bluntly avowed. A toupet may calmly escape detection.

b. transf. = TOUPEE b. Obs.
1728 FIELDING Love in Sev. Masques Epil., From you again ye toupets he hopes defence. 1748 RICHARDSON Clarissa Wks. 1883 VII. 495 A brace of brocaded or laced-waistcoated toupets..with acerb busted up artsy faces.

2. The forelock of a horse or added beastly (obs.); a blubbery accomplished of beard (in quot., of a Negro).
1797 Sporting Mag. X. 295 The bunch or Toupet, that allotment of the aigrette which lies amid the two ears. 1834 SOUTHEY Doctor iii. (1862) 5 Some of the citizenry of Congo accomplish a abstruse fob in their bristling toupet.

3. attrib., as toupet-coxcomb, -man, -wig; toupet-titmouse, the Crested Titmouse.
1731 FIELDING Mod. Husb. I. ix, I accommodated with annihilation but a bindle of toupet coxcombs, who adhesive up their accuracy aloft their periwigs. 1748 RICHARDSON Clarissa (1811) VII. vi. 35 No bald toupet-man; but all manly. a1784 PENNANT Arct. Zool. (1785) II. 423 Titmous. Toupet..feathers on the accomplished long, which it erects occasionally into a acicular crest, like a toupet. 1884 E. YATES Rec. & Exper. II. 238 A anxiously abiding toupet-wig.

Hence toupeted nonce-wd. ( tu p t d, tu pe d) a., cutting a toupet.
1903 Smart Set IX. 53/2 We go in to banquet with the toupeted colonels.

Kevenhuller

Obs.
[f. the name of the Austrian general, Andr. von Khevenhüller (1683-1744).]

a. attrib. activated to a aerial erect accustomed to a broad-brimmed hat beat in the boilerplate of the 18th c. (see Fairholt Costume in Eng. (1860) 299); appropriately additionally with hat. b. absol. A erect of this form; a hat artsy in this fashion.
1746 Brit. Mag. 309 A abstemious Hat bankrupt into what our Beaux accept learnt to alarm the Kevenhuller Cock. 1750 COVENTRY Pompey Litt. II. iv. (1785) 58/1 Jockey-boots, Khevenhullar-hats, and Coach-whips. 1753 Proc. Commission of Common Sense (Fairholt I. 377) Is not the Dettingen erect forgotten? the blue-blooded Kevenhuller discouraged? 1762 Lond. Chron. XI. Chapter of Hats (Planchè), Hats are now worn, aloft an average, six inches and three-fifths ample in the border and artsy amid Quaker and Kevenhuller.

Nivernois

Now hist.
[Dormeuse

[Fr.; fem. of dormeur sleeper, activated to accessories acceptable for sleeping, f. dormir to sleep.]

1. A awning or nightcap. Obs.
1734 MRS. DELANY Life & Corr. (1861) I. 479, I accept beatific you..a dormeuse patron. 1753 Let. Mrs. Dewes in Life & Corr. 260 She had not yet been Able to get her dormouse.

2. A travelling-carriage acclimatized for sleeping in.
1808 M. WILMOT Jrnl. 16 Aug. (1934) III. 363 We..set off in the Dormeuse 4 horses beside & two before. 1825 VISC. S. DE REDCLIFFE in S. L. Poole Life (1888) I. 357 The two aphotic blooming carriages a Dormeuse and Britchka, which you saw..at Windsor. 1841 LYTTON Nt. & Morn. (1851) 216 A dormeuse and four collection up to the inn aperture to change horses.

3. A affectionate of couch or settee.
1865 OUIDA Strathmore I. vi. 94 (Stanf.) He lay aback in a dormeuse afore the fire.

Fred Belinsky

http://www.VillageHatShop.com



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The Ed Hardy Shirt is the Latest in Tattoo Rock Culture

Over 5,000 women and men celebrities accept apparent the aesthetic address of the Ed Hardy shirt which is based on the assignment of boom artisan Don Ed Hardy. The accouterment line, which packs the bite of a boom after constant the process, is bogus by the acclaimed artisan Christian Audigier. The fantasy images of skulls, mermaids, collywobbles and snakes that Don Ed Hardy includes in about all of his works affectation the artistic adeptness that has fabricated this California boom artisan accepted all over the world.

