Is this person saying that the 1800's, Elizabethan era and vintage are all the same or is it just a poorly written sentance?
I think the sentence as written says that the 1800s and Elizabethan are the same, and that it is/they are a subset of "vintage."
On the other hand, it's an interview. So there could have been something lost in transcribing from the spoken word to the written page.
Is there really much surviving vintage clothing from the late 16th/early 17th centuries?
Is LJ being weird?
I tried to post and it just won't let me.
I was trying to post this story about an intrepid group of knitters from around the world that recreated a 100+ year old lace shawl pattern from two photographs.
But it wouldn't let me.
Is there really much surviving vintage clothing from the late 16th/early 17th centuries?
Not that anyone can easily get their hands on.
Mona and I just went to the store. On the way back, I noticed fire trucks! police cars! an ambulance! at this house on the corner. I couldn't figure out what was happening because I wasn't seeing anything that looked emergency-like.
Then I realized there was a CAR on their front porch.
Then I realized there was a CAR on their front porch.
Am I bad person for thinking "that's AWESOME"
Crap, another lefty cafe in Evanston is closing. Wild Tree (on the corner of Davis and Oak) is closing due to bankruptcy. They just weren't doing well in this economy.
Am I bad person for thinking "that's AWESOME"
I don't know but I will confess to a having similar reaction. So we can be bad people together.
They took a seedy part of town that wasn't hurtin' nobody (except for the occasional murder) and turned it all touristy and sports-bar-ish....
The verb for this is: Giuliani.
"They totes Giulianied 9th and Hennepin, man!"