MAKR STUDIO STOOL

The brand ‘Mark‘, has expanded. Now Jason Gregory, the owner of Makr, has designed and built a beautiful stool. This stool has the same concepts as the products it sells ‘Makr Goods‘ as, simple, clean and handmade.

This new line of furniture complements the line of wallets and canvas bag, as part of a ‘lifestyle’. Prices range from $375 to $550 depending on the finish and whether or not you require a back.


-Mark

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BEASTS OF THE SOUTHERN WILD

 

Directed by Benh Zeitlin, Beasts of the Southern Wild is a magical realist tale, a poetic evocation of an endangered way of life, a touching hero’s journey and an ode to human resilience set along the mythologized part of southern Louisiana nicknamed the Bathtub. Here Hushpuppy, an intrepid six-year-old girl, lives with her father, Wink, whose though love prepares her for the unraveling of the universe; for a time when he’s no longer there to protect her. When Wink contracts a mysterious illness, nature flies out of whack-temperatures rise, and the ice caps melt, unleashing an army of prehistoric creatures called aurochs. With the waters rising, the aurochs coming, and Wink’s health fading, Hushpuppy goes in search of her lost mother. Shot on Super 16-millimeter film and casting nonactors, Benh Zeitlin’s directorial debut is hauntingly beautiful both visually and in the tenderness it shows toward the characters. Hushpuppy is not just the film’s heroine; she’s its soul. Beasts of the Southern Wild exists entirely in its own universe: mythological, anthropological, folkloric, and apocalyptic. Standing defiantly at the end of the world, Hushpuppy affirms the dignity of telling their own story: that they were once there.

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Author : Federica Mascagni

DI NUCCI CYCLES

Mark Di Nucci is not a bike maker, but THE bike maker.

He is an institution in the biking world, a source of inspiration for the most important of bicycle craftsmen. His bikes are handmade with full attention given to each detail and also with love, dedication and passion. Everything is elegant, harmonious. It’s a perfect symphony.

Everything began in the 1970′s, when Mr Di Nucci started as one of the earliest US framebuilders. He specialized in handmade frames for road and track and continued that work through the mid 80’s when he turned to designing production bikes for some of the biggest brands in cycling.

Then, after 25 years of engineering bicycles for other brands he has returned to what he loves most, taking the time to design and build frames that reflect his own standards in craftsmanship & performance.

 

http://www.dinuccicycles.com/

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Author : Valentina Matelli

SUGGESTED BY OLIVIA : J R FAUSET

Lolotte, Who Attires My Hair by Jessie Redmon Fauset

Lolotte, who attires my hair,
Lost her lover. Lolotte weeps;
Trails her hand before her eyes;
Hangs her head and mopes and sighs,
Mutters of the pangs of hell.
Fills the circumambient air
With her plaints and her despair.
Looks at me:
‘May you never know, Mam’selle
Love’s harsh cruelty.’

Author : Olivia Lewit

VITTORIO VALERIO, THE HOSIERY MASTER

Among all designers exposing at Artisanal Inteligence in Rome last weekend, as you have been able to see from photos we have been posting, Vittorio Valerio is one of the names we devote our plenty admiration. That table full of hand made hosiery woven with care by wise and skilled hands immediately captured our hearts, and not only ours. Certainly Spring is near and  Elitism doesn’t write about something too many seasons before  but this time it’s an exception. We seriously think you should make a memo on your agenda or put an alarm in your mobile phone not to forget that “tricot” will be a hot item for next autumn and that Vittorio Valerio fall winter 2012-13 collection  simply marks the lines of excellence.

Vittorio Valerio is a creative factory that  believe in quality and in the value of authenticity.  They  produce, entirely in Italy,  a wide  range of  hosiery made of best wools. Capes, sweaters, cardigans (Vneck and crewnecks) , scarfs and caps.  Everything is made with extra care and love: it’s the classical Italian hosiery school coming from grandmothers wisdom and memory to our days with a revisited approach and allure. VV  also produces a line of t shirts that aims to be  an ensamble of unique pieces inspired by vintage apparel and it’s  starting exploring the territory of accessories with unusual luxury crocodile bags and snake ski holders. Memory, tradition and a strong desire to be and live differently: Vittorio Valerio’s philosophy is simple and clear.