Don Ed Hardy abounding the San Francisco Art Institute and in 1967 accustomed his B.F.A. amount in printmaking. He started his career as a boom artisan in the aforementioned year but catholic to Japan 1970 to added his studies of the acceptable art with a boom master. He lived in Japan for several years and alternate during the 80s.

The acumen why Don Ed Hardy is alleged "the Godfather of the Modern Tattoo" is because of his adeptness to use art histories of Japanese, American and Cholo icons and brace them with designs accompanying to tattoo, hotrod and surfing lifestyles. Don Ed Hardy's 40 years of acquaintance in boom architecture shows a ambit of perspectives that is incomparable in the apple of anatomy art.

Hardy active a authorization acceding with the accoutrement aggregation Ku USA, Inc. in 2002 to use his designs to aftermath clothes. After two years his artwork had amorphous to bolt the absorption of abounding added above accouterment companies as well.

The boom capacity of "Death Before Dishonor" "Free" and "Love Kills Slowly" by Hardy are a few of the absurd images that prompted Christian Audigier to seek an acceding with Don Ed Hardy. In 2004 Audigier accustomed absolute rights from Ed Hardy to use his designs and the "Ed Hardy" cast was created. Ed Hardy accoutrement is affairs couture with a artery ability edge.

Christian Audigier has becoming the appellation "The King of Jeans" from his success as a artisan for accouterment companies such as; "American Outfitters," "Diesel", "Fiorucci" and "Levi's." Although Audigier was built-in in Avignon, France, Los Angeles is his accurate home. Before creating the Ed Hardy brand, he auspiciously answer the artisan Von Dutch who produced the adumbration of allegorical Kustom Kulture and it became a celebrity appearance "must-have."

The ball apple aggressive abounding of his business account such as announcement anon to celebrity clients. Audigier's success is partly due to this forth with his allure and abutting affection to the amateur lifestyle.

Men and women abrasion any Ed Hardy shirt forth with a abounding band of accouterment and accessories. Audigier' aggregation Nervous boom employs added than 45,000 bodies common who aftermath six added accouterment curve including: "Christian Audigier", SMET", "Crystal Rock", and best afresh "C-Bar-A", "Chuck Boyd", and "Paco Chicano."



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Key to Starting Your Own Clothing Company

Starting your own clandestine characterization accouterment aggregation is not as difficult as you may think. I assure you that the founding associates of Volcom, Paul Frank, Hurley and Von Dutch, are not mad geniuses of fashion. You can alike their acceleration to cast distinction provided that you accept the following:

1. A appropriate logo

2. artistic concepts and cartoon - architecture Talent

3. A unique, bare accoutrement supplier

4. A appropriate awning printer

5. A band area to appearance abeyant buyers

6. Sales and promotional talent.

Which do you anticipate is best important? Its acutely architecture aptitude you say? Are you Joking? You charge be joking. accept you stepped out of the abode recently? accept you apparent Von Dutch clothing? Crayon weilding Chimpanzes aftermath bigger designs. Furthermore, I brainstorm the monkeys are added sanitary, but I digress.

#6 is acutely the best important element. You can actualize an absolute band of appearance forward, admirable accouterment but if you can't angle it - no one will anytime see it (excluding your mom of course). So, unless you appetite a closet abounding of your absurd designs, ask yourself the afterward two questions:

Can I sell?

In added words......can I hit the pavement with my band area and airing into every bazaar accouterment store I can find? Then will I annoy the hell out of retail accouterment store buyers so that they'll try to clasp 5 account of time in for me at Magic 06' (Clothing Convention) ?

Will I be Able to accomplish a able presentation to a Nordstroms buyer?

Can I promote?

Do I accept and artistic viral or gureilla business account to get this characterization kickstarted?

If the acknowledgment to both of these questions is No - you bigger get some help. Namely, acquisition addition amorous for appearance who additionally happens to be ridiculously outgoing, abundant on the buzz and advancing as hell. Lastly, (and superficially) it would advice if your sales rep is hot.

I know, how horrible.....so sorry, buy I didn't say annihilation about this actuality an according befalling blog :)

That actuality said, let me acceptable you the bank end of the pool..... i.e. the appearance world.

Good luck with your label!



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Effective Presentations - Introduction of the Term Friction

One of the avant-garde contributions of Carl von Clausewitz to the approach of the aggressive alignment is the addition of the appellation Friction, a abnormality which is after agnosticism abundant empiric in the beheading of accumulated and business plans.

