Mononazo - Awesome owl biggest lie ever I am only going to buy one book shirt
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Watch Troye Sivan Prepare to Walk the Awesome owl biggest lie ever I am only going to buy one book shirt also I will do this Cannes Red Carpet—And Share the Posing Tips He Learned From Lily-Rose Depp Kate was not the only British royal sporting family heirlooms at the wedding banquet: Princess Beatrice opted to wear the York tiara, belonging to her mother, Sarah Ferguson, for the event. Commissioned from Garrard, the tiara was a gift from Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip ahead of the Duchess of York’s wedding in 1986. There is jewelry, and then there is jewelry. On a flying visit to Florence, Italy, last week, you are confronted with the usual groaning display of glittery gold on the Ponte Vecchio—and please don’t get me wrong, I love this stuff—but then there is the heart-stopping high jewelry presented by Cartier, at their Le Voyage Recommence fandango, which of course is the reason for the trip in the first place. Who can deny the pleasures of Florence and its spectacular Renaissance architecture—big lines at the Uffizi, so we’ll catch Venus’s birth next time; a quick wave to Michelangelo’s David (he’s a replica anyway…) It’s a town made for walking. In less that 10 minutes you can travel from Caffe Gilli, the site of the famous photograph, “American Girl in Florence,” to Humana, a Florentine version of Goodwill where everything is around 15 euros (but alas, looks it). Or set off in the opposite direction to the 800-year-old Santa Maria de Novella—far more than an apothecary, where your friend buys the tobacco soap, but you are so overwhelmed by the wealth of lotions and potions that you get nothing.
Cartier saves the Awesome owl biggest lie ever I am only going to buy one book shirt also I will do this best for last. Leading up to the unveiling of the high jewelry is a sunset cocktail the night before at the Antinori Winery. A triumph of modernism, the building was designed by Marco Casamonti, and you arrive from deep underground—my ear pops—to a stunning vista where you are served a menu comprising ravioli, risotto, and tiramisu—three words I know in Italian. So delicious, so chic, but no jewelry until tomorrow! The next day bright and early I pile into the car—each and every Cartier guest has his or her own driver, a luxury that is impossible to overpraise, and head an hour and a half out of town to Lucca, to the newly restored 19th century Villa Reale di Marlia, the former residence of Napoleon’s sister Elisa.
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