Photo: wool cape , maglia rovescia+punto semi sparsi  and wood buttons

http://www.vittoriovalerio.it/index.html

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Author : Marco Maggetto

SOKO – FIRST LOVE NEVER DIE

SoKo (21) was born in Bordeaux, France as Stéphanie Sokolinski. She started out as an actress and appeared in several French movies like Les Irréductibles, Dans les Cordes and Les Diablesses. She picked up singing in 2006, after approaching filmmakers with her desire to sing for the movie she was in. Click link below to watch video.

Soko – First Love Never Die (Video)

Author : Maxim Deluxe

OFFICINA ROMA

OFFICINA ROMA is an experimental building practice. It is constructed on the grounds of
MAXXI
in Rome, entirely out of recycled materials, within a week long workshop with some high school students from all over the country. It looks like a villa but it’s not made of concrete, it is entirely built out of trash. Inside there’s a sleeping room, a kitchen (built out of old bottles) and a work shop in the centre of the structure. The project has been realized by raumlaborberlin a working team of archtects and designer which investigated strategies for urban renewal. As they declare “The OFFICINA ROMA radiates an atmosphere of urgency; a turning point. It talks about the essential necessity to question our lifestyle, based on individuality, completion (competition), growth and exploitation of natural resourses. Although situated in the very dynamic and exclusive garden of the MAXXI, the design speaks of deadlocks, interdependencies and the need for more fundamental and tougher negotiations over privileges in our future society.”

 

MAXXI
Strategies for Architecture, City and Planet

1 December 2011 – 29 April 2012
in context of the exhibition RE-cycle


Author : Francesca Querci

INK/IT: TOFINO TATTOOING

 

 

Tofino started being a tattooer almost as a joke. When he used to work as fashion designer, his tattooer proposed him to tattoo himself. He accepted and did it just with the experience of watching other tattooers working. The experience was amazing and from that moment on he decided to become a professional tattooer. Thank to the constant support of his friend and mentor Marco Ruffa (Colors Tattoo Studio, Milano) and after five years of continuous practice in drawing and in tattooing, Tofino has become a really good traditional style artist. Traveling and joining international conventions is essential to him: Tofino is always on the road! In February he will be guest of the Hammer’s Tattoo Studio of Canton, Ohio, then you will find him at the Rotterdam Convention (March 10-11), at the Frankfurt Convention (March 30 – April 1) and then at the Amsterdam Convention (June 1-3)!  His technique, characterized by a blend of essential and throwback styles, offers an equilibrium between light and shade that makes hid tattoos legible even from a distance.

 

tofino.tattoo@gmail.com Details »

Author : Marco Annunziata

CAI GUO-QUIANG EXHIBITION@MATHAF

Cai Guo-Qiang: Saraab showcases Cai’s diverse body of work, ranging from his signature gunpowder drawings to large-scale site-specific installations and the explosion event of Black Ceremony. Cai Guo-Qiang’s biggest exhibition since “I Want To Believe” at the Guggenheim Museum in 2008, Saraab (“mirage”) will feature more than fifty works, including sixteen newly commissioned pieces, thirty recent works and nine documentary videos.

December 5, 2011 – May 26, 2012
Mathaf: Arab Museum of Modern Art
Education City, Doha, Qatar

Cai Guo-Qiang was born in 1957 in Quanzhou, Fujian Province, China, and was trained in stage design at the Shanghai Theater Academy. His work has since crossed multiple mediums within art, including drawing, installation, video and performance art.

Author : Redazione

NEW ANIMAL – THE SOUND THAT IT MAKES

 

New Animal – The Sound That It Makes Video

newanimal.net

Author : Maxim Deluxe

LOUIS VUITTON – BICYCLE POLO

Another prestigious brand that works for sport.

Louis Vuitton has enlisted one of the most sought-after designers in the realm of contemporary designs, Philippe Starck, to design and personalised an exclusive bicycle. It’s a sophisticated fixed gear dedicated to bicycle polo with luxurious tan leather belts and precious machined chainring by Victoire.