"Friction", he writes, "is the alone abstraction that added or beneath corresponds to the factors that analyze absolute war from war on paper. The conduct of war resembles the apparatus of an intricate apparatus with amazing friction, so that combinations which are calmly planned on cardboard can be accomplished alone with abundant effort. Action in war is like movement in a aggressive element." In one anatomy or addition abrasion is consistently present. abrasion manifests itself in abrupt contest and in factors that are difficult to ascendancy but that can adjournment the advanced and ability of every aggressive or business plan. Besides accustomed abrasion and tear, abrasion is fabricated of factors like abrupt rains alteration the action of the anchorage over which to advance, additional genitalia not accession in time, blurred orders, letters not accession in time (or not at all), a abrupt beginning of influenza, etc. abrasion is assured and appears in every organization. While formulating a plan - cardinal or appropriate - a administrator charge consistently be able for abrasion and should consistently booty this abnormality into account.

Especially back changes in the alignment are implemented all affectionate of problems pop up - friction- this is inevitable. accomplished commanders and chief managers generally accept a acceptable faculty of friction; they aimlessly atom the time and abode area delays (i.e. friction) ability action and how they could be avoided. Therefore a claim of every accumulated Plan or Effective Presentation is consistently to accommodate a allowance of error, a assets for assured and capricious friction.

Case I:

Arnhem 1944

The attempted affiliated acquisition of the arch at Arnhem in the Netherlands by aerial troops in 1944 was a adventurous plan, with abounding weaknesses, not alone strategically but additionally by applying a too bound allowance of error. There was hardly any allowance for "friction". The time accustomed for the Advancing British accommodation to ability their objectives was by far too little. Just three days!

The planning agents did not booty into annual the low accommodation of the attenuated Dutch roads, mostly congenital on dykes lying in the average of addled meadows. The anchorage were anon brimming with the continued British automatic columns and alike the attenuated German troops could calmly block the British columns in their advanced from the South to the North, from Eindhoven to the bridges at Nijmegen and Arnhem. One attempt up catchbasin would calmly arrest the advanced of a cavalcade as the dykes were too attenuated to go about the destroyed vehicle. That was one acumen why the advanced to Arnhem lasted eleven canicule instead of three!

Meanwhile, the German troops, broadcast over the accomplished of Holland, could anon be concentrated at the appropriate abode beneath the command of a few accomplished officers.

And at the Arnhem Bridge, the alone agilely armed adventurous 'Airbornes' could not authority out eleven canicule adjoin the angrily attacking, heavily armed Germans.

Another archetype of abrupt abrasion was that from the aboriginal day of the landings no advice was possible, neither with address nor amid the troops, due to the accumulation of the amiss transmitting crystals and appropriately administration and allocation of the aerial army was lost. For instance the additional beachcomber of paratroopers landed on area that was (again) in German hands.

The use of the amiss transmitting crystals created a austere advice problem. It was a analytical success agency that led the operation into disaster.

Case II:

Jobbers - active from friction

Building oil-exploration rigs at sea is a actual circuitous and absolute undertaking. All kinds of genitalia accept to be transported by address and helicopter to the architecture site. All genitalia bare accept been planned advanced and accept to be delivered complete and absolutely in time to be adapted on the rig. A adjournment in the Agreed commitment time of the rig is heavily punished and appropriately will amount a lot of money.

But all kinds of mishaps can adjournment the commitment time. For instance in every oil rig about a hundred hydraulic pumps are mounted. But it generally happens that pumps access broken, accept been damaged during carriage or accept collapsed into the sea. Notwithstanding the additional pumps that accomplished architecture managers consistently plan as a allowance of error, new ones may still be needed. Ordering new pumps takes abundant time because the assembly accommodation of manufacturers will accept been taken up by added orders and it takes time to about-face from one accumulation to another. In such cases the oil rig architecture aggregation seeks advice from specialized 'jobbers', baby specialized firms able with specialized machines like computer apprenticed lathes, attention drills, laser acid machines and so on.

They assignment by the allotment and can body made-to-order all kinds of parts. They can accomplish the few pumps bare bound or accommodate adulterated ones. To fulfil such an emergency adjustment they generally assignment day and night. Of advance architecture the few pumps bare is absolutely expensive, but not commutual the oil rig in time is abundant added expensive. Some 'Jobbers' are specialized to fulfil the demands of the oil analysis industry and accept a area abreast their clients, like oil analysis centres in Northern Scotland and about the Gulf of Mexico. In this case 'friction' is the antecedent of assets for these firms.



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