The mallet people… nuff said.

http://www.louisvuitton.com

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Author : Valentina Matelli

LIVE FROM A.I. FAIR ROME

Miriam B. Roma, “Gemme Taglienti”

Author : Redazione

LIVE FROM A.I. FAIR ROME

Officina Mobile Antiques Rome.

Author : Redazione

LIVE FROM A.I. FAIR ROME

Calzoleria Petrocchi, Roma

Author : Redazione

LIVE FROM A.I. FAIR ROME

Le Gallinelle, Tnt “tessuto non tessuto” shirt project.

 

Author : Redazione

LIVE FROM A.I. FAIR ROME

Hibou Spring Summer 2012.

Author : Redazione

LIVE FROM A.I. FAIR ROME

Studio Pretzel Spring Summer 2012 collection.

Author : Redazione

LIVE FROM A.I. FAIR ROME

Vittorio Valerio croco Bag and handmade precious wool sweaters.

Author : Redazione

LIVE FROM A.I. FAIR ROME

View from the top @ Tempio Di Adriano, Rome.

Author : Redazione

LIVE FROM A.I. FAIR ROME

Orlando & Ofelia – Avantgarde Bookstore in Rome, The House Of Love and Dissent.

 

 

Author : Redazione

SUGGESTED BY OLIVIA: CHARLES BAUDELAIRE

 

The Cat

Come, superb cat, to my amorous heart;
Hold back the talons of your paws,
Let me gaze into your beautiful eyes
Of metal and agate.

When my fingers leisurely caress you,
Your head and your elastic back,
And when my hand tingles with the pleasure
Of feeling your electric body,

In spirit I see my woman. Her gaze
Like your own, amiable beast,
Profound and cold, cuts and cleaves like a dart,

And, from her head down to her feet,
A subtle air, a dangerous perfume
Floats about her dusky body.

Author : Olivia Lewit

INK/IT: MATTEO CIAMPI

 

INK/IT is a selection of Italian tattooers working in Italy or around the world and foreign tattoo artists that love coming to Italy to work and enjoy la dolce vita. Every week Marco Annunziata will write about the best tattooers around… So pick up your favorite one and go get inked!

Matteo Ciampi is an old fashioned tattooer. He started tattooing at the age of 13 with a machine that he made with parts of a record player, a Bic pen and a spoon. At the beginning it was just a big passion but later while hanging out at Leonardo Giusti’s parlour and after an encounter with Christian di Costanzo, he decided to become a real tattooer. Mattia Lotti that used to ink Matteo and is still one of his favorite artists, gave him precious advices to go on, so he traveled around Europe to join conventions and worked for a while with Michele Vodola at Burra Tinta.  Since 2010 he is the proud owner of Segnistrani Tatuaggi, a tattoo parlour in Montelupo Fiorentino which is  a tiny village near Florence known as one of the most important centers of pottery production of the Rinascimento. At Segnistrani you can get traditional style tattoos and custom tattoos designed by the expert hand of Leonardo Borri. Two interesting curiosities about the shop: the master Maurizio Fiorini was born there when the building was a house and not a Tattoo Studio and you can sit on one of the chairs owned by Marco Cerretelli before he moved and made it America.

 

http://www.segnistrani.com/

 

 

 

Author : Marco Annunziata

THE INSATIABLE FASCINATION WITH THE UNUSUAL: DIANE ARBUS

Winter in Paris is like autumn in New York. It’s in those grey tones of clouds that you feel the French touch, the vie en rose, the delightful and tasty flavour of a macaron, or of a butter croissant with an espresso coffee, served at Fauchon’s. It’s in those night lights, those high heeled shoes, those sales that make you go crazy, boulevards, love spreading, Colette’s, the golden Jeanne of Arc statue, the Concorde square and those infinite, sublime, roof tops from where the Tour Eiffel can be viewed in all its beauty. Paris is a beating heart, a revolutionary creature, fed by what’s chic and à la mode. As I was wandering in the city centre, waiting for the beginning of the haute couture week, walking and talking in Rue Saint-Honoré, it came to my mind that last time I was in Paris I had the chance to visit the Lee Miller exhibit at the Jeau de Paume. As I was close to it, I decided to go and see what was on. I then crossed the road, made my way to Rue de Rivoli, entered the Jardis de Teulieries and saw those amazing two words: Diane Arbus. Saturday, lunch time, a spare few hours, and there I was, ready, with craving eyes.

As a key figure in the history of the 20th century art, Diane Arbus’s exhibition offered more than 200 pictures drawn from private collections and museum; an itinerary along which the spectator is stroke by powerful images accompanied only by the artist’s own titles so to create a real personal and subjective experience. I realized, Diane Arbus’ work remains problematic for many viewers. This amazingly talented artist transgressed the traditional boundaries of portraiture, making pictures of circus and sideshow freaks, many of whom she formed lasting friendships with. She also killed herself, at aged 48, on 26 July 1971. So now, on the 40th anniversary of her death, I thought it was also worth reconsidering her artistic legacy. She undoubtedly felt at ease among the outsiders she photographed. She also seem to experienced a frisson of guilty pleasure when photographing them, you also feel it in many shots with naked individuals or street scenes. Her works make the viewer question not just the reasons for looking people who are pathetic, pitiable, as well as repulsive, but also our own. Arbus’ black and white portraits particularly of those with mental disabilities or physical abnormalities, retain their power to unsettle and disturb the viewer. Whatever the intention was, the cruel often seems to outweigh the tender. With Diane Arbus, as with Nan Goldin, the life and the art are inextricably intertwined. Arbus seemed a great humanist photographer who foresaw a new kind of photographic art. An ‘avantguardiste’, I’d say. She certainly was a trailblazer of a new photographic aesthetic. Raw and unflinching, disturbing and illuminating, pessimistic and narcissistic. Arbus may have felt an enormous empathy with the people she photographed, even if she was not part of them, and however she identified with their outsider status of being. She had her own troubles, but they were of a different order. The work she left is powerful not just because of its dark beauty or its stark vision, but because it asks questions of the viewer about the limits of looking, about the predatory nature of photography, and about our complicity in all of this.

When we look at one of her images, we cannot help feeling that we are intruders or voyeurs, even though her subjects are in a time and place that has vanished. There is a high sense of complicity because the images hold the viewer in a sway. This is her power: she understood the instinctive conflict and did more than anyone to exploit it artistically.

One of the best exhibition ever seen.

 DIANE ARBUS

Until February the 5th 2012 – Jeu de Paume, Place de la Concorde – Paris

http://www.jeudepaume.org/

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Author : Isabella Cecconi

THE QUICK ONE: THIS IS DORIAN

 

 

 Who are you? Where do you come from and what do you do?

My name is Dorian and I’m living in Milan since ten years even though I’m originally  from Liguria where I lived untill the end of high school. I’m into underground music and  its daily effect over humans through DJ-sets, events management, promoting gigs of international bands, parties and soundtracks for happenings. I’m resident dj at celebrated PLASTIC, the last of the famous international Club. At the moment I’m involved in a new video-art project: MALIBU 1992, which has been already featured in the latest shows in Paris of big international fashion designers like Bernhard Wilhelm and Donatella Versace.

How did you start your job?

I always felt some kind of attraction for music and English culture in particular: my father had a remarkable vinyl collection from the Sixties, which I got lots of inspiration from, dazing myself of Merseybeat sounds, garage, rock’n'roll, also devoting my attention to some major icons of those days from Dusty Springfield to Sandy Shaw, not to miss out Elton John, Rod Stewart, Boy George and Pet Shop Boys which definitely moved my range of interest and affinity over the underground subcultures and imaginary. This is the reason why I’m in this kind of work at the present time.

Who is your style icon?

I’ve been influenced by various people especially as an adolescent when the wave of cool Britannia knocked me down with the style of Jarvis Cocker and Damon Albarn. Currently my style icon is Albert Redwine, an American musician belonging to a new trend called sea-punk.

What Are you wearing right now?

In this precise moment I’m wearing a cream-colored interweaved sweater made in Scotland, skinny vintage Wrangler jeans and dark-brown Dr. Martens from the late 80s when they were still making them in the UK.

What do you enjoy most in life? Any hobbies?

I love traveling as soon as I have some spare time. I’m fine visiting every kind of place, what matters is breaking-out. I’m fond of classic art and medieval history as well. I think I’m lucky given that my hobbies have become my job.

If you could have been the writer of a famous song, which one would it be?

Don’t Worry Baby by The Beach Boys.

What makes you laugh?

Movies from and independent label in splatter  B-movies: TROMA VIDEO. My personal favorite is “Terror Firmer”.

Which and where is your favorite restaurant?

One among the many guest-houses scattered in between the hills of Val d’Orcia in Tuscany and the Botin restaurant in Madrid since 1725 where you can taste the best cocchinillo asado. And for a romantic dinner cuddled by the waves I’d go at The Dhow restaurant in Dubai.

Who would you like to work with?

Madonna

Could you please make a playlist for me?

Grimes – Vanessa
Fire For Effect – Yr So Wet
Kreayshawn – Gucci Gucci ( Rock-it! Scientists rmx)
Dominique Young Unique – Stupid Pretty
Naomi Elizabeth – I’d Hit It
Sandy Shaw – There’s lways something there to remind me
Leila K – Open Sesame
Willow feat Nicki Minaj – Fireball
The Twins – Ballet dancer
Elvis Presley – Fun in Acapulco….and you can also listen to my new project Malibu 1992.

 
http://malibu1992.tumblr.com/
 
dandygoth@hotmail.com
 
 

Author : Angela Biani

LES OBJETS SINGUILIER

Les Objets Singulier  is a project curated by Emanuela Nobile Mino which consists of two exhibitions explicitly conceived for AltaRoma/AltaModa January 2012 venue. The exhibitions will open simultaneously on Saturday 28th January 2012 and  both will present “ singular objects ”, unique pieces or limited editions, all conceived by the authors invited as wearable objects. The title of the project is inspired by the book “Les objets singuliers”  in which philosopher Jean Baudrillard and architect Jean Nouvel discuss about the “singularity ”. In the book, the dialogue between the two figures produces a reflection that involves all contemporary semantic categories (from architecture to art) and, by analyzing the saturate and over-aestheticized reality that surrounds us, tries to highlight all those elements that, due to their conformation or their finality can be defined remarkable. The exhibitions present some valid great points on the “ singularity ” topic derived today from different contexts such as design, fashion and art and  reflects on what seems to be a common claim to both designers and artists today: creating objects of desire.

Galleria Ugo Ferranti + Galleria O – Rome

Opening 28th January 2012 from 4 p.m. onwards

Photo: Konstantin Grcic cappa suit for Brioni

Author : Redazione

ARTISANAL INTELLIGENCE GALLERY, THE FAB 3 UPCOMING EVENTS

During Rome’s Fashion Week,  from 28 to January 30, A.I.  Gallery proposes three events focused on  the existing relationship between art,  handicraft practices and fashion. The never ending crisis and economic conjunctures have stimulated artists, artisans, stylists and performers to come back to work with a new spirit and a mutated attitude. The result is a new territory suspended among innovation, tradition, experiment. An itinerary that starts with Davide Dormino’s installation at Muga Gallery of Via Giulia and continues at Motelsalieri  with Carol Christian Poell‘s new collection.  Poell who is quite out of the fashion system and never predictable,  will play with an unusual ensamble of suits, accessories, art and music to transform the shop into a work of art. The itinerary will end with “ The Diamond Pattern”  an event curated by BOMBA41.  Store, gallery, multitasking space, BOMBA41 was born as natural evolution of the historical space owned by Cristina Bomba.  Caterina Nelli, Julia Frommel and Emiliano Maggi, the three creative minds behind BOMBA41, will sew and invite the public to sew in order to pursue the creation of an unique fabric, a symbol of the cycle of  life. The fragments of this mosaic of cloth, the “diamond pattern” that froms the title to the performance, are crops of unique pieces collected by  Cristina Bomba during 30 years of career.

A.I- GALLERY PROGRAM

Saturday 28th January  – Davide Dormino,  L’origine della trama

Galleria Muga – Via Giulia 108/109  Rome –  from 11 a.m. till 8 p.m.

 

Sunday  29th  January – Inedito: Carol Christian Poell

Motelsalieri – Via Giovanni Lanza 162 Rome- from 4 p.m. till 9 p.m.

 

Monday  30 Janaury  – The Diamond Pattern, ora et labora

Bomba41 – Via dell’Oca 39 Rome - from 4 p.m. till 9 p.m.

Photo above : Inedito by Carol Christian Poell

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Author : Redazione

SUGGESTED BY OLIVIA: ARNA BONTEMPS

Length of Moon by Arna Bontemps
Then the golden hour
Will tick its last
And the flame will go down in the flower.
A briefer length of moon
Will mark the sea-line and the yellow dune.
Then we may think of this, yet
There will be something forgotten
And something we should forget.
It will be like all things we know: .
A stone will fail; a rose is sure to go.
It will be quiet then and we may stay Long at the picket gate
But there will be less to say.

Author : Olivia Lewit

STARRED – CEMETERY/MACHINE

STARRED “Cemetery/Machine” Video

Author : Maxim Deluxe

SARAH BURTON’S JOURNEY THROUGH LINGERIE AT ALEXANDER MCQUEEN

I’ve recently had the chance to analyze the complex evolution of Alexander McQueen‘s work, just to realize his creative process, starting from sources of inspiration and the world he lived in, was absolutely incredible and unique. When he died, on February 11, 2011, he left a void which is not only creative, but above all cultural. In present times, with the world drowning into economic crisis, loss of beliefs and no future perspective, his absence is probably another reason of sadness and dejection. Despite this, the fashion house he founded in 2001 is still producing beautiful creations, through which his legacy lives on. Sarah Burton, appointed creative director in May 2010, has done her own thing, without even trying to compete with the memory of her predecessor.
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Author : Teresa Cannatà

DIRTY OLD TOWN

 

If you are in New York and you walk down Houston Street towards the Bowery, I’m sure your attention will be catch by Billy’s Antiques and Props, a shop within a tent which is a throwback to another New York. Billy’s Antiques is a Lower East Side institution and Billy Leroy, the shop owner-biker, is a truly downtown legend. No surprise that filmmakers Daniel B. Levin, Jenner Furst and Julia Willoughby Nason were fascinated by this man, his shop and all the stories which gravitated around it. The directors first considered making a documentary about Leroy. But the more time they spent in his shop, the more they wanted to write their own story developing a narrative that imagines the end of the shop has finally come.  ”It was more exciting to think of it in terms of a narrative,” says Furst. “This tent became sort of a playground, a canvas for something fictional.” 

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Author : Federica Mascagni

SONIA BOYAJIAN, THE NEW GENERATION JEWELLERY

Here at Elitism we love Jewels. They bright up our page and make us feel beautiful. Sonia Boyajian is a new generation jeweler with a certain “pizzaz” and she  presented us  her Spring Summer 2012 collection called “The Beginnings”. It’s a  solid  ensamble of creations made of 22 karat gold, bronze, silver, glass, semi precious stones, ceramic, silk, onyx, resin, dried flowers, as well as sculpted porcelain figurines made by French Artist Sylvie Auvrey. It’s a journey into past societies and movements, it’s a collection that takes inspirations from the primitive and the opulent. It can be Egyptian, it can be Bizantine.  It’s  brisk and the style is unique.

Sonia Boyajian was born in California and majored in Fine Arts before graduating from Otis College of Art and Design with a degree in fashion. Young and attracted by adventure,   she moved to Antwerp and started working under the wing of  famous jeweller Pascal Masselis. In few years she not only learnt how to work metals and stones but was  also noticed by Bernhard Williehm who appointed her to create jewels for his Paris Fashion Shows.  At the age of 23 Sonia went back to Los Angeles and settled up her Studio from where she now sells to clients and selected boutiques all over the world.

W magazine has defined her an “explosive mix of surrealism that remembers Elsa Schiapparelli”. She declares to be inspired by Romanian artist Constantin Brancusi and Calder. She is an artist that found in shining metals and stones  her way to express herself.  Needless to say, Elitism was  in love with her at first sight.

Photo above : Oyster Necklace, handmade chain with discs

http://soniabstyle.com/

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Author : Marco Maggetto